Sect Shinto (教派神道, Kyōha Shintō, or 宗派, Shuha Shintō) refers to several independent organized Shinto groups that were excluded by law in 1882 from government-run State Shinto.[1] These independent groups have more developed belief systems than mainstream Shrine Shinto, which focuses more on rituals.[2] Many such groups are organized into the Kyōha Shintō Rengōkai (教派神道連合会, Federation of Sectarian Shinto).[3] Before World War II, Sect Shinto consisted of 13 denominations, which were referred to as the 13 Shinto schools. Since then, there have been additions and withdrawals of membership.
Whereas Shrine Shinto is an aggregation of various shrines and customary beliefs in various parts of Japan (which became united under the Ise Grand Shrine after the Meiji period), denominational Shinto is based on the kokugaku (lit. 'national study') school of philosophy. Tenrikyo was categorized as Sect Shinto but is often considered a separate monotheistic religion.[4]
Overview
Starting in the late Edo period, Sect Shinto became established in the Meiji era after the Meiji Restoration.[5] Its formation was stimulated by religious policies of the Meiji government,[6] and it emerged at a time when there was increasing theological discussion among people of a wider range of classes, rather than only intellectuals.[7]
In 1868, the religious administration of the new Meiji government issued the Shinto-Buddhist Separation Order, resulting in the haibutsu kishaku and the restoration of the unity of ritual and government system. Following the Taikyo Proclamation, which designated Shinto as the state religion, the Taikyo Institute was established, though it was soon reformed into the Bureau of Shinto Affairs and later the sect Shinto Taikyo.
During these early trial-and-error religious policies, the Meiji government promoted a nationalized system of Shinto education by religious instructors known as kyōdō shoku.[6] However, with the spread of the separation of church and state and freedom of religion, the kyōdō shoku came to an end. This produced a division in Shinto between shrines for state-run public rituals and religious groups centered on edification.[6] Groups that met certain conditions (such as the number of followers) were officially recognized as "independent denominations". This was the beginning of denominational Shinto.
This separation strengthened the idea that it was necessary to establish an institution that was a more developed version of the former Shodo Shido Practice Center. Accordingly, the Meiji government established the Office of Japanese Classics Research in Tokyo Prefecture, independent of the Bureau of Shinto Affairs, in order to organize the exploration of ideas unique to Japan. It was later succeeded by Kokugakuin University.
Establishment
Formation of a united government
The impetus for denominational Shinto was the separation of Shinto and Buddhism, which began in 1868 (first year of Meiji) with the revival of the Department of Divinities and the separation of Shinto and Buddhism, which started with the Shinto-Buddhist Hanzen Order, a Daijo-kan directive.[8] This led to the formation of the unity of ritual and government, and a Shinto government was revived. Around then, official decrees abolished the hereditary system of Shinto priests, thus ending the jurisdiction of the Shirakawa and Yoshida families over Shinto.[8]
The rituals of the Shinto shrines are the religious services of the state, and it is, of course, true that they are not the private property of one person or one family. This is a common practice in the country, and priests are considered to be a separate species from the people.
— Meiji 4th Year Taishogun's Bulletin No. 234
During this transition, the concept of missionaries to propagate Shinto remained. In 1870 (Meiji 3), the imperial Taikyo Proclamation designated Shinto as the state religion.[9][10] The Taikyo Institute was established in 1872 (Meiji 5) as a missionary organization, but was dissolved in 1875 (Meiji 8). It was succeeded by the Bureau of Shinto Affairs in the same year, to which the originally disparate folk belief religions belonged.
