ONTAKÉ.
PILGRIMAGES AND THE PILGRIM CLUBS.
THE GOHEI.
THE SHRINES OF ISE.
ONTAKÉ.
IN the heart of Japan, withdrawn alike by
distance and by height from the commonplaces of the every-day
world, rises a mountain known as Ontaké or the Honorable Peak. It
is a fine volcanic mass, sundered by deep valley-clefts from the
great Hida-Shinshiu range, amidst which it stands dignifiedly
aloof. Active once, it has been inactive now beyond the memory of
man. Yet its form lets one divine what it must have been in its
day. For upon its summit are the crumbling walls of eight
successive craters, piled in parapet up into the sky.
It is not dead; it slumbers. For on its western face a single
solfatara sends heavenward long, slender filaments of vapor, faint
breath of what now sleeps beneath; a volcano sunk in trance.
Almost unknown to foreigners, it is well known to the
Japanese. For it is perhaps the most sacred of Japan's many sacred
peaks. Upon it, every summer, faith tells a rosary of ten thousand
pilgrims.
Some years ago I chanced to gaze from afar upon this holy
mount; and, as the sweep of its sides drew my eye up to where the
peak itself stood hidden in a nimbus of cloud, had meant some day
to climb it. Partly for this vision, more because of the probable
picturesqueness of the route, I found myself doing so with a friend
in August, 1891. Beyond the general fact of its sanctity, nothing
special was supposed to attach to the peak. That the mountain held
a mystery was undreamed of.
We had reached, after various vicissitudes, as prosaically as
is possible in unprosaic Japan, a height of about nine thousand
feet, when we suddenly came upon a manifestation as surprising as
it was unsuspected. Regardless of us, the veil was thrown aside,
and we gazed into the beyond. We stood face to face with the gods.
The fathoming of this unexpected revelation resulted in the
discovery of a world of esoteric practices as significant as they
were widespread. By way of introduction to them, I cannot do more
simply than to give my own. Set as the scene of it was upon the
summit of that slumbering volcano sunk in trance itself, a
presentation to the gods could hardly have been more dramatic.
We had plodded four fifths way up the pilgrim path. We had
already passed the first snow, and had reached the grotto-like hut
at the eighth station—the paths up all high sacred mountains in
Japan being pleasingly pointed by rest-houses; we were tarrying
there a moment, counting our heartbeats, and wondering how much
more of the mountain there might be to come, for thick cloud had
cloaked all view on the ascent, when three young men, clad in full
pilgrim white, entered the hut from below, and, deaf to the
hut-keeper's importunities to stop, passed stolidly out at the
upper end: the hut having been astutely contrived to inclose the
path, that not even the most ascetic might escape temptation. The
devout look of the trio struck our fancy. So, leaving some coppers
for our tea and cakes, amid profuse acknowledgment from the
hut-keeper, we passed out after them. We had not climbed above a
score of rods when we overtook our young puritans lost in prayer
before a shrine cut into the face of the cliff, in front of which
stood two or three benches conspicuously out of place in such a
spot. The three young men had already laid aside their hats, mats,
and staffs, and disclosed the white fillets that bound their shocks
of jet-black hair. We halted on general principles of curiosity,
for we had no inkling of what was about to happen. They were simply
the most pious young men we had yet met, and they interested us.
The prayer, which seemed an ordinary one, soon came to an
end; upon which we expected to see the trio pack up and be off
again. But instead of this one of them, drawing from his sleeve a
gohei-wand, and certain other implements of religion,
seated himself upon one of the benches facing the shrine. At the
same time another sat down on a second bench facing the first,
clasped his hands before his breast, and closed his eyes. The third
reverently took post near by.
No sooner was the first seated than he launched into the most
extraordinary performance I have ever beheld. With a spasmodic
jerk, pointed by a violent guttural grunt, he suddenly tied his ten
fingers into a knot, throwing his whole body and soul into the act.
At the same time he began a monotonic chant. Gazing raptly at his
digital knot, he prayed over it thus a moment; then, with a second
grunt, he resolved it into a second one, and this into a third and
a fourth and a fifth, stringing his contortions upon his chant with
all the vehemence of a string of oaths. Startlingly uncouth as the
action was, the compelling intentness and suppressed power with
which the paroxysmal pantomime was done, was more so.
