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What is Wong Tai Sin and who is Wong Tai Sin?

Huang Chuping (Wong Tai Sin)

Origin of Huang Chuping (Wong Tai Sin): Huang Chuping (Wong Tai Sin), a Taoist priest in Jin Dynasty, a famous Taoist immortal, was born in Jinhua, Zhejiang. When he was fifteen, his family asked him to herd sheep. Seeing his purity and kindness, some Taoist priests took him to the stone room in Jin Huashan to study Taoism and become a fairy.

Du Xiong became immortal: After Huang Chuping entered the mountains to learn Taoism, more than forty years passed in an instant. His brother Huang Chu went into the mountains to find ChuPing, but he didn't find it all these years. Later, I met a Taoist who was good at divination in the city. The Taoist told Chuchi where Huang Chuping was and took him to Jin Huashan to find Huang Chuping. When Huang Chuping was in front of his brother, countless white stones turned into thousands of sheep. For the sake of his brother's divine power, Huang Chu abandoned his wife and stayed in Chuping to study Taoism. After eating turpentine poria cocos for 5,000 days, you can wait and die, walking in Japan and China without a shadow, looking like a boy. Later, the two brothers went back to the village together, and when they saw that all their relatives and friends were basically dead, they returned to Jin Huashan. When I went back, I was awarded Nanbofeng, whose surname was Chi Chuping, and the word was changed to red pine nuts. From the beginning, the word was changed to Luban. After that, dozens of people passed on this medicine and won eternal life.

The spread of faith: Chisong Temple was built in the northern part of Jinhua in the Jin Dynasty, with a large scale and "the highest Taoist temple in the south of the Yangtze River". In the past, faith was common in southeastern China. As overseas Chinese went out to make a living, Wong Tai Sin belief gradually spread overseas. Now the Wong Tai Sin Temple in Hong Kong is particularly famous, and many pilgrims come to worship all year round.

References:

Fairy legend,

Concise Taoist dictionary