given the latter’s essentially “secular” and ethical orientation, verging on
philosophy rather than transcendental religious emphasis. Yet precisely because
Confucianism primarily provides an ethical and moral framework, it was less
challenging to Islam on a theological level. Confucianism is also the most
“Chinese” of all religions in China, making
it important for Muslims, under the
watchful eyes of oppressive and suspicious Qing Dynasty officials, to convince
the authorities of the compatibilities of Islam with Confucianism, demonstrating
that it favored order, justice, good governance, and supported the Emperor.
Some Muslims believed they could enlist Confucianism
as a gateway for
spreading Islam among the Chinese. But full accommodation between the two
religions was always a stretch, especially since the main body of Muslim belief
extends well beyond the dispassionate, this-worldly, nontheistic moral precepts
of Confucian thought. The powerful ethnocentricity of Chinese culture,
furthermore, made difficult any acceptance of distant
and exotic Mecca as the
center of Islamic faith, while the miraculous elements and beliefs of all three
Western revealed religions strained Chinese credulousness. Thus, Muslims had
little success in acquiring new converts to Islam among Han Chinese. Buddhism
was an even greater stretch for Muslims to identify with, being of Indian origin,
nonnative to China,
and too abstract, otherworldly, and nontheistic for Muslim
sensibilities.