

Shinto
is a general term for the activities of the Japanese people
to worship all the deities of heaven and earth, and its
origin is as old as the history of the Japanese. It was
towards the end of the 6th century when the Japanese were
conscious of these activities and called them 'Way of Kami(the
deity or the deities)'. It coincides the time when the 31st
Emperor Yomei prayed before an image of Buddha for the first
time as an emperor for recovery of his illness. Thus accepting
Buddhism, a foreign religion, the Japanese realized existence
of a tradition of their own faith.
After having gone through a long history since then, this
indigenous faith, Shinto, has developed into four main forms:
Koshitsu Shinto (Shinto of the Imperial House), Jinja Shinto
(Shrine Shinto), Shuha Shinto (Sectarian Shinto), and Minzoku
Shinto (Folk Shinto).
|