H. E. DAVEY
SHINTO
MEDITATIONS
FOR REVERING THE EARTH
Stuart D. B. Picken
Foreword by Yukitaka Yamamoto, High Priest of Tsubaki Grand Shrine
STONE BRIDGE PRESS • BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA
Published by
STONE BRIDGE PRESS
P. O. Box 8208, Berkeley, CA 94707
510-524-8732 • [email protected] • www.stonebridge.com
Calligraphy on frontispiece: “Shinto” by H. E. Davey.
Misogi exercise on pages 105–12 adapted from Kami no Michi, The Way of the Kami: The Life and Thought of a Shinto Priest by Guji Yukitaka Yamamoto, Introduction by Stuart D. B. Picken (Stockton, CA: Tsubaki America Publications, 1987).
Our gratitude to Rev. Koichi Barrish, H. E. Davey, Shunkichi (Yuji) Inokuma, and Peter St. Onge for advice and assistance.
Photographs on pages 13, 17, 20, 97 courtesy Tsubaki Grand Shrine, Japan. Photograph on page 101 courtesy Wago Enten, Hawaii. Photographs on pages 113, 120 courtesy Tsubaki Grand Shrine of America, Washington.
Text © 2002 Stuart D. B. Picken.
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Picken, Stuart D. B.
Shinto meditations for revering the earth / Stuart D. B. Picken; foreword by Yukitaka Yamamoto.
p. cm.
ISBN 1-880656-66-3
1. Shinto—Prayer-books and devotions—English. 2. Nature—Religious aspects—Shinto—Meditations. I. Title.
BL2224.3 .P53 2002
299'.561432—dc21
2002021183
Foreword
The Human, the Divine, and Great Nature
According to Shinto thinking, human beings are descended from the world of the divine, the world of the kami. The cosmic process called Great Nature, the collective reality we call the universe, is honored even by those kami that brought it into being. Within the vast compass of Great Nature, therefore, together, things that exist are given life and thus human beings become able to enjoy the happiness of truth and sincerity. This is the principle that binds heaven and earth, which is called Kannagara, the Way of the Kami. The way known as Kannagara can be understood as the character that lies at the foundation of the existence of all humanity, the principle of mutually cooperative peaceful coexistence.
Modern human civilization, however, has been and is still proceeding on a trajectory of development that seeks to conquer the vast expanses of Great Nature, a pathway that will lead to its own inescapable self-destruction. Human beings henceforth must learn conciliation. The world’s religions, their leaders, their doctrines, and their teachings must take the initiative and engage in dialogue that will lead to an initiative to rehabilitate and reestablish the displaced principle of heaven and earth. This must lead to the building of a new order and to a turnabout in thinking that will promote tolerance, generosity, and understanding. This is the meaning of Kannagara, the way of following Great Nature. It is not a religion to be taught, but the source of true and valid religious sentiment.
Human beings, as living bodies, become quite unaware of how impurities that pollute the soul are acquired. They may be descendants of the kami, but they are not kami as such. The soul and the body require constant purification. Through the regular Shinto practice of misogi (purification under a waterfall, in a river, or in the sea), human spirituality can be heightened and humanity may be restored to its initial divine, kami nature. Only thus can the human, the divine, and Great Nature be once again brought back into their primal harmony. This is the way toward the cultivation and restoration of human divinity.
This book of meditations gathers common features of natural religion from different faith traditions and shows how they can be used in a Shinto context to revere the earth and cultivate human spirituality. I believe that now is the time for human civilization to unite in achieving this goal. And I believe that Shinto can help show the way.
Yukitaka Yamamoto
96th High Priest of Tsubaki Grand Shrine
The First District Shrine of Ise
Mie Prefecture, Japan
Preface
Does religion puzzle you? An old professor of mine explained this by using the analogy of a tiger—it fascinates you, but you are nevertheless afraid of it. Do you ever feel that you want to belong actively to a group that seeks the cultivation of human spirituality? Do you also become disappointed that, often as not, these groups demand in return that you submit to articles of faith you really don’t find “believable”? And doesn’t it seem difficult to choose among the wide array of faiths open to you? Do you feel a special reverence for nature and the environment but lack the means to explore this feeling or reference it in your daily life? If the answer to any or all of these is “Yes,” then this book is for you.
I would like to talk to you about the most straightforward and basic approach to religion that there is or ever has been. I would like to help awaken you to what religion began as, when nature was the spirit’s only guide. Before prophets and gurus, priests and preachers, human beings followed their own inner stirrings, and their religion was natural religion. It was not man-made, artificial, or invented. Its sentiments, beliefs, and responses were drawn from direct communion with the natural. It does not mean that its followers merely worshiped nature, but they did possess a special feeling toward it. They lived within it, and—unlike us today, who are so far from the natural, the authentic, and the immediate—it lived within them.
This religion really was in every sense of the term “pre-historic.” It emerged before history was invented to tell us who we are, where we came from, and what we should do with ourselves. It predates the great religions of history. Before the Buddha was born in India, or Jesus of Nazareth preached to the Jews, or Lao-tzu wrote about the Tao, it was there.
This simple approach to religion that listens to nature, that enriches spirituality, and that restores purity does exist. It has survived in only one modern technological society. It is called Shinto, and it lives in modern Japan.
The word Shinto (pronounced like “sheen-toe”) is a compound of two Chinese characters, shin, which is a kind of generic term referring to the divine, and do, which quite simply means “the way.” So in short, it refers to the “way of the divine.” As its name implies, it is not a teaching but a way, like a well-trodden forest path. It is there for all to see.
But you might protest, “So? Another religion?” To this the answer is “Yes, but with a difference. There is no known or remembered founder. There is no holy book. There are no systematically worked out doctrines, and there is no central or overarching authority.” And, there are people who have discovered it without ever having heard the word Shinto and without having visited Japan.
Let me tell you a true story .
I met Mari on a flight from Boston to Prestwick in Scotland. She had been working as a chaplain in an AIDS center in the Bronx in New York City. She had been born in Scotland and had studied Law and Divinity, planning to be a minister in the Church of Scotland. She felt called by her faith, and in obedience went to the United States to the place where she was working at the time I met her.
It was very clear that the work was filling her with sadness and depression simply through exposing her to misery and suffering on a daily