There are three essential elements in any form of Shinto worship. The first step is the all-important act of purification, almost always involving water. The water is poured over the hands and used to rinse out the mouth in an act of ritual washing. The second step is an offering to the kami, usually food or money. The third step is offering a prayer to the kami, of both thanksgiving and petition for the future. Music, dance, and ritual reenactment of planting, harvest, or history are often involved in the large community celebrations. The Shinto celebrations bring the Kami into the presence of the daily life of the community and it's individual citizens.
If we keep un-perverted the human heart-which is like unto heaven and received from the earth-that is God. (Revelation to Mikado Seiwa)
Do not forget your obligations to ancestors.
Respect your ancestors.
Do not forget the profound goodness of the kami, through which calamity and misfortunes are averted and sickness is healed.
Do not be sluggish in your work.
Even the wishes of an ant reach to heaven.
Leave the things of this world, and come to me daily with pure bodies and pure hearts.
Sincerity is a witness to truth.
Sincerity is the single virtue that binds the divine and man in one. (Jingishoju)
To do good is to be pure. To commit evil is to be impure.
If you pray to a deity with sincerity, you will surely feel the divine presence.
A single sincere prayer moves Heaven. You will surely realize the divine presenc through sincere prayer.
The best and surest way to be one with the divine is sincerity.
The first and surest means to enter into communion with the Divine is sincerity.
With sincerity, there is virtue.
Sincerity is the mother of knowledge.
In governing, let us govern with true sincerity.
Even in one single leaf on a tree, or in one blade of grass, the awesome Deity presents itself.
Our eyes might see un-cleanliness, but let not our minds see un-cleanliness. Our ears might hear un-cleanliness, but let not our minds hear un-cleanliness.
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Shinto is a prehistoric religious tradition indigenous to Japan, which has been influenced by Buddhism and Chinese religions and provides a worldview that has become central to Japanese culture and national identity. Shinto recognizes no all-powerful deity and is a diverse set of traditional rituals and ceremonies, rather than a system of dogmatic beliefs or ethics. The kami are the powers of nature primarily associated with such things as animals, trees, mountains, springs, boulders, the sun, and so forth. They also sometimes include the earliest ancestors of the Japanese, as well as the souls of the dead, and are revered in matsuri, or celebrations that seek to ensure continued order in the cosmos. Offerings such as fish, rice and vegetables are presented to the kami and later eaten. Music, dancing, and praise are also offered, and Shinto priests bless all with the branch of the sacred sakaki tree dipped in holy water. Another, shamanistic type of Shinto ritual exists in rural areas, in which miko (women shamans) speak for the kami by falling into a trance.
it is the belife of and a creator called the ''shijio''
Shintoism is the major religion in Japan.
Japan, it is the major religion there
Throw the cheeeeeeeeeese
Every living thing is intrinsically valuable and should be respected
the shinto has there birthday and the holy day
A major teaching is for Shinto followers to live and coexist in harmony with nature and other people.
NO. Shintoism is an indigenous Japanese faith. All other major faiths and philosophies in Japan, such as Confucianism and Buddhism, however, did come from China.
There is no founder for Shintoism
There is know founder for shintoism.
Shintoism, Shinto
The Halawali is the key text of Shintoism.
Shintoism is a spiritual practice in Japan