Shintoism The Shinto Religion example essay topic
There really is no one thing that can be called "Shinto", The name itself is a bit misleading because it is made up of two Chinese words meaning "the way of the gods" (Shen: "spiritual power, divinity"; Tao: "the way or path"). The word for this in Japanese is: 'the way of the kami. ' Many things can be said about Shinto. First, it was a tribal religion, not a state one. However, even when the tribes were organized into coherent states, they still retained their Shinto beliefs.
Second, all Shinto cults believe in Kami ("the divine") Individual clans worshipped a single Kami which was regarded as the principal ancestor of the clan. As the clan spread, it still worshipped it's Kami, but when one clan conquered another clan-the defeated clan had to worship the Kami of the victorious clan. What the Kami consist of is hard to define. Kami refers to the gods of Heaven, Earth, and the Underworld. But Kami also are all those things that have divinity in them to some degree. Third, all Shinto involve some sort of shrine worship, the most important was the Izumi Shrine on the coast of the Japan Sea.
Originally, these shrines were (unpolluted land surrounded by trees) or (unpolluted land surrounded by stones). Shinto shrines are usually single rooms raised off the ground, with religious objects placed inside, and on the outside there was a torii (wash-basin). The torii was used for the, which is washing the hands and sometimes the face before entering the shrine. Someone worships a shrine by "attending" it, or devoting oneself to the object that is being worshipped, and by giving offerings to it: the offerings can be anything from vegetables to great riches. Almost nothing at all is known about early Shinto because nothing was written about it. Early Shinto may just be a name given to a large number of unrelated local religions that combined with the the centralized states.
The two texts of Shintoism, the Koji ki (The records of Ancient matters) and theNihongi (Chronicles of Japan), were written down around 700 A.D., two centuries after Japan had declared Buddhism the state religion. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the Japanese government campaigned to make Shinto the national religion. However many people were unhappy with Shintoism. During that time Christianity arrived in Japan. Between 1868 and 1873 Christianity was severely attacked as the government shut out foreigners and their ideas. Many active Christians were killed.
In 1912 the Japanese got religious freedom. Therefore, about 120 million people adhere to 2 or more religions at the same time.
Bibliography
Shinto' web Online. 5 June 1995.
H ishida, Miki. "Religions in Japan". 15 Dec 1995.