His strange action was matched only by the strange inaction
of his vis-á-vis. The man did not move a muscle; if anything, he
grew momentarily more statuesque. And still the other's monotoned
chant rolled on, startlingly emphasized by the contortion knots.
At last the exorcist paused in his performance, and taking
the
gohei-wand from beside him on the bench, placed it between
the other's hands, clenched one above the other. Then he resumed
his incantation, the motionless one as motionless as ever. So it
continued for some time, when all at once the hands holding the
wand began to twitch convulsively; the twitching rapidly increased
to a spasmodic throe which momentarily grew more violent till
suddenly it broke forth into the full fury of a seemingly
superhuman paroxysm. It was as if the wand shook the man, not the
man it. It lashed the air maniacally here and there above his head,
and then slowly settled to a semi-rigid half-arm holding before his
brow; stiff, yet quivering, and sending its quivers through his
whole frame. The look of the man was unmistakable. He had gone
completely out of himself. Unwittingly we had come to stand
witnesses to a trance.
At the first sign of possession, the exorcist had ceased
incanting and sat bowed awaiting the coming presence. When the
paroxysmal throes had settled into a steady quiver—much as a top
does when it goes off to sleep—he leaned forward, put a hand on
either side the possessed's knees, and still bowed, asked in words
archaically reverent the name of the god who had thus deigned to
descend.
At first there was no reply. Then in a voice strangely
unnatural, without being exactly artificial, the entranced spake:
"I am Hakkai."
The petitioner bent yet lower; then raising his look a
little, preferred respectfully what requests he had to make;
whether the peak would be clear and the pilgrimage prove
propitious, and whether the loved ones left at home would all be
guarded by the god? And the god made answer: "Till the morrow's
afternoon will the peak be clear, and the pilgrimage shall be
blessed."
The man stayed bowed while the god spake, and when the god
had finished speaking, offered up an adoration prayer. Then leaning
forward, he first touched the possessed on the breast, and then
struck him on the back several times with increasing insistency.
Under this ungodly treatment the possessed opened his eyes like one
awaking from profound sleep. The others then set to and kneaded his
arms, body, and legs, cramped in catalepsy, back to a normal state.
No sooner was the ex-god himself again than the trio changed
places; the petitioner moved into the seat of the entranced, the
looker-on took the place of the petitioner, and the entranced
retired to the post of looker-on. Then with this change of persons
the ceremony was gone through with again to a similar possession, a
similar interview, and a similar awakening.
At the close of the second trance the three once more
revolved cyclically and went through the performance for the third
time. This rotation in possession so religiously observed was not
the least strange detail of this strange drama.
When the cycle had been completed, the three friends offered
up a concluding prayer, and then, donning their outside
accoutrements, started upward.
Revolving in our minds what we had thus so strangely been
suffered to see, we too proceeded, and, being faster walkers, had
soon distanced our god-acquaintances. We had not been long upon the
summit, however, when they appeared again, and no sooner had they
arrived, than they sat down upon some other benches similarly
standing in the little open space before the tip-top shrine, and
went through their cyclical possessions as before. We had not
thought to see the thing a second time, and were almost as much
astounded as at first.
Our fear of parting with our young god-friends proved quite
groundless. For on returning to the summit-hut after a climb round
the crater rim, the first thing to catch our eyes amid its dim
religious gloom was the sight of the pious trio once more in the
full throes of possession. There were plenty of other pilgrims
seated round the caldron fire, as well as some native
meteorologists in an annex, who had been exiled there for a month
by a paternal government to study the atmospheric conditions of
this island in the clouds. Up to the time we met them the weather
had been dishearteningly same, consisting, they informed us
somewhat pathetically, of uninterrupted fog. The exorcists,
however, took no notice of them, nor of any of the other pilgrims,
nor did the rest of the company pay the slightest heed to the
exorcists; all of which spoke volumes for the commonplaceness of
the occurrence.
We again thought we had seen our last of the gods, and again
were we pleasurably disappointed. At five the next morning we had
hardly finished a shivery preprandial peep at the sunrise,—all
below us a surging sea of cloud,—and turned once more into the hut,
when there were the three indefatigables up and communing again by
way of breakfast, for they took none other, and an hour later we
came upon them before the tip-top shrine, hard at it for the fifth
time. And all this between four o'clock one afternoon and six the
next morning. The cycle was not always completed, one of the three
being much better at possession than the other two, and one much
worse, but there were safely ten trances in the few hours that
fringed their sleep's oblivion.