Ministry of Religion, kyōdō shoku, and the Taikyo Institute
In 1872 (Meiji 5), the Missionary Office was abolished and replaced with the Ministry of Religion.[11] In April, Shinto priests and monks were assigned kyōdō shoku positions, of which there were 14 ranks.[9] The Ministry was later dissolved in 1877, and kyōdō shoku was abolished in 1884.[12]
The priesthood was initially divided geographically in two on April 29, with the eastern division headed by Konoe Tadafusa, priest of Ise Grand Shrine, and the western division headed by Senge Takatomi, the grand priest of Izumo Taisha Shrine. Since it was assumed that one's religious affiliation was free, there was a struggle for power between the Ise and Izumo factions.[13] On January 30, 1873, the two-part system was abolished and the two were combined as Shinto. However, it later became a three-part system with Senge Takatomi, Koga Takemichi, and Inaba Masakuni, and then a four-part system with the addition of Tanaka Yoriyasu, the grand priest of the Ise Grand Shrine. On that same day, the Kurozumikyō and Shinto Shusei were specially established as denominational Shinto sects, and the compartment system was abolished.[14]
In May 1873 (Meiji 6), the Ministry of Religion issued a church ordinance, which set standards for the approval of kosha (religious lecture or meeting). In August, the Ministry approved the Kurozumikyō, the Tohokami (later Misogi-Kyo), the Mitake, and the Fuji Isan (later Fuso-kyo), as well as Buddhist kosha.[15]
In 1873, the Taikyo Institute was established—first in Kojimachi, Kioicho and later in Masukami, Shiba at Zōjō-ji—as the head temple for kyōdō shoku of a joint Shinto and Buddhist sect.[16] The Taikyo Institute was initiated by the Buddhist side to concretize teaching by the Ministry of Religion, but it later became focused entirely on Shinto.[17] The Buddhist side, led by Shinshū, broke away from the religion.[16] On April 30, 1875 (Meiji 8), the Taikyo Institute was dissolved by order of the Ministry of Religion.[18]
Bureau of Shinto Affairs
Just prior to the dissolution of the Taikyo Institute, the Bureau of Shinto Affairs was formed in March 1875 by a group of Shinto shrines, mainly at Ise Grand Shrine, and other shrines throughout Japan, as well as Shinto priests and instructors belonging to private Shinto-related kosha.[16] The Shinto side sensed that there was no organization that corresponded to the various Buddhist sects,[17] and on March 27, 1875 (Meiji 8), Grand High Priest Suechi Sanjonishi, Grand Priest-in-Charge Inaba Masakuni, Yoriyasu Tanaka, Hirayama Seisai, and Konosetsu Tsume jointly petitioned the Ministry of Religion for the establishment of a government office for Shinto.[19][20]
The next day, March 28, 1875 (Meiji 8), he received permission to establish the Bureau of Shinto Affairs.[19] On April 8, he requested the Ministry of Religion to establish the Bureau of Shinto Affairs. The content of the request was that even small shrines, centering on the Imperial Shrine at Ise, should be able to cooperate with each other for the purpose of propagating Shinto.[19] On April 15, the Bureau of Shinto Affairs was opened in the Tokyo Branch Office of the Jingu Shichosha.[21] Once the Bureau of Shinto Affairs was prepared—which brought together the traditionally existing shrines, Shinto kosha, and churches of folk beliefs—various denominations that met certain conditions were able to branch out and become independent from it.
The following year, in 1876 (Meiji 9), a dormitory was established in the Shinto Office to train priests. Also that year, the Kurozumikyō and Shinto Shusei, which had been flourishing, became independent denominations.[22]
Inaba Masakuni was the first president of the Bureau of Shinto Affairs.[23] Yoriyasu Tanaka was the Chief of Ise Jingu and the first head of Jingūkyō.[24] Hirayama Seisai was the grand priest of Hikawa Shrine and the first headmaster of Shinto Taiseikyo and Ontake-kyo.[25] Kousetsu Tsume would become the second head minister of the Ontake Sect.[26]
In 1886, the Bureau of Shinto Affairs was reorganized, later becoming the sect Shinto Taikyo.
Controversy over shrine deities
The Bureau of Shinto Affairs had a plan to make Jingu Haruhaiden (later becoming Tokyo Daijingu) the central temple[12] and a center for missionary work.[27] Since Jingu Haruhaiden was to enshrine a branch spirit of Amaterasu, not only the Ministry of Religion but also the Emperor visited the building and obtained permission from the Seiin to begin construction, which was funded by donations from the Imperial Household Agency and various families.[27]
In 1880, the opinion of Senge Takatomi on the deities to be worshipped in the Bureau of Shinto Affairs' temples was so controversial that it divided Shinto into the Ise and Izumo factions.[28] By order of the Meiji Emperor, a great conference on Shinto was held in January 1881 (Meiji 14), attended by 118 people, including all the chief priests of the government buildings and the instructors of the sixth grade and above. However, the issue could not be settled. Thus, it was settled in February by the imperial decision of the Meiji Emperor.[12]
Separation of ritual and faith
In January 1882, the separation of ritual and religion was enacted by the Ministry of Home Affairs through Bill No. 7, which prohibited those in the kyōdō shoku (priest-teacher position) from performing rituals, thereby promoting the separation of those who continued to be priests performing rituals or preaching the teachings, and solidifying the formation of Sect Shinto.[28][1]
Priests shall no longer serve as teachers and shall not be involved in funeral services.
