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15 November 2009
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Shrine and home worship

Shinto worship

Torii arch and wide staircase full of people climbing up to the Tosho Gu shrine, a collection of buildings with gold-painted roofs

People arriving to worship at Tosho Gu shrine, Nikko

Shinto worship is highly ritualised, and follows strict conventions of protocol, order and control. It can take place in the home or in shrines.

Although all Shinto worship and ritual takes place within the patterns set when the faith was centralised in the 19th century, there is much local diversity.

The spirit of Shinto worship

In keeping with Shinto values, Shinto ritual should be carried out in a spirit of sincerity, cheerfulness and purity.

Shinto worship and the senses

Shinto ritual is intended to satisfy the senses as well as the minds of those taking part, so the way in which it is carried out is of huge importance. Shinto ceremonies have strong aesthetic elements - the setting and props, the sounds, the dress of the priests, and the language and speech are all intended to please the kami to whom the worship is offered.

Private and public worship

Although Shinto worship features public and shared rituals at local shrines, it can also be a private and individual event, in which a person at a shrine (or in their home) prays to particular kami either to obtain something, or to thank the kami for something good that has happened.

Worship at home

Many Japanese homes contain a place set aside as a shrine, called a kami-dana (kami shelf), where they may make offerings of flowers or food, and say prayers.

The kami-dana is a shelf that contains a tiny replica of the sanctuary of a shrine, and may also include amulets bought to ensure good luck (or absorb bad luck). A mirror in the centre connects the shelf to the kami.

If a family has bought a religious object at a shrine they will lay this on the kami-dana, thus linking home to shrine.

Worship at a shrine

There is no special day of the week for worship in Shinto - people visit shrines for festivals, for personal spiritual reasons, or to put a particular request to the kami (this might be for good luck in an exam, or protection of a family member, and so on).

Worship takes place in shrines built with great understanding of the natural world. The contrast between the human ritual and the natural world underlines the way in which Shinto constructs and reflects human empathy for the universe.

The journey that the worshipper makes through the shrine to the sanctuary where the ritual takes place forms part of the worship, and helps the worshipper to move spiritually from the everyday world to a place of holiness and purity.

The aesthetics (or to put it over simply, the 'look') of the shrine contribute substantially to the worship, in the way that the setting of a theatre play contributes significantly to the overall drama.

Although Shinto rituals appear very ancient, many are actually modern revivals, or even modern inventions.

In this article

  1. Shrine and home worship
  2. Rituals

This page was last updated 2004-03-09

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