And nobody, apparently, took any cognizance of what was going
on, except us and the meteorologists, who came out to fraternize
with us, and volunteered comments in a superior manner on the
senselessness of the proceeding,—an imported attitude of mind not
destitute of caricature.
Truly the gods were gracious thus to descend so many times;
and truly devout their devotees to crave so much communion.
Doubtless an inordinate desire for their society is gratifying to
the gods, but the frequency of the talks fairly took our breath
away, though it had no perceptible effect on the young men's nor on
the god's, even at that altitude. The god possessed his devotees
with comparative ease; which was edifying but exhausting; for to
let another inhabit one's house always proves hard on the
furniture. And all this took place on top of a climb of ten
thousand feet toward heaven. In spite of it, however, these
estimable young men were equal to a tramp all over the place during
the rest of the morning. They ascended religiously to all the
crater-peaks, and descended as piously to all the crater-pools—and
then started on their climb down and their journey home of three
hundred and fifty miles, much of it to be done afoot. That night
saw them not only off the mountain, but well on their way beyond.
How far their holy momentum carried them without stopping I know
not, for the last we saw of them was a wave of farewell as they
passed the inn where we had put up for the night. But the most
surprising part of the endurance lay in the fact that from the
moment they began the ascent of the mountain on the early morning
of the one day, till they were off it on the late afternoon of the
next, they ate nothing and drank only water.
Such was my introduction to the society of the gods; and this
first glimpse of it only piqued curiosity to more. No sooner back
in town, therefore, than I made inquiry into the acquaintanceship I
had so strangely formed upon the mountain, to receive the most
convincing assurance of its divinity. The fact of possession was
confirmed readily enough, but my desire for a private repetition of
the act itself was received at first with some mystery and more
hesitation. However, with one man after another, offishness thawed,
until, getting upon terms of cordiality with deity, it was not long
before I was holding divine receptions in my own drawing-room.
Exalted and exclusive as this best of all society unquestionably
was, it proved intellectually, like more mundane society we agree
to call the best, undeniably dull. I mention this not because I did
not find it well worth knowing, but simply to show that it was
every whit the company it purported to be.
II.
The revelation thus strangely vouchsafed me turned out to be
as far-reaching as it was sincere. There proved to exist a regular
system of divine possession, an esoteric cult imbedded in the very
heart and core of the Japanese character and instinct, with all the
strangeness of that to us enigmatical race.
That other foreigners should not previously have been
admitted to this company of heaven may at first seem the strangest
fact of all. Certainly my introduction cannot be due to any special
sanctity of my own, if I may judge by what my friends tell me on
the subject. Nor can I credit it to any desire on my part to rise
in the world, whether to peaks or preferments—an equally base
ambition in either case—for Ontaké, though not of every-day ascent,
has been climbed by foreigners several times before. Rein, that
indefatigable collector of facts and statistics, managed some years
ago to get to the top of it and then to the bottom again without
seeing anything. The old guide-book, in the person of an
enthusiastic pedestrian, contrived to do the like. Other visitors
of good locomotive powers also accomplished this feat without
penetrating the secret of the mountain. And yet the trances were
certainly going on all the time, and the guides who piloted these
several gentlemen must have been well aware of the fact.
The explanation is to be sought elsewhere. The fact is that
Japan is still very much of an undiscovered country to us. It is
not simply that the language proves so difficult that but few
foreigners pass this threshold of acquaintance; but that the
farther the foreigner goes, the more he perceives the ideas in the
two hemispheres to be fundamentally diverse. What he expects to
find does not exist, and what exists he would never dream of
looking for.
Japan is scientifically an undiscovered country even to the
Japanese, as a study of these possessions will disclose. For their
importance is twofold: archaeologic no less than psychic. They are
other-world manifestations in two senses, and the one sense helps
accentuate the other. For they are as essentially Japanese as they
are essentially genuine. That is, they are neither shams nor
importations from China or India, but aboriginal originalities of
the Japanese people. They are the hitherto unsuspected esoteric
side of Shintō, the old native faith. That Japanese Buddhists also
practice them is but appreciative Buddhist indorsement of their
importance, as I shall show later. We must begin, therefore, with a
short account of Shintō in general.
SHINTŌ
SHINTŌ, or the Way of the Gods, is the name of
the oldest religious belief of the Japanese people. The belief
itself indefinitely antedates its name, for it has come down to us
from a time when sole possession of the field precluded
denomination. It knew no christening till Buddhism was adopted from
China in the sixth century of our era, and was then first called
Shintō, or the Way of the Gods, to distinguish it from Butsudō, or
the Way of Buddha.
