The Shifting Landscape of Japanese Religion

Japan’s Religious Ambivalence: The Shaping and Dismantling of a National Polity

Society Culture Lifestyle

Shimazono Susumu [Profile]

Religion is often regarded as playing a comparatively minor role in Japanese society, but is this really true? Religious scholar Shimazono Susumu examines the historical evolution of religion as a social force in Japan.

State Shintō Disseminated through Schools

There are thus many “quasi-religions” in Japan that are not perceived as being true religions, the most influential of which was probably State Shintō. Until the end of World War II, Japanese schools religiously followed the instructions contained in the Imperial Rescript on Education, the teachings on the fundamental spirit of education bestowed by Emperor Meiji in 1890. Elementary schools became the “shrines” where the imperial teachings were imparted, and the Japanese of this era grew up learning Shintō styles of worship. They would bow toward faraway Ise Shrine and the Imperial Palace, pay their respects at Yasukuni Shrine and Meiji Shrine, and bow their heads to the portraits of the emperor and empress and the framed Imperial Rescript on Education. This is what is known as State Shintō, and this is what was taught in Japanese schools.

Those of my parents’ generation, born in the early 1920s, remember the songs celebrating Kigensetsu(*1) on February 11 that they sung in school, and they would hum them even as adults.

The songs included lyrics depicting the reign of an unbroken line of emperors descended from the god Ninigi no Mikoto, grandson of the sun goddess Amaterasu Ōmikami. Also appearing in the lyrics is Asuka in present-day Nara Prefecture, which was the nation’s capital around the seventh century and where the imperial family established its rule.

Another song sings about primordial times, when Emperor Jinmu began his dominion as the first human emperor based on the unity of religion and the state. This emperor, shrouded in myth, is said to have ascended the throne in Kashihara, Nara Prefecture. The shrine Kashihara Jingū was erected there in 1890, the same year as the promulgation of the Imperial Rescript on Education.

Kashihara Shrine.

State Shintō was disseminated more through schools than shrines. Not just Kigensetsu but most national holidays prior to World War II were days when the emperor conducted important Shintō rituals at the Imperial Palace. Imperial Shintō, Shrine Shintō, and school events were the primary vehicles of State Shintō rites, and children learned about the ideologies of kokutai (“national polity”) and emperor worship through the Imperial Rescript on Education, as well as in classes on such subjects as ethics and history.

The Story of State Shintō

One common misconception regarding Shintō is that it is a religion centered on shrines, the priesthood, and worshippers. This is much too narrow an understanding of Shintō. In fact, emperor worship was the main thrust of State Shintō, which was propagated not at shrines but through schools and at national festivals, which were much closer to the people of modern Japan, as well as by the media. It was a new form of Shintō that took shape in parallel with the modern nation state on the basis of the kokutai ideology developed in the Edo period (1603–1868).

Kokutai in the broad sense refers to a country’s political system. But in Japan, especially prewar Japan, it has had a more specific meaning, referring to the unbroken line of emperors descended from heavenly gods who have reigned over the people from the dawn of time. Kokutai also connotes the belief that this national polity makes Japan superior to every other nation in the world.

What place, then, does State Shintō hold in the long history of Shintō? It is difficult to pinpoint the origin of Folk Shintō, lying as it does on the same spectrum as various amorphous folk beliefs. Its beginnings may lie somewhere in the prehistoric Yayoi or Jōmon era, and some people use the word Koshintō to refer to this ancient incarnation.

The origins of Imperial Shintō, by contrast, can be determined with some degree of certainty. Its foundations were laid with the development of state rituals and legal codes modeled on Tang China between the late seventh and early eighth centuries, around the time of Emperors Tenmu and Jitō. Buddhism was the dominant religion in medieval Japan, however, and Imperial Shintō receded from popular view, as it had little bearing on people’s lives in the community. The effort to place Imperial Shintō at the center of national life through the ideas of kokutai and the unity of religion and the state gathered momentum toward the end of the Edo period, and these ideas emerged as the guiding principles of the Meiji state.

