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Shinto

Introduction
The Gods
Shrine Shinto
State Shinto
Sect Shinto

PowerPoint Presentation: An Overview of Shinto

The Indigenous religion of Japan

 

Preliminary considerations:

Where is God?

Can the sacred be found in nature? Does the Creator permeate the creation?

Recall the most beautiful natural setting you�ve ever seen. Remember how you felt when you were there? Would you say you felt close to God in those surroundings?

The Shinto religion is based on a sense of sacredness in and of nature originating in the natural beauty of Japan. It is religion of feeling and acting (ceremonies, rites and rituals) more than of belief - thus it is sensory (in touch with surrounding nature and ritual activity) and communal (rich in public and national festivity and providing a sense of connection to a people)

  • The name Shinto comes from two words: shen (chi, "spirit") + tao (way). Thus Shinto means "The way of the gods" or "The Spirit Way".

  • Shinto is the ancient, indigenous religion of Japan - an ethnic religion, a nationalistic and cultural religion. All Japanese are Shinto by virtue of being Japanese. They may also be part of any other religion.

  • There is no founder of this faith and it had no name until sixth cent. CE (it was only given a name to distinguish it from Buddhism once the foreign religion reached Japan's shore).

  • The closest thing to scripture are mythological books of ancient Japanese history: Kojiki is myths of gods and man, Nihongi is ancient history of Japan - both texts were written down by early eighth century but passed down orally before then.

  • Shinto is, perhaps, the only indigenous "nature" religion to successfully compete with the "classic" religions and develop into a contemporary religion in its own right.

  • There are three forms that Shinto has taken:

Shrine Shinto

State Shinto

Sect Shinto

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Created by Laura Ellen Shulman 

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Last updated: April 24, 2011