If it thus acquired a name, it largely lost local habitation.
For Buddhism proceeded to appropriate its possessions, temporal and
spiritual. It had been both church and state. Buddhism became the
state, and assumed the greater part of the churches; paying Shintō
the compliment of incorporating, without acknowledgment, such as it
fancied of the Shintō rites, and of kindly recognizing the more
popular Shintō gods for lower avatars of its own. Under this
generous adoption on the one hand, and relegation to an inferior
place in the national pantheon on the other, very little,
ostensibly, was left of Shintō,—just enough to swear by.
Lost in the splendor of Buddhist show, Shintō lay obscured
thus for a millenium; lingering chiefly as a twilight of popular
superstition. At last, however, a new era dawned. A long peace,
following the firm establishing of the Shogunate, turned men's
thoughts to criticism, and begot the commentators, a line of
literati, who, beginning with Mabuchi, in the early part of the
eighteenth century, devoted themselves to a study of the past, and
continued to comment, for a century and a half, upon the old
Japanese traditions buried in the archaic language of the Kojiki
and the Nihongi, the history-bibles of the race. As science, the
commentators' elucidations are chiefly comic, but their practical
outcome was immense. Criticism of the past begot criticism of the
present, and started a chauvinistic movement, which overthrew the
Shogunate and restored the Mikado—with all the irony of fate, since
these littérateurs owed their existence to the patronage of those
they overthrew. This was the restoration of 1868. Shintō came back
as part and parcel of the old. The temples Buddhism had usurped
were purified; that is, they were stripped of Buddhist ornament,
and handed over again to the Shintō priests. The faith of the
nation's springtime entered upon the Indian summer of its life.
This happy state of things was not to last. Buddhism, and
especially the great wave of western ideas, proved submerging. From
filling one half the government, spiritual affairs were degraded,
first to a department, then to a bureau, and then to a sub-bureau.
The Japanese upper classes had found a new faith; and Herbert
Spencer was its prophet.
But in the nation's heart the Shintō sentiment throbbed on as
strong as ever. A Japanese cabinet minister found this out to his
cost. In 1887, Mori Arinori, one of the most advanced Japanese
new-lights, then minister of state for education, went on a certain
occasion to the Shrines of Ise, and studiously treated them with
disrespect. It was alleged, and apparently on good authority, that
he trod with his boots on the mat outside the portal of the
palisade, and then poked the curtain apart with his walking-stick.
He was assassinated in consequence; the assassin was cut down by
the guards, and then Japan rose in a body to do honor, not to the
murdered man, but to his murderer. Even the muzzled press managed
to hint on which side it was, by some as curious editorials as were
ever penned. As for the people, there were no two ways about it;
you had thought the murderer some great patriot dying for his
country. Folk by thousands flocked with flowers to his grave, and
pilgrimages were made to it, as to some shrine. It is still kept
green; still to-day the singing-girls bring it their branches of
plum blossoms, with a prayer to the gods that a little of the
spirit of him who lies buried there may become theirs: that spirit
which they call so proudly the Yamato Kokoro, the heart of old
Japan.
For in truth Shintō is so Japanese it will not down. It is
the faith of these people's birthright, not of their adoption. Its
folklore is what they learned at the knee of the race-mother, not
what they were taught from abroad. Buddhist they are by virtue of
belief; Shintō by virtue of being.
Shintō is the Japanese conception of the cosmos. It is a
combination of the worship of nature and of their own ancestors.
But the character of the combination is ethnologically instructive.
For a lack of psychic development has enabled these seemingly
diverse elements to fuse into a homogeneous whole. Both, of course,
are aboriginal instincts. Next to the fear of natural phenomena, in
point of primitiveness, comes the fear of one's father, as children
and savages show. But races, like individuals, tend to
differentiate the two as they develop. Now, the suggestive thing
about the Japanese is, that they did not do so. Filial respect
lasted, and by virtue of not becoming less, became more, till it
filled not only the whole sphere of morals, but expanded into the
sphere of cosmogony. To the Japanese eye, the universe itself took
on the paternal look. Awe of their parents, which these people
could comprehend, lent explanation to dread of nature, which they
could not. Quite cogently, to their minds, the thunder and the
typhoon, the sunshine and the earthquake, were the work not only of
anthropomorphic beings, but of beings ancestrally related to
themselves. In short, Shintō, their explanation of things in
general, is simply the patriarchal principle projected without
perspective into the past, dilating with distance into deity.
