What We Hold Sacred
The Analects & the Five Classics — The cultivation of virtue
Confucians hold sacred the cultivation of the noble person—the junzi—and the relationships that make society humane. The Analects record the words of Confucius; the Five Classics (including the Book of Odes, the Book of Rites) embody the wisdom of the sages. The transcendent secret of Confucianism is ren—benevolence, humanity, the virtue that makes us fully human. Li—ritual, propriety—is not empty form but the embodiment of respect and harmony. Xiao—filial piety—honors parents and ancestors, the bond between generations. What Confucians hold most sacred is the possibility of a harmonious society through education, self-cultivation, and right relationship. The sage-kings of antiquity modeled virtuous rule; the goal is to restore that order. Sacred is the mandate of heaven, the responsibility of the ruler to care for the people, and the dignity of every person who strives to become noble. The Way is human, social, attainable—through study, reflection, and practice.