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English Pages 296 Year 1982
Japanese
Religion UNITY AND DIVERSITY THIRD EDITION
IAN SERIES
NUNC COGNOSCO EX PARTE
TRENT UNIVERSITY LIBRARY PURCHASED WITH FUNDS FROM:
THE REV. JOHN F. COUGHLAN LIBRARY FUND
Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2019 with funding from Kahle/Austin Foundation
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Japanese Religion: Unity and Diversity Third Edition
IV
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H. Byron Earhart Western Michigan University
WADSWORTH PUBLISHING COMPANY Belmont, California A Division of Wadsworth, Inc.
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Religion Editor: Sheryl Fullerton Production Editor: Judith McKibben Managing Designer: Lois Stanfield Copy Editor: Pat Herbst
BOOKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR Religion in the Japanese Experience: Sources and Interpretations (Wadsworth) The New Religions of Japan: A Bibliography of Western-Language Materials, 2d ed. (Michigan Papers in Japanese Studies) A Religious Study of the Mount Haguro Sect of Shugendo (Sophia University) Translation from the Japanese: Japanese Religion in the Modern Century, Shigeyoshi Murakami (University of Tokyo Press) The author is indebted to the following for permis¬ sion to reprint copyrighted material: Sir George B. Sansom and Stanford University Press, for use of material from A History of Japan; Masaharu Anesaki and Charles E. Tuttle Company, for use of material from History of Japanese Religion. © 1982 by Wadsworth, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a re¬ trieval system, or transcribed, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, re¬ cording, or otherwise, without the prior written per¬ mission of the publisher, Wadsworth Publishing Company, Belmont, California 94002, a division of Wadsworth, Inc. Printed in the United States of America
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Earhart, H. Byron. Japanese religion, unity and diversity. (Religious life of man) Bibliography: p. Includes index. 1. Japan—Religion. I. Title. II. Religious life of man (Belmont, Calif.) BL2202.E17 1982 291'.0952 81-12963 ISBN 0-534-01028-8 AACR2
ISBN
0-53M-01D5fl-fl
10—97 96 95
Series:
Contents
Foreword Preface to the Third Edition Map of japan
vii ix xiii
Table of Japanese Religious History, with Chronological Periods and Corresponding Cultural Features
1
2
Introduction
4
1
Five Religious Strands
1
Unity and Diversity
3
Persistent Themes in Japanese Religious History
7
The Closeness of Human Beings, Gods, and Nature
7
The Religious Character of the Family
9
The Significance of Purification, Rituals, and Charms
12
The Prominence of Local Festivals and Individual Cults
12
The Pervasiveness of Religion in Everyday Life
14
The Natural Bond Between Religion and the Nation
16
The Traditional World-View
16
Part One. The Formation of Japanese Religion
3
xiv
The Prehistoric Heritage
20
22
The Origins of Japanese Religion
22
The Evidence and Meaning of the Earliest Religion in Japan
24
The Religious Significance of Burial and the Dead
25
The Religious Significance of Fertility
26
The Religious Significance of Divine Descent
26
The Formation of Shinto
29
Mythological Materials and the Origins of Shinto
30
Organized Shinto: Priests and Rituals in Shrines
33
Distinctive Characteristics of Shinto
36
iv
5 Early Japanese Buddhism: Indian Influence with
Contents
Chinese Coloration
39
The Introduction of Buddhism as a Foreign Religion
40
Buddhism's Impact on the Court and the State
41
Buddhism as a State Religion
43
The Six Philosophical Schools of Nara Buddhism
45
The Sanron School
47
The Decline of Nara Buddhism
49
6 Confucianism and Religious Taoism: Chinese Importations
52
Confucianism: Explicit Chinese Influence on State and Society
53
Religious Taoism: Implicit Chinese Influence on Beliefs and Rituals 7
8
Folk Religion: Religiosity Outside Organized Religion Aspects of Japanese Folk Religion
60 62
The Individual and Folk Religion
65
Interaction in the Formation of Japanese Religion
68
The Interaction of Religious Traditions
68
The Formation of a Distinctive Japanese Religious Tradition
69
The Development and Elaboration of Japanese
Religion
74
The Founding of a Japanese Buddhism: The Shingon and Tendai Sects
10
60
Folk Religion in Family, Village, and Occupation
Part Two.
