III. Belief systems generally reinforced existing social structures while also offering new roles and status to some men and women. For example, Confucianism emphasized filial piety, and some Buddhists and Christians practiced a monastic life.
In the previous time period, the ❌ created by agricultural production first led to social and gender ❌ which in turn were ❌ by laws and codes. Belief systems too affected ❌ roles in society, and each of the major world religions that was codified during this period had an impact on gender relations. Hinduism, Confucianism and Christianity all encouraged ❌ (although at differing levels of severity.) The Hindu Laws of Manu taught that a woman is not ❌ of men at any point in her life:
In childhood a ❌ must be subject to her father, in youth to her husband, when her lord is dead to her sons; a woman must never be independent. She must not seek to ❌ herself from her father, husband, or sons; by leaving them she would make both (her own and her husband's) families contemptible. She must always be cheerful, clever in (the management of her) household affairs, careful in cleaning her utensils, and economical in expenditure.
--Laws of Manu
The writings of St. Paul in the New Testament of the Christian Bible also reinforced patriarchy, but hold up a husband's ❌ to love his wife "as Christ loves the church."
Wives, be subject to your own husbands, as to the Lord. For the husband is the head of the wife, as Christ also is the head of the church. . . ❌ , love your wives, just as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself up for her.
--Ephesians 5:22,25
Confucianism teaches a ❌ family structure and endows the husband with authority over the wife. But like Christianity, this is a soft patriarchy with reciprocal obligations for the hustband, namely that he show respect and be a model of proper behavior in the family. The deep respect for parents and ancestors, called ❌ , was also a central tenent of Confucianism.
In its original form Buddhism was unique in this regard. It ❌ the caste system on which social inequality was based and taught that both genders had equal access to ❌ . Thus it was a rare exception to the wide practice of patriarchy in the ancient world. As it spread into east Asia, however, Buddhism absorbed many cultural values of China. In many areas Confucian patriarchy remained the dominant family model.
Some followers of Buddhism and Christianity had tendencies toward ❌ , an extreme rejection of the ❌ values of the world, its luxuries, anything extravagant or unnecessary, and all sexual pleasure. Such people avoided all material things except the bare necessities and simplest food. In their attempt to separate themselves from the sensual ❌ of the world, some Buddhists and Christians developed ❌ , the lifestyle of living as monks in a monastery. Christian monks lived without worldly goods and worked to feed the poor and care for orphans and widows. Buddhist monks purged themselves of desire and aided the weak or poor while striving to attain enlightenment. Although the reality of monasticism could be quite different--the lust for power and wealth can infect every human institution-- ideally, monasteries gave opportunities for both men and women to provide charitable services to the less fortunate.
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