The Shinto Cult
The Shinto CultTHE SHINTO CULT.SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY.FOOTNOTES:Copyright
The Shinto Cult
Milton Spenser Terry
THE SHINTO CULT.
1. The Country.In taking up
the study of a religion which has never extended beyond the limits
of an easily defined territory, we may appropriately first of all
take a hasty glance at the geographical outlines of the system we
call Shinto, the primitive faith of the people of Japan. To
appreciate the geographical position of Japan, one needs to have
before him a map of the world. He may then see at a glance how
remarkably the three thousand islands of that Empire stretch for
some twenty-five hundred miles along the coast of Asia, from
Kamchatka on the north to the island of Formosa on the south, which
island is crossed by the tropic of Cancer. It may be called the
longest and the narrowest country in the world. It looks like an
immense sea-serpent, with its northern tail twisting toward the
Aleutian Islands, which our Government acquired from Russia in
1867, and its southern head pointing toward the Philippine Islands,
which we acquired from Spain in recent years. It seems to guard the
whole eastern coast of Asia, and along with China, on the mainland,
is suspected and feared by some European diplomats as embodying
some sort of a "Yellow Peril." It may be that its noteworthy
contiguity to our Alaskan possessions at one extremity and our
Philippine wards at the other bodes some sort of peril to any
Western nation that may hereafter presume to enlarge its dominions
in the Orient by force of arms.Attention has often been called to the fact that the British
Isles, in the Atlantic Ocean, just off the northwestern coast of
Europe, occupy a corresponding geographical relation to the Western
world. The islands themselves are comparatively small, but their
measuring line has gone out into all the earth, and their
civilization is dominating the world. Asia, on the east of the
Eastern hemisphere, is a land of innumerable population; Europe, on
the west, is a land of new ideas and of hopeful progress. The
United States, resting her Atlantean shoulder on the island-empire
of Europe, and her Pacific shoulder on the island-empire of the
Orient, may be, in the order of God, a mighty mediator, possessed
both of a great population and of new and commanding ideas, and
destined to bring about the universal peace, the sound knowledge,
and the highest prosperity of the world.We are told that Japan is a country of diversified beauty.
Compassed round about with the vast ocean, yet not far from the
Asiatic mainland; supplied also with a wonderful inland sea, and
with lakes and rivers and fountains of waters; a land of mountains,
and valleys, and broad meadows, and all manner of trees and shrubs
and fruits and flowers, and charming landscapes, and all varieties
of climate; it is no wonder that the people and their poets have
called this group of islands "the sun's nest," "the country of the
sun-goddess," "the region between heaven and earth," "islands of
the congealed drop," "the grand land of the eight isles," "central
land of reed-plains," "land of the ears of fresh rice," "land of a
thousand autumns," and other similar names indicative of manifold
excellence.[1]This island-empire of the Orient is the home of the religious
cult called "Shinto," a religion which has never traveled nor
sought to propagate itself beyond the dominions of Japan. It has
never put itself in a hostile attitude toward any other form of
religion, either at home or abroad, except when a foreign cult has
entered its ancient home and sought to meddle with affairs of State
or to interfere with loyalty to the Emperor.2. Is Shinto a Religion?At a
meeting of the Society of Science, held at Tokyo in 1890, the
president of the Imperial University expressed the opinion that
Shinto should not be regarded as a religion. He believed it to be
an essential element in the existing national thought and feeling
of Japan, but destitute of the essential qualities of a strictly
religious cult. Others have expressed a similar opinion; but we are
disposed to think that this judgment arises from an incorrect
concept of religion, and a consequent defective definition of the
same. A similar denial has been made of the religious character of
other cults and systems. Taoism, Confucianism, and even Buddhism
have been said to lack the elements essential to a real religion.
But if these systems do not constitute a religion for the peoples
who accept them, they are in every case their substitute for
religion. Any religion or any form of religion may so involve its
thought and its practices with philosophical speculation, or with
social customs, or with the political management of the State, as
to have the appearance of a philosophical or a political system,
rather than a form of religion. But, however it may, in such ways,
ignore the religious ideas and practices of other systems, if there
be no other religious cult among the people, the philosophy, the
ethical policy and the customs, which make up this important
element of the civilization and the national life, are as truly
tantamount to a religious cult as any form of faith and practice
which all men agree to call religion.3. Origin and Relative Age of the
People.The main body of the Japanese people
are believed to have migrated in old times from the northern
central part of Asia, and to have worked their way eastward into
Korea, and thence into the islands of Japan. They expelled or
subjugated the aborigines of the country, and made themselves
masters of the great islands and the inland and surrounding seas.