— January 24, Meiji 15, the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications No. 7
After this, on May 15, 1882, the six factions (including Jingūkyō) became independent. Jingu Haruhayashiden (the source of the ritual god controversy) was transferred to Jingūkyō's ownership and renamed Daijingu Shrine, and Jingū Taima were distributed by Jingūkyō.[29] Senge Takatomi took the opportunity to resign from his position as priest of Izumo Taisha Shrine and handed it over to his younger brother, who became the head of the Izumo Taisha Sect.[30]
On August 11, 1884, the government issued a proclamation abolishing the kyōdō shoku position.[31] In turn, this meant the Bureau of Shinto Affairs had lost its original reason for opening,[31] and so in 1886, the Bureau reorganized; it later became Shinto Taikyo, one of the schools of Shinto.
Office of Japanese Classics Research
On November 4, 1881, the Office of Japanese Classics Research was established as a successor to the Bureau of Shinto Affairs.[32] Like its predecessor, it was a unified Shinto missionary organization established to train Shinto priests.[33] Funded by an imperial gift, it purchased a mansion in Iidacho, Kojimachi-ku (present-day Chiyoda-ku).[33]
Immediately after the Great Council of Shinto, it was decided to establish the Office upon the proposal of Akiyoshi Yamada of Lord of Home Affairs.[34] Prince Arisugawa Takahito was appointed as its first president, and announced his intention to pursue a unique Japanese academic discipline.[35] In the "Announcement of the Establishment of the Imperial Academy" (jointly signed by Li-Kuro Kubo, Yorikuni Inoue, Nakasaburo Itsumi, and Hans Shishino), the intention of the establishment of the academy was to train personnel to maintain kokutai (national identity).[36] The Imperial Institute established branches in the provinces and qualified students for priesthood.[34]
The Office was later succeeded by Kokugakuin University.
Academics
In December 1868 (the first year of Meiji), the Imperial Academy was established in Kyoto but was abolished the following year. When the Ministry of Religion was established in 1872, it was responsible for research.[37]
In 1882 (Meiji 15), institutes of imperial studies were established one after another. This was due to a keen awareness of the need for doctrinal studies in the rites and rituals controversy. The controversy was divided between the doctrinalists (denominational Shinto sects) and the national scholars (academics). As the doctrinalists became independent, the national scholars were stimulated and the separation of doctrine and learning progressed.[38] On April 30, Jingūkyō established Kōgakkan University in Ise.[38] On May 30, the Department of Classics was established at the University of Tokyo.[34]
After World War II
On December 15, 1945, the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers (GHQ) issued the Shinto Directive aimed at dismantling State Shinto. In January of the following year, the Dai Nihon Shinto-kai, the Imperial Academy, and the Jingu Bonan-kai were dissolved to form the Association of Shinto Shrines, a religious corporation.[39] In March, Jingu-Shogakukan University was abolished by the Shinto directive; in April, representatives of each denomination explained their denomination to the GHQ Civilian Information and Education Department at Broadcasting Hall 108.[40] In June, at a meeting at Tenrikyo's Honshiba Grand Church between the presidents of the various schools and W. K. Vance, head of the Religious Affairs Division at GHQ, the occupying forces promised not to impose any restrictions on the religious activities of the Shinto sects.[40]
Tenrikyo established a policy of restoration immediately in 1945, and Konkokyo established the Council for the Establishment of the Faith in 1951 to eliminate Shinto colors.[41]
The system in which there were 13 Shinto sects and 13 Buddhist sects recognized by the government was broken up into even smaller groups as religious organizations when the Religious Corporation Law was enacted.