Postwar Transformation of State Shintō

From the Meiji era (1868–1912) up through World War II, the government (Ministry of Education) maintained that Shintō was not a religion but a Japanese folk custom. As such, all Japanese citizens were required to take part in State Shintō rituals at shrines and schools, even if they were Buddhists or Christians. Shintō sects upholding teachings distinct from those of Imperial Shintō were called Sect Shintō, though, and treated as religions.

The General Headquarters (GHQ) of the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers, which governed Japan after World War II, believed that the roots of Japan’s militarism and ultranationalism were to be found in the nature of religion in Japan, particularly, the lack of separation of religion and the state. The GHQ quickly took steps to remove what it felt to be the adverse religious and ideological influences that had led the Japanese into a reckless war. On December 15, 1945, it issued the so-called Shintō Directive, and on January 1, 1946, Emperor Shōwa made the “humanity declaration” denying the divinity of the emperor in his New Year’s statement.

These moves essentially dismantled the State Shintō machinery, but Imperial Shintō remained largely intact even after the war. Active efforts have been made to reinforce the ties between the imperial family and Shrine Shintō and to enhance Shintō’s national role. In that sense, State Shintō has not died out completely even after the war.

State Shintō was originally underpinned by grassroots movements associated with emperor worship and was supported by the Jinja Honchō (Association of Shintō Shrines), which became a private entity after the war. Although much weaker today, State Shintō continues to attract many devotees with its message of Japan’s divinity, owing to the freedom of religion that Japan enjoys. It goes without saying, though, that its activities must not oppress the freedoms of people with different religious and ideological beliefs.

Article 20 of the Constitution

Given Japan’s prewar experience, there may be fears that the Japanese people would again be forced to take part in State Shintō rituals and lose their freedom of thought and religion, but this is prohibited by Article 20 of the Constitution of Japan stipulating the freedom of religion. Section 1 reads, “Freedom of religion is guaranteed to all. No religious organization shall receive any privileges from the State, nor exercise any political authority.” Sections 2 and 3 continue, “No person shall be compelled to take part in any religious act, celebration, rite, or practice,” and, “The State and its organs shall refrain from religious education or any other religious activity.” In short, the Constitution makes clear that no one must be forced to submit to State Shintō, nor must the state grant a special status to Shintō.

Prime Minister Abe Shinzō’s visit to Yasukuni Shrine on December 26, 2013, has brought the significance of this shrine under renewed scrutiny. If Yasukuni were ever to be made into an official ceremonial facility of the state, it would imply a regression toward the prewar regime that drove the Japanese people to religious worship of the emperor. Article 20 has thus played an important role in keeping State Shintō in check.

Most Japanese have little involvement with religion today to the point of being regarded as nonreligious. But as State Shintō illustrates, religion does have significant implications for society and the state, even in Japan. This is a point that should not be overlooked.

(Title photo: People shopping at Yasaka Shrine in Kyoto for wooden plaques on which to write their wishes and decorative arrows to ward off misfortune. Photo by R-CREATION Co., Ltd./Aflo.)

(*1) ^ Established in 1872, based on the belief that February 11 is the day when Emperor Jinmu ascended the throne, as described in the Nihon shoki (Chronicle of Japan). Kigensetsu was abolished in 1948, but the day has been a holiday known as National Foundation Day since 1966.

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Buddhism Yasukuni Shrine Shintō Christianity religion State Shintō Kokutai Article 20

Shimazono SusumuView article list

Professor at the Faculty of Theology and director of the Institute of Grief Care, Sophia University. Completed coursework for a PhD at the University of Tokyo in 1977. Past positions prior to assuming his current position in 2013 include research fellow in philosophy at the University of Tsukuba, assistant professor at the University of Tokyo Department of Religious Studies, and professor at the University of Tokyo Graduate School of Humanities and Sociology. Has written Nihonjin no shiseikan o yomu (Reading Japanese Views on Life and Death), Tsukurareta hōshasen “anzen” ron (The Myth of “Safe” Radiation), and Rinri ryōsho o yomu (Reading Good Ethics Books).

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