Lü Qiu Fangyuan (闾丘方远): The Daoist Sage of Mount Tiantai

Lü Qiu Fangyuan (闾丘方远): The Daoist Sage of Mount Tiantai

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Lüqiu Fangyuan (?–902), with the compound surname Lüqiu, styled Dafang and known by the literary name Mr. Xuantong, was a native of Susong in Shuzhou (now part of Anhui Province). He was a Taoist priest in the late Tang Dynasty and the Five Dynasties, and an important figure in the Nanyue-Tiantai School of Taoism.


At the age of sixteen, Lüqiu Fangyuan had a thorough knowledge of Confucian classics and history. He studied I Ching under Chen Yuanwu of Mount Lu. At 29, he learned the art of golden elixirs from Zuo Yuanze of Xianglin. At 34, he received Taoist ordination certificates at Yuxiao Palace on Mount Tiantai. Emperor Zhaozong of the Tang Dynasty conferred upon him the title "Master Miaoyou, Mr. Xuantong".


According to Continued Biographies of Immortals, Lüqiu Fangyuan propagated Taoist teachings and had a large number of disciples, approximately over a hundred. On the 14th day of the second lunar month in the second year of Tianfu (902), Lüqiu Fangyuan bathed, burned incense, sat upright with hands folded in front, and ascended to immortality at noon. It is said that he wrote An Abridgment of the Taiping Scripture in ten volumes.


Key Life Events & Contributions

1. Early Years: From Scholar to Seeker

  • Born into a literati family, Lü Qiu Fangyuan mastered the classics and histories by 16, yet felt unfulfilled. He said:

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    "Books teach names, not truths;
    The Tao is written in wind, not ink."

    He left home to study under Chen Yuanwu of Mount Lu, learning the I Ching (Book of Changes) and divination.

  • At 29, he sought the "golden elixir" (金丹之术), a Daoist alchemical practice, from Zuo Yuanze of Xianglin. He later quipped:

    "The elixir is not in the crucible—
    It is in the stillness between thoughts."

2. Spiritual Awakening: The Tiantai Years

In 875 CE (age 34), he received falu (ritual ordination) at Yuxiao Palace, Mount Tiantai, becoming a key figure in the Southern Mount Tianyi Daoist lineage. There, he:

  • Taught the Taiping Jing (Scripture of Great Peace)
  • Advocated "inner alchemy" (neidan) over external rituals
  • Wrote Taiping Jing Chao, a 10-volume abridgment of the classic

Table: Master Lü’s Teachings

Age Milestone Philosophy
16 Mastered classics, began studying I Ching "The hexagrams are mirrors; reflect deeply."
29 Learned alchemy from Zuo Yuanze "The elixir of immortality is a metaphor—the true fire is within."
34 Ordained at Yuxiao Palace, Mount Tiantai "Rituals are bridges; the Tao is the river."
65+ Taught over 100 disciples, wrote Taiping Jing Chao "A single candle lights a thousand others; share wisdom freely."

3. Imperial Recognition & Legacy

Emperor Zhaozong of Tang (r. 888–904) honored him as "Miaoyou Dashi Xuantong Xiansheng" (妙有大师玄同先生, "Master of Subtle Perfection, Mr. Xuantong"). Yet Master Lü remained detached, saying:

"Titles are like autumn leaves—
Beautiful today, gone tomorrow.
The Tao is the root beneath."

He passed away peacefully in 902 CE, sitting in meditation, and was said to have "ascended to the heavens" at noon.


III. Intellectual Legacy: Scriptures, Alchemy, and Ethics

1. Taiping Jing Chao: A Bridge Between Ancient and Modern

Master Lü’s abridgment of the Taiping Jing (a 3rd-century Daoist classic) emphasized:

  • Social harmony: "A nation’s peace begins in the home."
  • Alchemical ethics: "The golden elixir is not gold—it is compassion."
  • Mystical numerology: Linking cosmic cycles to human destiny (e.g., "Seven stars guide seven virtues").

2. Inner Alchemy & Meditation

He taught that true immortality lay not in potions but in:

  • Breath control (qigong): "The breath is the Tao’s horse; ride it to stillness."
  • Dream work: "Nightmares are messages; decode them as you would tea leaves."
  • Simplicity: "A cluttered mind is a cluttered life; clear one, clear the other."

3. Ethics for Troubled Times

As war loomed, Master Lü urged:

"In chaos, be the rock;
In calm, be the stream.
Adapt, but never bend."

His disciples included warriors, scholars, and farmers—all seeking refuge in the Tao.


IV. Circle of Influence: From Tang Courts to Modern Times

1. Notable Disciples

Name Role Famous Quote
Anonymous Monks Copied his texts "His Taiping Jing Chao turns confusion into clarity."
Farmers & Soldiers Practiced his meditations "When war came, his breath exercises kept us sane."

2. Impact on Later Thought

  • Daoism: His blend of scripture and practicality influenced the Quanzhen (Complete Perfection) School.
  • Literature: Poets of the Song Dynasty quoted his alchemical metaphors.
  • Modern: His ethics inspire mindfulness teachers today.

V. Final Reflection: Why Master Lü Matters Today

  • For seekers: His teachings offer a path to inner peace amid external chaos.
  • For leaders: His ethics remind us that true power lies in humility.
  • For all: His life proves that wisdom is not in grand gestures, but in quiet acts of kindness.

A Parable from Master Lü:

"A traveler asked, ‘What is the Tao?’
The master pointed to a river.
‘It flows, yet never leaves its source.
It bends, yet never breaks.
Be the river.’"

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