Ru Yi: The Scepter That Started as a Back-Scratcher — 如意
Paul PengShare
In Taoist scripture illustrations, every Celestial Worthy of any significance holds one. In the imperial court, it was the gift exchanged between emperors and high officials at the New Year. In Buddhist monasteries, abbots used it as a pointer when lecturing on sutras. And before any of that, it was a back-scratcher — a long-handled tool for reaching the parts of the back that hands cannot. The Ru Yi (如意) is one of the few objects in Chinese ritual history that traveled the entire distance from domestic utility to divine attribute, and the path it took reveals something specific about how Taoist liturgy understands the relationship between the physical and the sacred.

The Ru Yi is a long-handled scepter whose head is shaped to follow the form of the character 心 (xīn, heart-mind) — three curved projections arranged in a configuration that Chinese calligraphic tradition associates with the seat of consciousness and intention. The handle curves gently upward toward the head, and the whole object is typically between 30 and 50 centimeters long. Materials range from jade and gold in imperial contexts to wood and bamboo in monastic ones.
The Song dynasty scholar Wu Zeng (吴曾), writing in his Nenggaizhai Manlu (能改斋漫录), records the object's origin explicitly: it began as a 搖背 (耶 bèi) — a back-scratcher. The name 如意 means "as one wishes" or "according to the heart's desire," which Wu Zeng explains as a reference to the implement's original function: reaching the places on the back that the hands cannot, satisfying an itch that would otherwise go unaddressed. That etymology is not trivial. It establishes the Ru Yi's core semantic field before any ritual significance is attached: the object that fulfills what the body wants but cannot reach on its own.
The key phrase preserved in Taoist ritual texts reads:
"The ruyi scepter is the external expression of the heart-mind." The word 表 (biǎo) means surface, external manifestation, or visible sign — the outward form that makes an inner state perceptible. The formula is not saying that the Ru Yi symbolizes the heart. It is saying that the Ru Yi makes the heart visible: that when the high priest holds it during the opening of a grand jiao ceremony, the scepter is the material form of his interior state of alignment with the Three Treasures (三宝: Dao, Scriptures, Masters).

In Zhengyi practice, the Ru Yi is carried by the high priest (高功) during the opening ceremony of a grand jiao ceremony. It is held in the left hand while the right hand performs the ritual gestures (手印, mudra-equivalents) that accompany the opening invocations. The scepter is not used to point, strike, or gesture in the way that the Ling Pai command tablet is used. It is held — present, visible, but not actively deployed.
That passivity is significant. The Ru Yi's function in the ceremony is not operational but declarative: it announces the interior state of the person holding it. A priest who carries the Ru Yi without the corresponding interior alignment — without genuine unity of heart with the Three Treasures — is, in the Zhengyi understanding, carrying an empty form. The scepter does not compensate for the absence of cultivation. It reveals it. This is why the Ru Yi is classified as a ceremonial implement rather than a functional tool: its efficacy is entirely dependent on the condition of the person who holds it, not on any property of the object itself.
The Ru Yi's appearance in the hands of Celestial Worthies (天尊) in Taoist scripture illustrations is not decorative. In the iconographic logic of Taoist visual culture, the attributes held by divine figures are precise statements about their nature and function. A Celestial Worthy holding a Ru Yi is being depicted as a being whose heart-mind is in perfect alignment with the Dao — whose interior state is, by definition, exactly what the scepter is meant to express.
The implication for the priest who carries the Ru Yi in ritual practice is direct: he is, for the duration of the ceremony, occupying the same position that the Celestial Worthy occupies in the iconographic tradition. The scepter is the visible sign of that temporary alignment. Whether the alignment is genuine — whether the priest's cultivation actually supports the claim the scepter makes — is a question the ritual cannot answer on his behalf. The Ru Yi makes the claim. The priest's practice is what makes it true or false.
Wu Zeng (吴曾). Nenggaizhai Manlu (能改斋漫录). Song dynasty.
Anonymous. Tianhuang Zhidao Taiqing Yuche (天皇至道太清玉册). Ming dynasty.
Chen Yaoting. Encyclopedia of Taoism (道教大辞典). Entry: 如意 (Ru Yi).
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.
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