That their dead should thus definitely live on to them is
nothing strange. It is paralleled by the way in which the dead live
on in the thought of the young generally. Actual personal
immortality is the instant inevitable inference of the child-mind.
The dead do thus survive in the memories of the living, and it is
the natural deduction to clothe this subjective idea with objective
existence.
Shintō is thus an adoration of family wraiths, or of imputed
family wraiths; imaginaries of the first and the second order in
the analysis of the universe. Buddhism with its ultimate Nirvana is
in a sense the antithesis of this. For while simple Shintō regards
the dead as spiritually living, philosophic Buddhism regards the
living as spiritually dead; two aspects of the same shield.
The Japanese thus conceive themselves the great-grandchildren
of their own gods. Their Mikado they look upon as the lineal
descendant of Niniginomikoto, the first God Emperor of Japan. And
the gods live in heaven much as men, their children, do on earth.
The concrete quality of the Japanese mind has barred abstractions
on the subject. The gods have never so much as laid down a moral
code. "Obey the Mikado," and otherwise "follow your own heart" is
the sum of their commands; as parental injunctions as could well be
framed. So is the attitude of the Japanese toward their gods
filially familiar, an attitude which shocks more teleologic faiths,
but in which they themselves see nothing irreverent. In the same
way their conception of a future life is that of a definite
immaterial extension of the present one.
To foreign students in consequence, Shintō has seemed little
better than the ghost of a belief, far too insubstantial a body of
faith to hold a heart. To ticket its gods and pigeon-hole its
folk-lore has appeared to be the end of a study of its cult.
Nor is its outward appearance less uninvitingly
skeleton-like. With a barn of a building for temple, a scant set of
paraphernalia, and priests who are laymen most of the time, its
appearance certainly leaves something to be desired. For in all
save good Puritan souls, the religious idea craves sensuous
setting. Feeling lies at the root of faith, and a fine mass at the
root of feeling. Sense may not be vital to religion, but incense
is.
II.
In but one thing is Shintō patently rich—in gods. It has as
much to worship as it has little to worship with. It has more gods
than its devotees know what to do with. From the Goddess of the Sun
to the gods of rice and agriculture, few things in heaven or earth
stand unrepresented in its catholic pantheon. Biblical biography
puts the number roundly at eighty myriads, but in Japanese speech
"eighty" and "myriad" are neither of them mathematical terms, the
one being a mystic number and the other a conventional confession
of arithmetical incompetency; both expressions being rigorously
rendered in English by the phrase "no end." Nobody ever pretended
to count the gods. Indeed, to do so would be pious labor lost; for
the roll is being constantly increased by promotions from the
ranks. Any one at death may become a god, and it is of the entailed
responsibilities of greatness that the very exalted must do so.
Of course no merely finite man can possibly worship so
infinite a number of deities, though time be to him of oriental
limitlessness. So each makes his choice of intimates, and clubs the
rest in a general petition, from time to time, to prevent
accidents.
His first choice is made for him by his parents. A week after
birth the babe is presented at the temple (
) and put under the protection of some special
deity. The god's preference is not consulted in the affair; he
becomes tutelary god on notification, as a matter of course.
Next in importance to the tutelary god is the patron god. For
every branch of human industry is specially superintended by some
god. Men may deem it beneath them to be in business, but the gods
do not. Each has his trade, and spends much time looking after his
apprentices. But it is work without worry, befitting the easy-going
East; the god of honest labor being portrayed as a jolly, fat
fisherman, very comfortably seated, chuckling at having just caught
a carp.
Pleasures, too, have their special gods with whom perforce
their votaries are on peculiarly intimate terms, inasmuch as such
gods are very boon-companion patrons of the sport. Furthermore,
every one chooses his gods for a general compatibility of temper
with himself. He thus lives under congenial guardianship all his
life.
Simple as such conceptions are, there is something fine in
their sweet simplicity. The very barrenness of the faith's
buildings has a beauty of its own, touched as it is by Japanese
taste. Through those gracefully plain portals a simple life here
passes to a yet simpler one beyond; and the solemn cryptomerea lend
it all the natural grandeur that so fittingly canopies the old.