9
55
77
The New Buddhism of the Heian Period
77
Shingon: Esoteric Buddhism in Japan
78
Tendai: Faith in the Lotus Sutra and Amida
83
The Development of Japanese Buddhism and Japanese Religion
85
Elaboration Within Japanese Buddhism: The Pure Land, Nichiren, and Zen Sects From Heian Buddhism to Kamakura Buddhism
90 91
The Pure Land Sects: Faith in Amida and the Recitation of the Nembutsu
92
Nichiren: Faith in theLofws Sutra as the Exclusive National Buddhism
95
The Zen Sects: Enlightenment Through Meditation
97
Dogen: Sitting in Meditation Zen: Institutional and Artistic Developments 11
The Development of Medieval Shinto
99 101 106
Medieval Buddhism and Medieval Shinto
107
Borrowing by Medieval Shinto
107
The Relation of Tendai and Shingon to Medieval Shinto
109
Medieval Shinto: Individual Scholars and Family Traditions 111 12
13
The Appearance of Christianity in Japan The Introduction of Christianity into Japan
116
The Japanese Acceptance of Christianity
116
The Expulsion of Christianity
119
The Significance of the Christian Century
121
The Five Traditions: Development and Mutual Influence
Part Three.
14
115
Formalism and Renewal in Japanese Religion
125
130
Buddhism, Neo-Confucianism, and Restoration Shinto in the Tokugawa Period The Tokugawa Government and Religion
134 134
Tokugawa Buddhism: State Patronage and Weakened Vitality
136
Neo-Confucianism: Political Stability and Social Conformity
137
Neo-Confucianism: The Development of Public and Private Ethics
15
139
Restoration Shinto: The Movement for a Purified Shinto
143
Motoori Norinaga and Restoration Shinto
145
The Meiji Restoration and Nationalistic Shinto
150
The Political and Religious Significance of the Meiji Restoration
150
The Attempt to Restore Shinto as the Only Japanese Religion
16
152
The Establishment of Nonreligious Shrine Shinto
154
Shrine Shinto as an Expression of Nationalistic Militarism
155
Religious Currents from 1868 to 1945
161
Buddhism: The Struggle for Renewal, Especially Within Buddhist Scholarship
162
v Contents
vi Contents
Christianity: Strength and Weakness Since 1868
164
The New Religions: New Variations from Old Traditions
168
17 Two New Religions: Tenrikyo and Soka Gakkai
172
The Many New Religions: Differences and Similarities
173
Tenrikyo: A Living Kami and a Joyous Life
173
Soka Gakkai: Faith in the Lotus Sutra and a Happy Life
177
The Significance of the New Religions: Old Wine in New Bottles 18
19
20
Religion in Postwar Japan
180 184
Shinto: Disestablishment and Popular Disfavor
184
Buddhism: The Continuing Need for Renewal
186
Christianity: The Problems of Denominationalism
187
The Postwar Boom of New Religions
188
Religious Life in Contemporary Japan
192
Are the Japanese Religious?
