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Shinto

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Essentially all followers of Shinto are ethnic Japanese. ... Puberty traditionally boys received warrior loin cloth and girls an underskirt ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Shinto


1
Shinto
2
Shinto
  • From the Chinese words shin and tao
  • The Way of the Gods
  • The Japanese expression kami-no-michi
  • 3 million practitioners worldwide
  • Essentially all followers of Shinto are ethnic
    Japanese. Outside of Japan, Hawaii and Brazil
    have many Shintoists.
  • 90 of Japanese follow some combination of Shinto
    and Buddhism.
  • Japans national religion

3
Views
  • Shinto defines itself as a way of relating to
    the spirit world. (Corduan 311)
  • The kami Divine powers, personal deities,
    impersonal spiritual force, nature spirits
  • Pervades all levels of being
  • Associated with natural phenomena
  • the sun, trees, rice fields, mountains
  • Locations may be marked
  • Guardian Kami of particular areas, clans and
    families
  • Associated with past emperors and heroes

4
Views
  • At the center of Shinto is the mysterious power
    of the kami.
  • Musuhi creating and harmonizing power of the
    kami
  • The way of kami

5
Ideas
  • Human Nature
  • Good
  • Ones family kami is the giver of each individual
    persons life.
  • All human life is therefore respected.
  • Evil is thought to stem from the individuals
    contact with external forces or agents that
    pollute our pure nature.

6
Views
  • Purification
  • No concept of sin
  • Ritual Impurities (tsumi) offend the kami and
    result in calamities
  • Impurities may come from contact with certain
    taboos corpse, menstruation, unkind action
    between people and the environment.
  • Water (at a shrine, misogi), ritual done by
    priest (oharai)

7
Views
  • Ethics and Morality
  • No explicit code of ethics
  • Morality is based upon that which benefits the
    group.
  • Shinto prioritizes the cooperative efforts and
    community celebrations
  • Kindness and unselfishness
  • Shintoists aspire to makoto, sincerity or true
    heart. Makoto is how one obtains the way of
    kami.

8
Views
  • Goal
  • The way of the kami and the way of nature
  • Kannagara Natural religion
  • Same word is used for movement of sun and
    planets.
  • The awareness of and harmony with nature, the
    flow of the universe, beauty, the divine in nature

9
Views
  • Destiny
  • Mix of ideas on ones destiny after death
  • The deceased becomes an ancestor living near the
    family.
  • The Buddhist idea of reincarnation and karma.
  • The deceased reverts back to the kami from who he
    or she received life to be born into the family
    as a new child.

10
Views
  • Generally
  • Optimistic
  • All of nature including human nature is good
  • Close association between gods, nature and
    people harmony
  • A this-worldly focus concerned for good fortune,
    and the celebration and enrichment of life

11
History
  • No founder synthesis of indigenous religions
    with influence primarily from Buddhism.
  • The religion of pre-unified Japan consisted
    originally of "an amorphous mix of nature
    worship, fertility cults, divination techniques,
    hero worship, and shamanism."
  • ("The Fountainhead of Miracles," at
    http//www.shinreikyo.or.jp)
  • 4th c AD Japan unified under one emperor.
  • Established one religion as superior to all
    others

12
History
  • In 6th c AD influence from China and Korea
  • Cultural shifts
  • Writing, architecture, implements
  • Philosophy and religion
  • Confucianism filial piety, authority, social
    ethic
  • Buddhism ordered worldview, hierarchy of beings
    and spirits flourished
  • Taoism yin yang

13
History
  • The Kojiki
  • In the 8th c at the initiation of the emperor a
    collection was made of various Japanese views of
    origins and the kami.
  • A coherent narrative was produced the Kojiki
    (712 AD), or record of ancient matters.
  • Also the Nihon Shoki (or Nihongi) Chronicles of
    Japan containing discovered variations of the
    Kojiki.

14
History
  • The Kojiki
  • Mythological history of Japan genealogies of
    gods political text establishing Japans
    identity with respect to China and the divine
    origin of the emperor.
  • The Kojiki and Nihongi are two of the most
    important texts in Shinto.
  • No established scripture

15
History
  • According to the Kojiki
  • Japan was created by the divine couple, Izanagi (
    male) and Izanami (female) who gave birth to the
    islands of Japan, plants, animals, the various
    Japanese clans, and other kami.

16
History
  • From Izanagi came the three important deities
  • Amaterasu sun goddess
  • Tsukiyomi moon god
  • Susa-no-no storm god
  • The main deity is the sun goddess, Amaterasu who
    is the origin of the imperial family. Flag
  • Thus the emperor legitimated his claim as ruler.

17
Japanese Flag
  • The sun goddess Amaterasu founded Japan.
  • The emperor is known as the Son of the Sun.
  • A name for Japan is Land of the Rising Sun.

18
History
  • Shinto started its self-reflective existence in
    response to Buddhism. (Corduan 316)
  • Interaction between Shinto and Buddhism debates
  • Indigenous forms of Buddhism developed
  • A synthesis of Shinto and Buddhism developed
    called Ryobu (two-sided Shinto).
  • Buddhism overshadows Shinto
  • Zen and Confucianism became of the philosophy of
    the samurai warriors.
  • Animistic Shinto continues among common people

19
History
  • In the 19th c a Shinto revival occurs.
  • 1868 The nationalistic Meiji Restoration begins
  • Followed a period of tight non-imperial rule in
    Japan (Tokugawa era)
  • Imperial power was restored under emperor Meiji
    (died 1912)
  • Shinto identified with Japanese nationalism and
    patriotism
  • State Shinto established

20
State Shinto
  • Shinto as Patriotism
  • Shinto declared to not be a religion during the
    Meiji Restoration
  • Government took control of shrines and paid
    priest
  • The emperor is divine descendant of Amaterasu the
    sun goddess
  • Continued until the end of WW II

21
Shrine Shinto
  • The place of special ceremonies of ones life
    cycle (except funerals).
  • Entrance the torii gate
  • Ceremonial washing with water
  • Two areas
  • Haiden (hall of worship).
  • Open or under roof
  • Bell rung
  • Offerings presented money, food
  • Honden (inner area)
  • Closed to public
  • Place of sacred objects associated with shrine
    kami

22
Torri Gates
23
Ise Shrine
The most revered shrine in Japan is the Ise
Shrine of Amaterasu
24
Domestic Shinto
  • Shinto is mainly practiced in the home
  • Kamidana shrine for venerating the family kami
  • High shelf
  • Offerings
  • Amulets

25
The Life Cycle
  • Pre-natal 4 months before birth
  • One month First trip to the tutelary kami
    shrine where the child is presented
  • Girls at 3 and 7 and boys at 5 presented to the
    kami
  • Puberty traditionally boys received warrior
    loin cloth and girls an underskirt
  • Marriage
  • 61, 77, 88
  • Death Buddhist ritual

26
Festivals
  • New years decorate to welcome the kami
  • February 3rd End of winter
  • Spring Festival
  • One month long
  • Purification
  • Successful planting
  • June rites for protection of crops
  • Fall thanksgiving to the kami with firstfruits
    offered to the kami
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