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[[Image:Park_021.jpg|thumb|Photo of an ancestors memorial in a Chinese Buddhist temple]]
[[Image:Park_021.jpg|thumb|Photo of an ancestors memorial in a Chinese Buddhist temple]]


'''Ancestor worship''', also '''ancestor veneration''', is a [[anthropology of religion|religious practice]] based on the belief that one's [[ancestor|ancestors]] possess [[supernatural]] powers. All [[culture]]s attach [[ritual]] significance to the passing of loved ones, but this is not equivalent to ancestor worship. Rather, ancestor [[worship]] involves the same sort of religious practices one sees when people appease or [[supplication|supplicate]] other entities thought to exist and possess supernatural powers, such as [[god]]s, [[angel]]s, [[saint]]s, or [[demon]]s. While far from universal, ancestor worship or ancestor veneration occurs in societies with every degree of social, political, and technological complexity, and it remains an important component of various religious practices in modern times.
'''Ancestor worship''' (拜祖), also '''ancestor veneration''' (敬祖), is a [[anthropology of religion|religious practice]] based on the belief that one's [[ancestor|ancestors]] possess [[supernatural]] powers. All [[culture]]s attach [[ritual]] significance to the passing of loved ones, but this is not equivalent to ancestor worship. Rather, ancestor [[worship]] involves the same sort of religious practices one sees when people appease or [[supplication|supplicate]] other entities thought to exist and possess supernatural powers, such as [[god]]s, [[angel]]s, [[saint]]s, or [[demon]]s. While far from universal, ancestor worship or ancestor veneration occurs in societies with every degree of social, political, and technological complexity, and it remains an important component of various religious practices in modern times.


Ancestor worship in some cultures (such as [[Culture of China|Chinese]]) seeks only to honor the deeds, memories, and sacrifice of the deceased. Much of the worship includes visiting the deceased at their graves, making offerings to the deceased to provide for their welfare in the [[afterlife]]. For instance, a [[toothbrush]], [[comb]], [[towel]], [[slippers]], and [[water]] are provided by the [[coffin]] so that the deceased will be able to have these items after they have died. ''Spirit money'' is sometimes burned as an [[offering]] to ancestors as well for the afterlife. The living may regard the ancestors as "guardian angels" to them, perhaps in protecting them from serious accidents, or guiding their path in life.
Ancestor worship in some cultures (such as [[Culture of China|Chinese]]) seeks only to honor the deeds, memories, and sacrifice of the deceased. Much of the worship includes visiting the deceased at their graves, making offerings to the deceased to provide for their welfare in the [[afterlife]]. For instance, a [[toothbrush]], [[comb]], [[towel]], [[slippers]], and [[water]] are provided by the [[coffin]] so that the deceased will be able to have these items after they have died. ''Spirit money'' is sometimes burned as an [[offering]] to ancestors as well for the afterlife. The living may regard the ancestors as "guardian angels" to them, perhaps in protecting them from serious accidents, or guiding their path in life.

Revision as of 23:00, 24 March 2005

File:Park 021.jpg
Photo of an ancestors memorial in a Chinese Buddhist temple

Ancestor worship (拜祖), also ancestor veneration (敬祖), is a religious practice based on the belief that one's ancestors possess supernatural powers. All cultures attach ritual significance to the passing of loved ones, but this is not equivalent to ancestor worship. Rather, ancestor worship involves the same sort of religious practices one sees when people appease or supplicate other entities thought to exist and possess supernatural powers, such as gods, angels, saints, or demons. While far from universal, ancestor worship or ancestor veneration occurs in societies with every degree of social, political, and technological complexity, and it remains an important component of various religious practices in modern times.

Ancestor worship in some cultures (such as Chinese) seeks only to honor the deeds, memories, and sacrifice of the deceased. Much of the worship includes visiting the deceased at their graves, making offerings to the deceased to provide for their welfare in the afterlife. For instance, a toothbrush, comb, towel, slippers, and water are provided by the coffin so that the deceased will be able to have these items after they have died. Spirit money is sometimes burned as an offering to ancestors as well for the afterlife. The living may regard the ancestors as "guardian angels" to them, perhaps in protecting them from serious accidents, or guiding their path in life.

It is in that sense that "ancestor veneration" may convey a more accurate sense of what practitioners see themselves as doing. For example, as "worship" in a Christian context is reserved for the Trinity, a Christian who is unfamiliar with the actual practices and beliefs involved in ancestor-directed rites may mistakenly assume that those who "practice" "ancestor worship" attribute to the ancestors everything that a Christian attributes to the Trinity: creation of the world, omnipotence, a different class of being, etc. If one asked a Japanese person if they thought their ancestors were all-powerful or had created the world, the person would probably laugh. "Ancestorhood" is a state of being that everyone can attain upon death, so an ancestor is not fundamentally different in the way a deity is.