192
Persistent Themes in Contemporary Japanese Religion
195
Approaches to Religious Change
198
Transformations of Religious Life in Contemporary Japan
200
Conclusion: The Challenge for Japanese Religion
209
Annotated Bibliography on Japanese Religion: Selected Works Study Questions
213 255
Index
266
Foreword
The Religious Life of Man series is intended as an introduction to a large, complex field of inquiry—religious experience. It seeks to pre¬ sent the depth and richness of religious concepts, forms of worship, spiritual practices, and social institutions found in the major reli¬ gious traditions throughout the world. As a specialist in the languages and cultures in which a religion is found, each author is able to illuminate the meanings of a religious perspective and practice as other human beings have experienced it. To communicate this meaning to readers who have had no special training in these cultures and religions, the authors have attempted to provide clear, nontechnical descriptions and interpretations of reli¬ gious life. Different approaches have been used, depending upon the nature of the religious data; some religious expressions, for instance, lend themselves to developmental, others to topical studies. The lack of a single interpretation may itself be instructive, for the experiences and practices regarded as religious in one culture may not be particularly important in another. The Religious Life of Man is concerned with, on the one hand, the variety of religious expressions found in different traditions and, on the other, similarities in the structures of religious life. The various forms are interpreted in terms of their cultural context and historical epntinuity, demonstrating both the diverse expressions and com¬ monalities of religious traditions. Besides individual volumes on dif-
viii
ferent religions, the series offers a core book on the study of religious
Foreword
meaning, which describes different study approaches and examines several modes and structures of religious awareness. In addition, each book presents a list of materials for further reading, including trans¬ lations of religious texts and detailed examinations of specific topics. During a decade of use the series has experienced a wide readership. A continuing effort has been made to update the scholarship, simplify the organization of material, and clarify concepts through the publication of revised editions. The authors have been gratified with the response to their efforts to introduce people to various forms of religious life. We hope readers will also find these volumes "intro¬ ductory” in the most significant sense: an introduction to a new per¬ spective for understanding themselves and others. Frederick J. Streng Series Editor
Preface to the Third Edition
I
welcome the opportunity
to bring out a third edition of this book.
Since the appearance of the second edition, continued study of Japa¬ nese religion (and study and travel in Korea, China, and Japan) have provided me with more information and the insight of other scholars for expanding and improving the previous edition. However, my intention remains unchanged—to present a general introduction to the history and dynamics of Japanese religion. This book is intended for readers interested in Japanese studies or religious studies. It is conceived and written as an introduction to Japanese religion and can be read as a first book in this area. No technical knowledge of Jap¬ anese history, Japanese religion, or the Japanese language is required for understanding the material.* I hope that this book will also be of use to advanced students and teachers who are acquainted with one area of Japanese history and culture and are looking for a comprehensive interpretation of religion in Japan. Whereas general readers may use the book as a steppingstone (through the "Selected Readings" and "Annotated Bibliog¬ raphy") to a deeper understanding of Japanese religion, advanced students and teachers may use it as a unified context in which they can integrate their specialized readings. The basic format of the previous editions has been preserved—an interpretation of persistent themes through three historical periods and the changing patterns of the various religious traditions (the framing of the third period has been changed somewhat, as indicated
X Preface to the Third Edition
by the new title of Part III, "Formalism and Renewal"). However, the third edition incorporates so many changes and additional materials that it is a completely rewritten work. Characterizations and general¬ izations have been amplified and clarified. Sections on important reli¬ gious figures and their contribution to Japanese intellectual history have been added. One new chapter has been written to give a closer look at "religious life in contemporary Japan." The suggestion men¬ tioned most frequently by professors who used the second edition was a request for more concrete information on the dynamics of reli¬ gious life in modern Japan, and it is in direct response to this request that the new chapter was written. Some friendly critics have pointed out to me privately that the book leaves unmentioned many areas of Japanese religious history—nota¬ bly the late medieval and early modern periods. Some new material in this