Shinto research institutions
Many of the scholars who had played a central role in Shinto research and education were expelled and replaced by folklorists such as Shinobu Orikuchi and Kunio Yanagita, as well as younger Shinto scholars who escaped expulsion.[42] On March 20, 1946, Kokugakuin University became a corporation, and the training of priests, which had been commissioned by the Ministry of Home Affairs, was continued from April as a new commission from the Jinja Main Office. The following year, Vance and Woodard of the Religious Affairs Division of GHQ decided that there was no problem with the study of Shinto and training of priests as a private university, and in 1948, the Shinto Affairs Department was established to form a Shinto training organization.[43]
The Shinto Scholarship Association, which had been conducting Shinto courses, was also dissolved in 1946.[44] In July 1949, at a meeting of the Federation of Shinto Sects at the Kinko Grand Church of the Tenrikyo Tokyo Branch Office, it was decided that Shinto lectures would be held at the Shinto Training Department of Kokugakuin University on behalf of the Federation of Shinto Sects; this practice continued until 1966.[44] Holding the Shinto course promoted the university as a Shinto university that combined both Shrine Shinto and Sect Shinto.[44] As of 1996, Kokugakuin University was said to be the only university with a course on Sect Shinto.
Sects
Overview
There are five main groups of Sect Shinto:[1]
- Fukko Shinto (Revival Shinto) lineage – includes Shinto Taikyo, Shinrikyo, and Izumo-taishakyo (which originates from Izumo Taisha)[1]
- Confucian Shinto – Shinto Taiseikyo (神道大成教) and Shinto Shusei[1]
- Mountain worship lineage – includes Jikkō kyō, Fuso-kyo, and Ontake-kyo[1]
- Purification sects – Misogikyo and Shinshu-kyo[1]
- Utopian groups – Kurozumikyō, Tenrikyo, and Konkokyo[1]
Tenrikyo is now classified by the Agency for Cultural Affairs as one of the various religions, not as a Shinto denomination.[45]
History
The first independent denominations were Kurozumikyō and Shinto Shusei in 1876 (Meiji 9). Jingūkyō was founded in 1882, but later reorganized into the Ise Shrine Offering Association[lower-alpha 1] in 1899 (Meiji 32).[46]
In 1895, eight denominations—Izumo Taisha-kyo, Kurozumikyō, Ontake-kyo, Jikkō kyō, Shinto Taiseikyo, Shinshu-kyo, Fuso-kyo, and Jingūkyō—joined to form the Shintō Dōshikai (lit. 'Society of Shinto Colleagues').[47][48][49] In 1899 (Meiji 32), the group was joined by Shinto Headquarters (Shinto Taikyo), Shinrikyo, and Misogikyo, and the name was changed to Shintō Konwakai; the same year, Jingūkyō reorganized as Jingū Hōnsaikai and withdrew from the federation.[49] In 1912 (Meiji 45), Konkokyo, Shinto Shusei, and Tenrikyo joined, forming 13 groups (14 if including the breakaway Jingūkyō), and the name was changed to Shintō Kyōha Rengōkai.[47] In 1934, the current name Kyōha Shintō Rengōkai (教派神道連合会, Federation of Sectarian Shinto) was adopted.[47]
After World War II, Oomoto joined the federation, but Tenrikyo and Shinto Taiseikyo withdrew. Tensha Tsuchimikado Shinto was re-established after the war, but never joined the federation. Shinshu-kyo withdrew in 1959 but returned in 1994.
In 1995, on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of its formation, the "100th Anniversary of the Formation of the Federation of Shinto Churches" was held.[50] In addition to Misogi-kyo, Shinto Taikyo, Jingūkyō, Konkokyo, Kurozumikyō, Fuso-kyo, Ontake-kyo, Shinrikyo, Oomoto, Shinshu-kyo, Shinto Shusei, Izumo Taisha-kyo, and twelve other denominations, the presidents of Tenrikyo and Shinto Taiseikyo also attended.[50]
Today, the federation has 12 affiliated groups.[49]
Denomination | Founder | Founding date | Independence date | Joined federation | Withdrew from federation | Followers[51] | Priests[51] | Shrines and churches[51] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kurozumikyō | Munetada Kurozumi | 1846[52] | October 1876 | 1895 | — | 297,351 | 1,312 | 307 |
