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Showing posts with the label filial piety

When Love Must Speak: The Confucian Art of Loyal Correction

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10 min read Most of us have swallowed a truth to keep the peace. But what if staying silent is the most disloyal thing you can do? This post explores how the Confucian classic  Xiaojing  redefines loyalty, filial piety, and moral courage as a living framework for character architecture, purposeful relationships, and the good life. Building a life of genuine substance isn't a solo project. It's a moral architecture built with other people, shaped by how you speak truth, receive correction, and hold your relationships to a higher standard.  The  Xiaojing  (《孝經》,  Classic of Filial Piety ), one of Confucianism's most compact and powerful texts, has a surprising argument: real loyalty sometimes means telling someone in authority that they're wrong. That's not rebellion. It's care. The Passage in the Xiaojing Chapter 15 of the  Xiaojing , the  Jian Zheng Zhang  (諫諍章, 'Chapter on Remonstrance'), states: 「當不義,則子不可以不爭於父,臣不可以不爭於君。」 "If something is un...

Your Body Is Not Your Own: What Confucianism and Christianity Knew About the Good Life

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  10 min read What if the secret to a purposeful life isn't about finding yourself, but about recognising that you were already  given  to something larger than yourself? This post explores how the ancient Chinese  Xiaojing  (Classic of Filial Piety) and the Christian scriptures share a startlingly similar blueprint for character architecture, moral leadership, and the good life. The modern pursuit of purpose has been turned into an exhausting exercise in self-maximisation. You're told to look inward, invent your own meaning, and optimise yourself like a productivity app. But that story is wearing thin. Deep fulfilment rarely comes from radical self-invention. It tends to arrive when you recognise that you're part of a larger, pre-existing story, one that includes your parents, your community, your moral tradition, and something beyond all of them. Two ancient texts make this case better than almost anything written since: the  Xiaojing  (Classic of Fi...