area has been included, notably a section on Neo-Confucianism and a section on Motoori Norinaga. But let me be the first to acknowl¬ edge that so brief a work as this cannot pretend to be a complete his¬ tory of Japanese religion. I hope this admission will not prevent critics from registering their complaints with me again. Given the eventuality of a subsequent edition, such critical comments will help me to cor¬ rect the imperfections and incompleteness of the present edition. Favorable comments on the usefulness of the annotated bibliog¬ raphy in previous editions have encouraged me to expand the anno¬ tated bibliography, especially the section "Histories and Works on Japanese Culture." All sections have been updated, and some older items have been deleted. Another new feature of this edition is a set of study questions listed at the back of the book. These questions were developed in response to students' requests for me to "program" the text for them, helping them to grasp the significance of each chapter. The questions have a double purpose as a study guide to direct reading and as a kind of self-examiniation for checking the content actually gained from reading. (Students tell me that the questions also are helpful for review¬ ing-) The questions correlate the text of this book, Japanese Religion, with the companion sourcebook. Religion in the Japanese Experience. A general note suggesting how to use the questions precedes the list. From the time of planning the first edition, Frederick J. Streng, Series Editor, and I discussed the advantage of illustrations, and it is only because of space limitation that illustrations were omitted from the first two editions. Now we have the luxury of some space for photo¬ graphs, and a special word is needed to describe the photographs
chosen. They have been selected from my collection of photographs
xi
taken during field work in Japan over the past twenty years. Out of
Preface to the Third Edition
thousands of pictures, I have tried to pick those which express the dynamics of religious life: from the New Year's decoration on a Tokyo taxi to a shaman's seance with a client's dead relative. The kinds of illustrations usually found in books about Japanese religion have been omitted. The major temples and shrines, the monumental statues and portraits of famous priests—which make such lovely picture postcards—will not be found here. Such pictures, as important as they may be, are abundant in many Western-language books. But there are rather few illustrations of Japanese religion as actually prac¬ ticed, and it is photographs of religion being practiced that have been chosen for inclusion. Those wishing to view religion through art and architecture may consult works in the "Annotated Bibliography" (such as Paine and Soper's The Art and Architecture of Japan or art works listed in the sections for "Shinto" and "Buddhism"). All photographs were taken by the author, with place and date listed. Some photographs were taken expressly for this book, during my last extensive stay in Japan, from September 1979 through January 1980. The major purpose of that research trip was a joint study of the new religion Gedatsu-kai with Professor Hitoshi Miyake under a grant sponsored by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science. Special thanks go to the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science for their research support; to Professor Hitoshi Miyake and Keio Uni¬ versity for facilitating this research; to Mr. Kojiro Miyasaka of Rissho Kosei-kai for housing; to Western Michigan University for a grant partially covering film costs; and to the leadership and members of Gedatsu-kai for their generous cooperation. In addition to those who helped in the writing of the earlier edi¬ tions, I would like to thank those who made suggestions on style and content for the third edition, especially Frederick J. Streng, editor of The Religious Life of Man
series, and Sheryl Fullerton, Religious
Studies Editor, and Jonathan Cobb of Wadsworth Publishing Com¬ pany. I also would like to thank the reviewers of this edition of Japa¬ nese Religion: Jeffrey Broughton of California State University, Long Beach, Walter Neevel, Jr. of University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Merlin L. Swartz of Boston University, and Richard Alan Williams of University of Texas at Austin. I would like to thank Mrs. Dolores Condic for typing assistance and my sons David and Paul for help in compiling the bibliography and preparing the manuscript.
xii
For the third time, it is a pleasure to dedicate this work to our
Preface to the Third Edition
Japanese friends and to the continued friendship and mutual cooper¬ ation of the United States and Japan.
NOTE All markings for long vowels have been omitted; no publications in Japanese are cited. Reference to Japanese names follows the Japanese convention of giving the family name first.
For more detailed maps showing the distribution and concentration of various reli¬ gions in Japan, see Joseph M. Kitagawa, ",Shinto" and “Mahayana Buddhism (Ja¬ pan),” in Historical Atlas of the Religions of the World, ed. Ismai'il Ragi al Faruqui and David E. Sopher (New York: Macmillan, 1974), pp. 127-32, 195-99.
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