Shinto Shusei | Nitta Kuniteru | 1849[53] | 1912 | — | 8,084 | 213 | 52 | |
Jingūkyō (disestablished 1946) |
Yoritsune Tanaka | 1882 | May 1882 | 1895 | 1899 | —[lower-alpha 3] | — | — |
Izumo-taishakyo | Senge Takatomi | 1882[54] | 1895 | — | 1,266,058 | 8,212 | 161 | |
Fuso-kyo | Shishino Nakaba | 1895 | — | 31,150 | 425 | 135 | ||
Jikkō kyō | Hanamori Shibata | 1895 | — | 10,910 | 250 | 87 | ||
Shinto Taiseikyo | Hirayama Seisai | 1882 | 1895 | 1976[47] | 21,515 | 173 | 30 | |
Shinshu-kyo | Masatsugu Yoshimura | 1895 | — | 126,181 | 203 | 93 | ||
Ontake-kyo | Osuke Tsuda | September 1882 | 1895 | — | 42,550 | 1,119 | 346 | |
Shinto Taikyo | Inaba Masakuni | 1872[lower-alpha 4] | January 1886 | 1899 | — | 21,375 | 470 | 163 |
Shinrikyo | Tsunehiko Sano | 1880[55][56] | October 1894 | 1899 | — | 67,248 | 938 | 139 |
Misogikyo | Masakane Inoue | 1899 | — | 78,675 | 482 | 61 | ||
Konkokyo | Kinko Ogami | November 15, 1859[57] | June 1900 | 1912 | — | 397,461 | 3,521 | 1,484 |
Tenrikyo | Nakayama Miki | 1838[58] | November 1908 | 1912 | 1970[47] | 2,000,000[lower-alpha 5][59] | ||
Tensha Tsuchimikado Shinto | Abe no Seimei | 1953 | — | — | 50,000[60] | |||
Oomoto | Nao Deguchi | 1892[61] | 1956 | 1956 | — | 166,367 | 4,280 | 715 |
Total (sensuo stricto) | — | — | — | — | — | 2,534,925[51] | 21,598[51] | 3,773[51] |
Total (sensuo lacto) | — | — | — | — | — | 4,584,925 |
Kurozumikyō
Kurozumikyō (黒住教) is a group highly linked to Amaterasu.
Shinto Shusei
Shinto Shusei (神道修成派) is considered a form of Confucian Shinto.[45][62][1] It was founded in 1849 by Nitta Kuniteru (1829–1902),[53] who was known to have read the Analects at age 9.[53] He founded the sect at age twenty,[53] and considered Japanese people to be descendants of deities.[53] He considered allegiance to the Emperor of Japan to be central to his philosophy; he was a supporter of Sonnō jōi but supported the Boshin Rebellion and the Meiji Restoration later.[53]
Alongside Kurozumikyō, it was one of the first two Shinto sects to gain independence in 1876.[46] It has not been very active in the postwar era.[63]
Jingūkyō
Jingūkyō (神宮教) was a sect run out of Ise Grand Shrine which distributed Jingu Taima. It was a rival to Izumo-taishakyo and eventually left the federation and came to dominate State Shinto.
Izumo-taishakyo
Izumo-taishakyo was founded by Senge Takatomi.[54][64] and has 1,266,058 followers.[51] It is a Fukko Shinto lineage and at one point was a major rival with Jingūkyō.
Fuso-kyo
Fusō-kyō (扶桑教) is a mountain worship sect traditionally seen to have been founded by Hasegawa Kakugyo (who was also associated with Jikkō kyō).[65]
Jikkō kyō
Jikkō kyō (実行教) is a mountain worship sect traditionally seen to have been founded by Hasegawa Kakugyo (who was also associated with Fusō-kyō).[65]
Shinto Taiseikyo
Shinto Taiseikyo (神道大成教) is a Confucian Shinto sect[62][1] founded by Hirayama Seisai.
Shinshu-kyo
Shinshu-kyo (神習教) is a "purification sect" alongside Misogikyo.[1]
It was founded by Masaki Yoshimura[66] (1839–1915[67]), who was a survivor of the Ansei Purge.[68] He worked at Ise Jingu and later was head of Tatsuta Shrine, but due to laws restricting teaching, he entrusted his children to Itō Hirobumi (before he became Prime Minister) and established a new branch based on his family traditions.[69]
Ontake-kyo
Ontake-kyo (御嶽教) is a mountain worship sect dedicated to Mount Ontake.[70] It had 3 million members in 1930,[71] which decreased to around 40,000 members in 2020.[51]
Shinto Taikyo
Shintō Taikyō (神道大教) is the direct successor to the Taikyo Institute. Its name "Taikyo" refers to the Three Great Teachings first proclaimed in the Proclamation of the Great Doctrine.[72]
Shinrikyo
Shinrikyo (神理教, lit. 'divine principle') is a Shinto sect considered to be part of the Fukko Shinto lineage of Sect Shinto, alongside Shinto Taikyo and Izumo-taishakyo.[45] The name "Shinrikyo" is relatively common among Shinto groups,[73] and uses different kanji characters than Aum Shinrikyo, a cult and terrorist organization.
