Ye Fashan 叶法善 The Daoist Sage in the Han Dynasty
Paul PengShare
The Ancestry of Ye Fashan: A Family of Stars and Mountains
His roots were as ancient as the Han Dynasty, yet his spirit soared beyond earthly titles:
- Origin: Born in Yexian, Nanyang (modern Henan), his family migrated south to Kuocang, Chuzhou (today’s Lishui, Zhejiang) during the chaos of the Han collapse.
- Heritage: For three generations—great-grandfather, grandfather, father—his kin served as Daoist priests, masters of alchemy, divination, and the "Way of Heaven."
- Youth: As a boy, Ye Fashan devoured texts like the Daodejing and Zhouyi (Book of Changes), but his true teachers were the mountains: their silence, their storms, their way of standing firm yet yielding to the wind.
He once told his disciples:
"A tree that grows too tall invites the axe. A man who seeks too much fame invites disaster. I would rather be a stone in the river than a temple’s gilded roof."
The Path of Ye Fashan: From Hermit to Imperial Counselor
His life was a dance between solitude and service, a refusal to be chained by either:
| Era/Year | Milestone | His Words (Paraphrased) |
|---|---|---|
| Tang Xianqing Era (656–661) | Emperor Gaozong summoned him to the capital, offering titles and wealth. Ye Fashan declined: "I am a servant of the Dao, not of men." Yet he stayed, teaching simplicity to courtiers. | "A mirror needs no crown to reflect the sun." |
| 650s–700s | For 50 years, he wandered China’s sacred mountains—Kunlun, Wudang, Taishan—then returned to the court when summoned, advising emperors on balance, humility, and the dangers of greed. | "A ruler is like a boat; the people, the water. Water can carry the boat—or sink it." |
| Circa 710 | When Tibetan envoys presented a "sealed letter" demanding the emperor open it, Ye Fashan warned: "Let the sender unseal it. A gift should not harm the giver." The envoy died when a hidden crossbow fired; the emperor lived. | "Trust is a thread woven from actions, not words." |
| 713 CE | Emperor Xuanzong granted him titles (Jinzi Guanglu Daifu, Honglu Qing, Yueguo Gong) and built a temple for his family. Ye Fashan accepted but rarely wore his robes of office. | "Titlesm are like autumn leaves—beautiful today, gone tomorrow. The Dao is the root beneath." |
| 720 CE | At 105, he passed away peacefully. Xuanzong mourned, calling him "a lamp in the darkness, a voice of reason in a storm." | "Death is not an ending, but a return to the source. Why weep for the river when it joins the sea?" |
The Wisdom of Ye Fashan: Three Lessons for Today
-
Speak Truth to Power—Gently
- When Xuanzong ordered a lavish Lantern Festival (30+ towers of gold and jade, 100+ feet tall), Ye Fashan said:
"Your Majesty, the light of the moon needs no candle. Extravagance feeds pride, not the people."
- Moral: Courage is not in shouting, but in calmly holding a mirror to excess.
- When Xuanzong ordered a lavish Lantern Festival (30+ towers of gold and jade, 100+ feet tall), Ye Fashan said:
-
Suspect "Miracles" That Flatter
- He refused to perform "magic" for crowds, saying:
"A true Daoist’s power is in seeing through illusions—not creating them."
- Moral: Beware those who dazzle you; seek those who ground you.
- He refused to perform "magic" for crowds, saying:
-
Legacy Lies in Actions, Not Titles
- Though honored as "Celestial Master" and "Realized One of Kuocang and Luofu," he often signed letters simply "Ye, a humble servant of the mountain."
- Moral: Your worth is not in what others call you, but in how you live.
How to Honor Ye Fashan in Modern Life
- Simplify: Before buying something, ask: "Does this nourish my spirit or feed my ego?"
- Question Authority: When told to follow blindly, reply: "Show me the path, and I’ll walk it—but I’ll keep my eyes open."
- Laugh at Yourself: Like Ye Fashan, don’t take titles or praise seriously. A wise person once said: "The more I learn, the more I realize how little I know."
Final Reflection
Ye Fashan was no saint—he drank wine, joked with peasants, and once tricked a greedy official by "conjuring" gold that turned to leaves by dawn. But in his humor, his humility, and his refusal to let power corrupt him, he became a bridge between heaven and earth.
May you walk his path: not by seeking immortality, but by living each day with integrity, kindness, and a light heart.
— A Fellow Traveler of the Way
Part of the Series
This article is part of our comprehensive guide covering all core Taoist philosophies, concepts, and practices — curated from the classic Encyclopedia of Taoism.
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About the Author
Paul Peng
Paul Peng is a Zhengyi Taoist priest from Longhu Mountain, Jiangxi — the ancestral home of the Celestial Masters' tradition. Ordained at 25 after a dream from the Celestial Master, he has practiced for 25 years under Master Zeng Guangliang. He is the curator of this store, which is officially authorized by Tianshi Fu. All items are consecrated at the temple by the resident priest team.
Read his full story →