So are the few Shintō rites perfect in effect. Finished
fashionings from a far past, they are so beautifully complete, that
one forgets the frailty of the conception in the rounded perfection
of the form.
One sees at once how aboriginal all this is. Childish
conceptions embalmed in an exquisite etiquette; so Shintō might
have been ticketed.
But the mythologic mummy showed no evidence of soul.
By the soul of a faith, as opposed to its mere body of belief, I
mean that informing spirit vouchsafed by direct communion between
god and man which all faiths proclaim of themselves, and pooh-pooh
of all the others. It was this soul that so unexpectedly revealed
itself to me upon Ontaké.
We must now see what the Japanese conceive this soul to be.
Now Shintō philosophy is not the faith's strong point. The Japanese
are artists, not scientists. And in their revelations their gods
show the same simple and attractive character. If, therefore, the
Shintō scheme of things seem at times incompatible with itself, the
gods themselves are responsible, not I, errors and omissions on my
part excepted. For I have it all from one whose authority is
nothing short of the god's own words, vouchsafed to him in trance,
my friend the high priest of the Shinshiu sect. So that my
knowledge of the subject is but second-hand divine, much nearer the
source of inspiration than I can ever hope in reason to come again.
To begin with, then, all things in heaven and earth are
composed of three elements, (
or
) body, (
) mind or spirit, and (
) soul. Stocks and stones, plants, animals, and
some men have no soul, being made up entirely of body and mind. The
behavior of some men seems to lend support to this theory. Gods, on
the other hand, are bodiless and consist of spirit and soul, except
the supreme god, Ame-no-minaka-nashi-no-mikoto, who is all soul.
, lit. god-spirit, is related to
, soul, much as a substance with its attributes is
related to the same substance without them. If you can manage the
conception of the first of these philosophic vacuities, you will
find no difficulty with the second. Furthermore, spirit and soul
may coexist separately in one body. As the spirit clarifies, that
is, becomes more and more blank, it approaches soul and finally
becomes it.
The one thing common, therefore, to all things, both of this
world and the next, is spirit. Everything, from gods to granite,
has its god-spirit. Each spirit is as separate and particular as
the body it inhabits; yet it is capable of indefinite expansion or
contraction, of permeating matter and of going and coming according
to laws of its own. It may, perhaps, be looked upon provisionally
as a gas.
Spirit never dies, it only circulates. When a man or animal
or plant dies its body duly decays, but its spirit either lives on
alone or returns to those two great reservoirs of spirit, the gods
Takami-musubi-no-kami and Kami-musubi-no-kami. From them a
continual circulation of spirit is kept up through the universe.
Whether a spirit's personality persist or not is a matter decided
by the supreme god, and depends upon the greatness or the goodness
of the defunct. For example, Kan Shojo, the god of calligraphy, has
persisted thus posthumously for almost a thousand years. It is to
be hoped for the sake of Japan's beautiful brushmanship, that he
will continue to survive and be worshiped for some time yet.
Spirit is by no means necessarily good. It is manifest that,
viewed from the human standpoint, some things are harmful, some
harmless, both among plants, animals, and men. The harmful ones are
therefore bad; the harmless ones may or may not be good. Why
certain inoffensive animals, for example, have got a bad name, or
even a good one, is as inscrutable as the cause of the gender of
Latin nouns. They are given a bad name, and that is cause enough.
It will be observed that in this system of ethics man has no
monopoly of original sin.
Similarly the gods themselves are divided into the sheep and
the goats, but by a merciful dispensation of something or other the
good gods are mightier than the bad. Indeed, a certain evolutionary
process is going on throughout the universe, by which the bad
spirits grow good and the good better. It is described as a
continued clarification, terminating in total blankness.
Spirit not only circulates after death; it may do so during
life. Usually it does not wander in this way, simply because it is
at home where it is and inertia keeps it there. But in some cases
it is not so wedded to the body with which it is associated, and
the purer it becomes the more is it given to occasional
volatilizing.
Now esoteric Shintō consists in compelling this spirit to
circulate for particular ends. This is not a difficult matter, if
it be properly undertaken. It is accomplished through
self-purification. For the degree of purity determines the degree
of possession. Possession is simply the entrance into one body of
another body's spirit, and the simultaneous expulsion or
subjugation of the spirit originally there.