It was founded by Tsunehiko Sano[73][56] in 1880.[55][56] Sano had previously studied medicine and was an advocate of traditional Japanese medicine. He studied kokugaku in his youth under Nishida Naokai.[74][75]
Sano's thought blurred the lines between monotheism and polytheism, entering transtheism.[73] His concept of kami was aimed at resisting the propagation of Christianity while composing teachings that were in line with the aims of popular national indoctrination. His core elements of the concept of kami did not change throughout his life.[73]
He believed the etymology of kami was derived from vital force (Ikimochi). He saw this as emphasizing the interconnectedness of everything, from humans to nature, and as such this could be interpreted as a monotheistic view.[73] He saw all the kami as unified under a divine principle, hence the name of the group.[73]
Misogikyo
Misogikyo (禊教, lit. 'Misogi religion') is considered a "purification sect" alongside Shinshu-kyo.[1]
The group is quite obscure today.[76] It is very ritual-focused, with little theoretical theology. In this way, it contrasts with Yoshida Shinto.[76] It emphasizes right state of mind and self-control.[76] It has influence from Confucian Shinto but is its own tradition.[76]
Konkokyo
Konkōkyō (金光教, Konkō-kyō) is a group often considered to be its own religion, which emerged from Shinbutsu-shūgō.
Tenrikyo
Tenrikyo (天理教, Tenrikyō, sometimes rendered as 'Tenriism') is a Sect Shinto group founded by Nakayama Miki. It is often considered a separate religion from Shinto.
Tensha Tsuchimikado Shinto
In the Edo period, the Tsuchimikado family, descendants of Abe no Seimei, established Tensha Tsuchimikado Shinto influenced by Confucian Shinto through Suika Shinto. However, because of the inclusion of fortune-telling and magic, the Meiji government considered it pagan and issued the Tensha Shinto Prohibition Ordinance. After the war, it was restored as "Tensha Tsuchimikado Shinto Headquarters", and registered as a religious corporation rather than a Sect Shinto or a Shinto shrine.
Oomoto
Oomoto (大本, Ōmoto, lit. 'Great Source, or Great Origin') is often seen as a new religion.
New Sect Shinto
New Sect Shinto (shin kyoha Shinto)[77] is a subset of Sect Shinto,[78] and consists of numerous organizations.[79] It is influenced by Buddhism and Confucianism.[78]
It is part of the Sect Shinto movement not centering upon 13 sects.[80] New Shinto sects have shamanistic leadership, syncretism of religious and philosophical beliefs, closely knit social organization, and individualism.[80] Some groups have characteristics of monotheism, in the extreme case making a compromise of Buddhism, Confucianism, and folk religion.[80]
See also
Notes
- ↑ This was one of the predecessor organizations that formed the Association of Shinto Shrines after World War II.
- ↑ Statistics source excluding Tenrikyo and Tensha Tsuchimikado Shinto
- ↑ Depending on interpretation, up to 98 million followers due to its role in founding the Association of Shinto Shrines.
- ↑ As the Great Teaching Institute
- ↑ 2002 data
References
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- ↑ "教派神道連合会(教派連)". Kyoharen.jp. Retrieved 2018-12-23.
- ↑ Fukaya, Tadamasa, "The Fundamental Doctrines of Tenrikyo," Tenrikyo Overseas Mission Department, Tenri-Jihosha, 1960, p.2
- ↑ Bowker, John (2003-01-01), "Kyōha Shintō", The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/acref/9780192800947.001.0001, ISBN 978-0-19-280094-7, retrieved 2022-04-30
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- ↑ "Kyôha Shintô Rengôkai 教派神道連合会". Glossary of Shinto Names and Terms. Institute for Japanese Culture and Classics, Kokugakuin University. 2001. Retrieved 2023-05-16.
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- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Encyclopedia of Shinto詳細". 國學院大學デジタルミュージアム (in Japanese). Retrieved 2023-03-06.
- 1 2 Miller, R.A. (1962). 現代日本文読本: Graded Lessons for Mastering the Written Language. Tuttle Publishing. p. 115. ISBN 9780804816472. Retrieved 2015-01-01.
- 1 2 "Notes". Shinto and the State, 1868-1988. Princeton University Press. 1989. pp. 171–190. doi:10.1515/9780691221298-014. ISBN 9780691221298.