But their origin and early history are involved in dense obscurity.
They doubtless brought with them from their earlier dwellings in
Asia various myths, legends, and traditions, and these grew and
strengthened amid the simple habits of life which they adopted in
their new island-world. According to a writer[2]in theWestminster Reviewof July, 1878, Japan
is yet, in more senses than one, a young country. Their language
and their institutions "show us a people still in a very early
stage of development." W. G. Aston holds that the earliest date of
accepted Japanese chronology is A. D. 461, and he says that
Japanese history, properly so called, can not be said to exist
previous to A. D. 500. He regards Korean history more trustworthy
than that of Japan previous to that date.[3]According to Satow, "everything
points to the descent of the Japanese people in great part from a
race of Turanian origin, who crossed over from the continent by way
of the islands Tsushima and Iki, which form the natural
stepping-stones from Korea to Japan."[4]But the last twenty-five years have witnessed a most
remarkable advance in the use of modern inventions, and more than
any other nation of the far East have the Japanese displayed both a
willingness and an ambition to improve their condition by means of
the ideas and usages of Western civilization. The war with China in
1894, and that with Russia in 1904-1905, displayed a wisdom, tact,
and energy which were a great surprise to the world. The
self-poise, the generosity, the far-sighted statesmanship exhibited
in her concluding terms of peace with her haughty but defeated
enemy, have commanded universal admiration. These facts make the
study of this people's ancient religious cult, which is still a
powerful element in the popular life, a matter of no little
interest at the present time.[5]4. Meaning of the Word Shinto.The word Shinto means the "way of the gods." It came into use
when Buddhism was introduced into Japan, and designates the old,
ancestral worship as a way of the gods distinct from the way of the
Buddhists, or of any other rival way of religious life. The
Japanese name isKami no michi.
In its essential elements it is a commingling of Animism and
ancestor-worship. Not only are the spirits of departed ancestors
reckoned among the gods, but there are innumerable deities of other
kind and character. The mountains and valleys, the rivers and the
seas, the trees, the wind, the thunder, the fire, all moving things
and objects of sense are supposed to have each a deity within. And
these deities seem for the most part to have been regarded as
beneficent powers, and their worship is of a joyous
kind.5. Sources of Information.The
sources of our knowledge of this ancient cult are quite numerous,
but not as accessible to English and American students as is
desirable. The oldest existing monument of Japanese literature is
known as the "Ko-ji-ki," the text of which would make a book about
the size of our four Gospels. It contains 180 short sections or
chapters. The wordKo-ji-kimeans a "Record of Ancient Matters," and appropriately
designates this oldest known record of the mythology, history, and
customs of the people of Japan. It is the nearest approach to a
sacred scripture of the Shinto cult which we possess. It has been
translated into English, and supplied with a learned introduction
and many explanatory notes by Basil H. Chamberlain,[6]a distinguished scholar, who has
made the Japanese language, literature, and archæology a subject of
extensive and minute research.Another and much larger work, comprising thirty books, and
containing a record of much of the same mythology and history as
theKo-ji-ki, is called
theNihongi, or "Chronicles of
Japan."[7]It is a composite
of various elements derived from numerous different sources, and
while it reports in substance the myths and stories of the gods as
they are found in theKo-ji-ki,
it makes no mention of that older work and omits some things which
the older work records. It gives, however, a number and variety of
reports of the myths and traditions, informing us how, in one
ancient writing, it is so and so recorded; in another writing, it
is somewhat differently told. This feature enhances its value for
purposes of comparison among the varying traditions.This later production lacks the simplicity and originality of
theKo-ji-ki, and bears
abundant evidence of the Chinese influences under which it was
composed. It is written for the most part in Chinese, and exhibits
numerous examples of the learning and philosophical cast of thought
peculiar to certain well-known Chinese writings. As a specimen of
this rationalistic type of construing the ancient myths of
creation, we here cite the opening sentences from the first book of
theNihongi:"Of old, Heaven and Earth were not yet separated, and the In
and Yo [orYinandYang