Taoist Church of Italy
The Taoist Church of Italy is a religious body of Taoism established in 2013 by Vincenzo di Ieso, a fourteenth-generation Taoist master of the Xuanwu school of the Wudang Mountains, into which he was initiated in 1993 with the ecclesiastical name of Li Xuanzong. Despite the founder's particular affiliation, the church intends to incorporate all forms of Taoism in Italy. The establishment of the church has been defined by a scholar of religious rights as a "crucial event for both Taoism and religious freedom in Italy".
History
After an earlier experience as the "Taoist Association of Italy" in the 1990s, master Vincenzo di Ieso—Li Xuanzong ordained the first Italian disciples into Taoist priesthood in 2010, then formally constituting the Taoist Church of Italy on 14 November 2013.The statute of the organization is "designed according to Italian regulations and in the perspective of a future agreement with the state". The Taoist Church of Italy would be the "first case in the world of a Taoist institution adopting such a type of confessional organization", according to the description given by the Italian CESNUR. At its dawn in China, however, Taoism organized itself into communitarian-confessional experiences, to develop in later centuries merely as an ensemble of ritual traditions exercised by priestly lineages and monastic orders. Such character is maintained in contemporary China, where those who qualify for the title of "Taoist" are only the initiates of priestly and monastic orders, who exert their sacerdotal function within the framework of Chinese folk religion.
Organization
According to the statute of the church, "adherents" are all those members who are not "Taoists", that is to say all those members who have not formally undertaken any Taoist religious engagement and yet participate, even temporarily, to the activities of the church.The Taoist Church of Italy, which is recognized by the Chinese Taoist Association, makes a distinction between its lay members and its sacerdotal body in accordance with the Chinese Taoist tradition. Only the members of the sacerdotal body, whether novices or already ordained ones, may call themselves "Taoists" in the Chinese acceptation of the term.
All lay members may have access to the novitiate, formally choosing to apply Taoist ethical principles into their own life. Through an initiation, members may pass from the degree of adherents to that of novices, and thenceforth they may attend the courses of the Higher Academy of Taoist Education. If novices are then accepted as disciples by a master, a fully ordained priest, they may take the vows and be ordained themselves as daoshi.