- 1 2 3 日本国語大辞典,百科事典マイペディア,デジタル大辞泉,世界大百科事典内言及, ブリタニカ国際大百科事典 小項目事典,日本大百科全書(ニッポニカ),精選版. "神理教(しんりきょう)とは? 意味や使い方". コトバンク (in Japanese). Retrieved 2023-03-12.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ↑ "The Life of The Founder | KONKOKYO". www.konkokyo.or.jp. Retrieved 2017-02-03.
- ↑ Tenrikyo Doyusha (2014). Tracing the Model Path. Translated by Tenrikyo Overseas Department. Tenrikyo Doyusha.
- ↑ Stuart D. B. Picken. Historical dictionary of Shinto. Rowman & Littlefield, 2002. p. 223. ISBN 0-8108-4016-2
- ↑ https://archive.today/20230316232109/https://d-museum.kokugakuin.ac.jp/eos/detail/id=9751
- ↑ Tamura, Yoshirō (2000). Japanese Buddhism: a cultural history. Translated by Jeffrey Hunter (1st English ed.). Tokyo: Kosei Pub. Co. ISBN 4-333-01684-3. OCLC 45384117.
- 1 2 "The Forms of Shinto". Caroline Myss. Retrieved 2023-03-06.
- ↑ "Glossary of Shinto Names and Terms - Shintô shûsei-ha 神道修成派". Institute for Japanese Culture and Classics, Kokugakuin University. 2001.
- ↑ Teeuwen, M.; Breen, J.; Inoue, N.; Mori, M. (2003). Shinto, a Short History. RoutledgeCurzon. p. 177. ISBN 9780415311793. Retrieved 2015-01-01.
- 1 2 Picken, Stuart D. B. (2010-12-28). Historical Dictionary of Shinto. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-7372-8.
- ↑ 小項目事典, 朝日日本歴史人物事典,デジタル版 日本人名大辞典+Plus,ブリタニカ国際大百科事典. "芳村正秉(よしむら・まさもち)とは? 意味や使い方". コトバンク (in Japanese). Retrieved 2023-03-06.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ↑ "歴史". 神道神習教公式ページ (in Japanese). Retrieved 2023-03-09.
- ↑ 井上順孝 1991, p. 277-278.
- ↑ 井上順孝 1991, p. 282.
- ↑ Holtom, D.C. (1938). The National Faith of Japan: A Study in Modern Shinto. Paragon Book Reprint Corporation. Retrieved 2015-01-01.
- ↑ Picken, S.D.B. (1994). Essentials of Shinto: An Analytical Guide to Principal Teachings. Greenwood Press. p. 232. ISBN 9780313264313. Retrieved 2015-01-01.
- ↑ "Shinto Taikyo". www.philtar.ac.uk. Retrieved 2023-03-12.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Sano Tsunehiko and "Divine Principle (Shinri)"". www2.kokugakuin.ac.jp. Retrieved 2023-03-05.
- ↑ https://rks.accesson.kr/assets/pdf/2564/journal-23-1-211.pdf
- ↑ "Encyclopedia of Shinto詳細". 國學院大學デジタルミュージアム.
- 1 2 3 4 Sawada, Janine Anderson (1998). "Mind and Morality in Nineteenth-Century Japanese Religions: Misogi-Kyō and Maruyama-Kyō". Philosophy East and West. 48 (1): 108–141. doi:10.2307/1399927. ISSN 0031-8221. JSTOR 1399927.
- ↑ Fleming, L. (2001). Excel Senior High School Studies of Religion. Pascal Press. p. 278. ISBN 9781740202411. Retrieved 2015-01-01.
- 1 2 "Shuha Shinto". jinja.jp. Archived from the original on 2015-01-01. Retrieved 2015-01-01.
- ↑ Barrett, D.B.; Johnson, T.M.; Guidry, C.R.; Crossing, P.F. (2001). World Christian Trends, AD 30-AD 2200: Interpreting the Annual Christian Megacensus. William Carey Library. p. 606. ISBN 9780878086085. Retrieved 2015-01-01.
- 1 2 3 "Intercultural Communication Studies XII-4 2003 Asian Approaches to Human Communication Aspects of Shinto in Japanese Communication". CiteSeerX 10.1.1.567.8041.
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External links
- Official site of Kyōha Shintō Rengōkai (in Japanese)