Spiritism and Charisma

Caodaism from its Infancy

Authors

  • Christopher Hartney University of Sydney

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/arsr.v20i3.334

Keywords:

Caodaism, Authority, Charismatic Leader

Abstract

The Religion of Caodaism (Vietnam, 1926) began as a communal effort by a number of early believers who responded to what they believed to be definite instructions from heaven granted through various devices of mediumship both Eastern and Western in origin. Of these forms I will investigate and speculate upon how the process of séance can be spoken of, understood in this Vietnamese context and how various ways to manage it were devised and operated by Caodaists. It will be shown that a general inability to manage séance led to the development of numerous other Caodaist groupings in Vietnam. After a period of division during the late 1920s and throughout the 1930s, Tay Ninh Caodaism (the original “trunk” of Caodaism) continued to develop under the influence of the increasingly charismatic leader Pham Cong Tac. It will be argued that under the guiding influence of this man, Tay Ninh Caodaism developed politically, hierarchically and mystically as a separate entity from other variants of Caodaism and that these developments better facilitated Pham Cong Tac’s control of the organization through charismatic manifestations rather than séance-granted authority. As this shift takes place, I will show that there is a change of emphasis from the democratically organised Cuu Trung Dai, or administrative hierarchy of the faith, to the self-selecting Hiep Thien Dai, or branch of mediums. Furthermore, post 1945; the work of Pham Cong Tac changes the spiritual emphasis of Caodaism from a non-personal thaumaturgical authority to a prophetic charismatic authority. Although Tay Ninh Caodaism is seen to operate in this more pragmatic charismatic way, it continues to understand itself as a séance-based group.

Author Biography

  • Christopher Hartney, University of Sydney
    Lecturer, Studies in Religion

References

Anonymous 1935 Lich Su Ngo Minh Chieu.

Blagov, Sergei 1999 The Cao Dai: A New Religious Movement. The Institute of Oriental Studies, Moscow.

a Caodaism: Vietnamese Traditionalism and its Leap into Modernity. Nova, New York.

b Honest Mistakes: The Life and Death of Trinh Minh The (1922–1955) Southern Vietnam’s Alternative Leader. Nova, Huntington, NY.

Chang, K.C. 1983 Art Myth and Ritual: The Path to Poltical Authority in Ancient China. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA.

Coughlin, Richard 1955 The Position of Women in Vietnam. Yale University Press, New Haven.

Coulet, G. 1926 Les sociétés secretes en terre d’Annam. Long-Xuan, Saigon.

Dai Dao Tam Ky Pho Do c. 1950 Loi Thuyet Dau Cua Duc Ho Phap. Tay Ninh.

Phap Chanh Truyen: La Constitution Religieuse du Caodaisme. Dervy, Saigon.

Thanh-Ngon Hiep-Tuyen. Nam Nham-Ty.

Do Van Ly 1984 Tim Hieu Dao Cao Dai. Cao Dai Giao, Viet Nam, Hai Ngoai, California.

Dong, Tan n.d. Lich Su Cao Dai. n.p.

Elliot, A.J.A. 1955 Chinese Spirit Medium Cults in Singapore. Athlone Press, London.

Escaliere, L. 1937 Le Bouddhisme et Cultes d’Annam. Imprimerie de T’ou Se We, Zi Ka Wei, Shanghai.

Festinger, Leon, Henry W. Riecken, and Stanley Schachter 1956 When Prophecy Fails. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis.

Gobron, Gabriel 1949 Histoire et Philosophie du Caodaism. Dervy, Paris.

Hartney, Christopher 2003 A Strange Peace: Dao Cao Dai and its Manifestation in Sydney. PhD dissertation, University of Sydney.

Vietnamese Esoterica and the Chinese Mystical Model. In Esotericism and the Control of Knowledge, edited by Edward Crangle, 274-86. Sydney Studies in Religion, Sydney.

Hoskins, Mary 1976 Vietnamese Women: Their Roles and Options. In Changing Identities in Modern Southeast Asia, edited by David J. Banks, 127-46. Mouton, The Hague.

Hue Tam Ho Tai 1983 Millenarianism and Peasant Politics in Vietnam. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA and London.

Kardec, Allan 2000 Le livre des mediums. Mortagne, Boucherville.

Kohn, Livia 1993 The Taoist Experience. State University of New York Press, New York.

Lancaster, Donald 1961 The Emancipation of French Indochina. Royal Institute for International Affairs, London.

Les Messages Spirites 1999 Tai Xuat Ban.

Nguyen Van Hong 1993 Gioi Thieu Toa Thanh Tay Ninh. Dai Dao Tam Ky Pho Do, Saigon.

The Writings of Hien-Tai Nguyen Van Hong. Online: www.personal.usyd.edu.au/~cdao/tusachdd.htm, accessed 3 May 2007.

Oliver, Victor 1976 Caodai Spiritism. E.J. Brill, Leiden.

Caodaism: A Vietnamese Socio-Religious Movement. In Dynamic Religious Movements: Case Studies of Rapidly Growing Religious Movements Around the World, edited by David Hesselgrave, 273-96. Baker Book House, Grand Rapids.

Pham Cong Tac c. 1950 Con Duong Thieng Lieng Hang Song? Divine Path to Eternal Life, translated by Christopher Hartney and Dao Cong Tam. Online: http://www.personal.usyd.edu.au/~cdao/conduong.htm, accessed 20 November 2007.

c. 1950 Bi Phap. Online: http://www.personal.usyd.edu.au/~cdao/biphap.htm, accessed 25 June 2007.

Puttick, Elizabeth 1997 Women in New Religions: In Search of Community, Sexuality and Spiritual Power. Macmillan, London.

Savini, A.M. 1955 Visages et Image du Sud-Vietnam. Imprimerie d’Outremer, Saigon.

Simon, Pierre J., and Ida Simon-Barouh 1973 Hâù Bóng Un Culte Viêtnamien du Possession Transplanté en France. Mouton, Paris and Le Haye.

Smith, R.B. 1970 An Introduction to Caodaism. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 33(2): 335-49; 33(3): 574-89.

Tran Thu Dung 1996 Le Caodaisme et Victor Hugo. PhD dissertation, Université de Paris VII.

Werner, Jayne Susan 1981 Peasant Politics and Religious Sectarianism: Peasant and priest in the Cao Dai in Viet Nam. Yale University Southeast Asia Studies, New Haven.

Woodside, Alexander Barton 1971 Vietnam and the Chinese Model. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA.

Published

2008-03-16

How to Cite

Hartney, C. (2008). Spiritism and Charisma: Caodaism from its Infancy. Journal for the Academic Study of Religion, 20(3), 334-356. https://doi.org/10.1558/arsr.v20i3.334