This shift of spirit may take place between any two bodies in
nature. Nor does such interchange differ in kind, no matter what
the bodies be. But for the sake of psychology rather than religion,
we may profitably consider it under the two aspects of
god-possession of things and god-possession of people. The one
gives rise to the miracles; the other to the incarnations. Both
kinds of possession occurred spontaneously, that is, at the will of
the gods, in olden times, and presumably so occur at the present
day; but the gods have also graciously granted pure men the power
to pray for them acceptedly.
In the case of people the act of possession is nowadays known
as
,
or
, that is, "the causing of the god to come
down," "the causing the god to transform" or "god transformation."
The first two names thus view the thing from the human standpoint,
the last from the divine. But this is matter of the temporary point
of view, all three expressions, with others such as
, "to change vehicles," being used
indifferently according to the speaker's preference.
Possession may be partial, complete, or intermediary, that
is, the alien spirit may share the head of the person with the
native spirit, or it may drive it out, or it may drive it down into
the belly. But such degrees of tenancy are grades rather of the
proficiency attained during novitiate into the cult. In actual
possessions the chief distinction consists in the character of the
god who comes.
Possession of things are in like manner possible through
purity in the person who would bring them about. They are called
or god-arts, because originally only the gods,
and now only the gods and the godly, can perform them.
IV.
Before entering upon the miracles, it is necessary to explain
the present position of Shintō with regard to these esoteric
practices generally. For, though as we shall see when we look later
into their history, it is probable that originally they were the
common property of all Shintōists, they are not so to-day.
Of the present ten sects that compose the Shintō church, only
two practice the possession-cult, the Shinshiu and the Mitaké
sects. That they do so while the others do not is not matter of
creed, but of tradition. Though called sects, the Shintō sects are
not properly so much sects as sections. For they differ not by
differently worshiping an identical god, but by identically
worshiping different gods. Each of them likewise worships, though
with less assiduity, all the others' gods. Each looks specially to
the great shrine dedicated to its special gods; and all but two,
one of which is a sort of general bureau of church organism, make
pilgrimages to their shrine once or twice a year.
These sects date only from since the time of the revival of
pure Shintō twenty years ago. But under another name the professors
of the cult hold it in unbroken practice from the far past. Whether
during the time of Shintō's long eclipse the possession cult was
kept up by the few remaining pure Shintōists, if indeed there can
be said to have been any pure Shintōists then at all, is doubtful,
although the priests to-day assert that it was always practiced by
the pious in secret. Certain it is, however, that during the lapse
of Shintō from national regard practice of the cult passed to all
intents and purposes to a hybrid of Shintō and Buddhism known as
Ryōbu or Both, because it was indeed manufactured of both creeds.
The great Kōbō Daishi is the reputed father of Ryōbu. This
worthy soul—who by the way was never called Kōbō Daishi while he
was called anything; he was known as Kūkai so long as he was known
at all—was the founder of the Shingon sect of Buddhism in Japan. He
seems to have been singularly energetic. The peaks he climbed, the
pictures he painted, and the divers deeds of one sort and another
which he accomplished, would have kept Methuselah on the jump for
the whole of his millennial life. Nevertheless, he found time amid
it all to invent Ryōbu. His invention consisted in a judicious
hodge-podge of Shintō and Buddhist popularities. His diligence met
its reward. The newly invented faith instantly became very popular,
because it let everybody in. It was essentially an open air faith,
much given to mountaineering, a trait it might be supposed to have
inherited from its father, were it not instinctive in a Japanese to
climb.
Ryōbu has more than one sect, but it was only the Ontaké sect
of the belief that practiced god-possession. It kept the cult alive
for a thousand years, and then, when pure Shintō was revived at the
time of the Restoration, and hybrids were abolished by imperial
edict, the Ontaké Ryōbuists came back again into the Shintō fold.
Besides Ryōbu, some of the Buddhist sects early saw the
advantage of being intimate with deity, and Kōbō Daishi, after
being taught the means to it by the Shintō Emperor Sanga, so it is
said, not satisfied with inventing Ryobu and incorporating it in
that, boldly took it for his own Shingon sect of Buddhism. And the
Shingon sect still practices the cult to-day. Denkyō Daishi, the
founder of the Tendai sect, was likewise captivated by it and
incorporated it into his belief. Lastly, the Nichiren sect learned
the art and indulges in it now more than either of the other two.
We thus find at the present time among the professors of the
cult some Shintōists, some Ryōbuists, and some Buddhists; each
faith claiming it stoutly for its own.