Lao Tzu, the legendary author of the Tao Te Ching , is also credited with the authorship of the Hua Hu Ching , which embodies some of his later teachings. During a time of political turmoil in the fourteenth century, all copies of this work were banned and ordered to be burned. Thus, few if any complete and accurate manuscripts exist today. Fortunately, the complete teachings of the Hua Hu Ching have been preserved through the oral transmission of generation after generation of Taoist masters to their disciples. In this book, Master Ni, heir to that orally transmitted wisdom, offers a superlative rendering of this reassured teaching.
One's growth depends on how you make use of each moment. If you make each moment a poison, it will poison you. If you turn it into a healing tonic, it will support you." Lead a life of balance, health and harmony. Practical suggestions for daily living, philosophical thought, esoteric insight and guidelines for living a rich and fulfilled life.
Master Hua-Ching Ni uses straightforward language and personal experiences, as well as traditional stories and teachings of the ancient masters, to impart the wisdom of Taoism, the Integral Way. His teachings promote a simple, natural, healthy, and happy way of life that lays the foundation for spiritual self-cultivation. Master Ni emphasizes that it is important first to establish a good understanding of basic spiritual principles and then begin to realize this wisdom in daily life by adopting practices and attitudes that help to conserve, nourish, and refine the subtle energy. Among the topics he discusses in short, accessible passages are: • Basic spiritual self-protection • Self-reliance • Emotional balance • Do's and don'ts for a healthy, natural lifestyle • Sleeping and dreaming • Diet • Love, sex and marriage • Meditations and invocations from the Taoist tradition
Lao Tzu's Tao Teh Ching has been of interest to humanity for millennia, though most readers are left with curiosity and amazement. In this translation by contemporary Taoist Master Hua-Ching Ni, much is simplified for the English reader. More importantly, Hua-Ching Ni explains energetics, rendering Lao Tzu's writing more understandable. We are also given some of the same energetic practices that are used to attain this wisdom.
Conversations with modern students and Taoist Master Hua-Ching Ni about life. A continuation of short readings from the Tao Teh Ching followed by questions from the audience about dreams, marriage, sexual vitality and pregnancy, to which Master Ni responds with his usual refreshing, thoughtful honesty.
Enlightenment is the inspiring story of Hui Neng, 6th Patriarch and father of Zen Buddhism. Although intellectually unsophisticated, Hui Neng became a true spiritual revolutionary who said that You have been programmed to believe that a godly way of life is different from what you are doing right here, right now. This is the main obstacle that you need to overcome.
Learn about some of the more subtle aspects of life. Master Ni points out the confusion which can be caused by some teachings and encourages students to cultivate internal growth. Master Ni says, "Students of Tao are not crazy about the descriptions of high beings and sages that were sent and so forth. The reality is, are you going to be your own sage and a sage for others? That is the goal and the realisation.
The leadership of society is the most influential, external element that determines whether we enjoy or suffer in life. This is followed by the external element of the political system. A good system can bring about a good life and a bad system can make us suffer. This book offers Hua-Ching Ni's view of the human dilemma and a vision of what can be done to improve it.
Hua-Ching Ni discusses the nature of the soul and how its quality can change according to what we think and do. He also addresses what we can do to improve ourselves and further our spiritual evolution. This book invites a deeper understanding of the soul, of saving the soul, liberating the soul, and the process of leaving the physical body at the time of death.
This companion book to Live with the Universal Faith, by Hua-Ching Ni and Mao Shing Ni, addresses the symbolism in the ancient diagrams related to the earliest beliefs in the sun and its light. At the center is the timeless example of the nine houses for social leadership by the Great Yu, around 4,000 years ago, who was inspired by the Lo Su diagram. This contribution to harmonious humanity, later elucidated by Ji Zi around 1215 BCE, covers all aspects of human leadership from personal development, to family and community relationships, to national and international politics. Readers will soon discover that the counsel from the Great Yu, through Ji Zi, remains relevant, and indeed inspirational, to this day.
Master Ni presents the truth about spirits taken from his own personal experiences. What do Mantras, past lives, soul parties, ogres, channelling, spirits and ghosts have in common? What are their differences? Master Ni says that the truth can help us nurture our own personal spirits, the foundation of our being. Fascinating yet serious reading. Open your mind to consider a different reality in the spiritual realm.
Teh', the Chinese term for virtue, means literally 'You gain.' Teh is our very being. In Virtue, Master Ni offers a broad study of human nature and draws upon a centuries-old tradition of natural life that transcends cultural and religious differences. By embracing a life of natural virtue, we can reconnect with our spiritual essence and nurture it.
This is a book for all who still have faith that there is a way to discover and develop themselves without having to go against what their common sense tells them is natural. It is also for people who are mature enough to understand that what is natural for one person can be unnatural for another, and that what is natural for one place and time can be unnatural a thousand years later half-way around the world. The gate to infinity does not lead to a system or institution, but to the depths of spiritual life that can be found in nature.
In 'The Centermost Way', Hua-Ching Ni has written an inspiring account of human spiritual development, from its earliest stages through the course of the last two millenia, up to today. It is a guidebook for those seeking a way of lfe that includes family, work, social activities and interests, scientific and religious pursuits, art, politics and every other aspect of existence that we cna know and xperience in the course of a lifetime on earth.
Beloved by our readers, learn from the perspective of an 8000-year-old tradition of natural living. Faithfully recorded from weekly gatherings over a five year period, these informed and sometimes amusing talks by Master Hua-Ching Ni cover a broad spectrum of practical as well as philosophical guidelines for living a spiritual life in modern times.
Living with the Universal Faith means restoring our faith in the healthy spirit of humanity in order to achieve world harmony. The authors of this book, Hua-Ching Ni and Mao Shing Ni, take us on a journey to inspect the evolution of several major spiritual teachings and their influence on human society. We also visit the earliest beliefs in the sun and its light, the ultimate source of all life on Earth. Faith in this universal truth would support everyone who seeks complete health, and wishes to be free from emotional and conceptual shadows. All this and more has been inspired by the teachings of Grandmaster Yo San Ni, father of Hua-Ching Ni, and our hope is that his spirit and words of wisdom will also inspire you.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.