Faith of Japan
Faith of Japan
BY
TASUKU HARADA, LL. D.
PRESIDENT OF DOSHISHA UNIVERSITY, KYOTO
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THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
1914
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Copyright, 19x4.
By THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
Set up and electrotyped. Published February, 1»14.
Tasuku Harada
Kyoto, Japan, Sept. i, 1913.
The Hartford-Lamson Lectures on "The Re-
ligions of the World" are delivered at Hartford
nocent beliefs.
plishments.
The second school is called the Wang-Yang-
*
Ming or Oyomei school, after a Chinese scholar
of the Ming dynasty, sometimes called the So-
1
To
the inquiry put by the Jiji Shimpo, in 1909, answers were
sent by more than a hundred men of position in all walks of life.
Among more than one hundred books the Analects received the
largest number of votes. The Book of Mencius came next; and it
is interesting to note that the New Testament occupied the
attached.
An earnest and most powerful adherent of Bud-
dhism was found in Shotoku-Taishi 1 (573-621), the
1
Taishi, royal prince in Japanese.
16 THE FAITH OF JAPAN
looked.
The last but not the least of the remarkable
chain of religious leaders was Nichiren (1222-
1282) the founder of the sect bearing his name.
With a strong personality, fired by combative
enthusiasm, he proclaimed salvation by the repe-
tition of the name of the sacred scripture. It was
the time when Japan was under fear of inva-
Meiji.
'
deities. The last two were pronounced to be from
a thing that sprouted up like unto a reed-shoot,
when the earth, young and like unto floating oil,
'
drifted about medusa-like. One
might of these
august-centre-heaven) ,
Takami-musubi-no-kami
(the High-august-producing- wondrous-deity), and
Kami-musubi-no-kami (the Divine-producing-
wondrous-deity), who are said to have been
"born in the plain of High Heaven when the
1
See my article on "God (Japanese)" in "The Encyclopaedia
of Religion and Ethics," edited by James Hastings, Vol. vi.
KAMI: THE CONCEPTION OF DEITY $$
1
W. G. Aston, "Shinto," pp. 121-122.
2
Joseph Edkins, "Propagation of Primitive Belief."
38 THE FAITH OF JAPAN
1
Wm. Crooke, on "Ancestor Worship," in "The Encyclo-
paedia of Religion and Ethics." Vol. i.
KAMI: THE CONCEPTION OF DEITY 39
1
the Supreme Being. In Shikyo and Shokyo it is
1
Shikyo and Shokyo are the Chinese classics, commonly known
as the "Book of Poetry" and the "Ancient Chronicles."
2
Lautze=Roshi, Chwangtze=Soshi, Chidze= Shushi, in Japa-
40 THE FAITH OF JAPAN
"
Yomei was an idealist. He asserted that apart
1
G. W. Knox, "A Japanese Philosopher" in "Transactions of
the Asiatic Society of Japan," Vol. xx. pp. 12, 13.
42 THE FAITH OF JAPAN
J
The word here translated "God" might be translated in the
plural, but this rendering is permissible, at least.
44 THE FAITH OF JAPAN
1
"Jirin" by S. Kanazawa, 1907.
2
"Japanese-English Dictionary" by F. Brinkley and others,
1896.
46 THE FAITH OF JAPAN
48
MICHI: THE WAY OF HUMANITY 49
in Japanese.
54 THE FAITH OF JAPAN
l
firmly holds it fast," said Confucius. Mencius,
his great expositor, declared: "Therefore sincerity
1
Kanzo Uchimura, "Representative Men of Japan," pp. 170-
171.
MICHI: THE WAY OF HUMANITY 61
it, and man is its image. For him the Way is the
X
G. W. Knox, "The Development of Religion in Japan,"
manity in relation.
that
way, a path and also a journey taken upon
to
way. It is the word used repeatedly signify
(Psalm 1 :6)
1
"The Red Cross in Japan" by Baron Ishiguro in "Fifty Years
of New Japan," edited by Count Okuma.
MICHi: THE WAY OF HUMANITY 71
fulfill."
IV
1
The English equivalents for Satori are enlightenment, under-
standing, illumination, intelligence, knowledge, wisdom, discern-
ment, and secondarily, conviction and resignation.
73
74 THE FAITH OF JAPAN
1
T. Kuruma, "The Outline of Every Sect of Buddhism," p. 73.
2
Shaku Soyen, "Sermons of a Buddhist Abbot," pp. 126, 132.
78 THE FAITH OF JAPAN
1
D. T. Suzuki, "Outline of Mahayana Buddhism," p. 10.
2
Idem, p. 91.
80 THE FAITH OF JAPAN
1
Ecclesiastes 1:2-4.
2
Zaigo-ho-o-kyo.
8
A poem by Kobo composed of the forty-eight letters of the
not of earth.
When Buddhism was flourishing in the Nara
and succeeding periods, several emperors abdi-
1
"The Method of Practicing Zazen" by K. Nukariya, in "Prin-
92
SUKUII THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION 93
Japan.
As early as the tenth century Kuya, a fore-
1
M. Anesaki, "Honen, the Pietist of Japanese Buddhism," in
"Transactions of the Third International Congress for the History
of Religions," Vol. i. pp. 124-125.
g6 THE FAITH OF JAPAN
keep the laws which are fixed for our duty during
1
our whole life."
1
Arthur Lloyd, "Development of Japanese Buddhism" in
"
Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan," Vol. xxii. p. 414.
gS THE FAITH OF JAPAN
1
See the conclusion in "Essay on Paradise and Pure Land" by
Prof. B. Matsumoto.
SUKUII THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION IOI
1
He calls Amida by the name Nyorai signifying "the one who
is coming."
2 Translation from "The Faith of Kiyozawa" by S. Akegarasu.
SUKUII THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION IO3
faith.
power of others.
1
Arthur Lloyd, "Shinran and His Work," p. 4.
"
2
J. Troup, A Japanese Buddhist Sect which Teaches Salvation
"
by Faith in Hibbert Journal, Vol. iv, p. 293.
108 THE FAITH OF JAPAN
1
Odomo-Yakamochi (d. 785 a. d.), translation from F.
"
Brinkley's Japan."
Il6 THE FAITH OF JAPAN
people.
Il8 THE FAITH OF JAPAN
give way.
There is a well-known story of a Japanese
CHUGi: THE SPIRIT OF LOYALTY 1 23
Whene'er I sorrow,
Thinking of our soldiers slain
In bloody battle,
In my soul I grieve the more
For their parents weeping sore.
CHUGII THE SPIRIT OF LOYALTY 1 27
(Rom. 14:7-8.)
"A faithful wife never seeks a second husband;
a loyal servant never seeks a second master" has
been a proverbial saying among the samurai.
After the death of Jier husband, a woman cuts her
hair in sign of fidelity; and a true retainer never
offered himself to the service of another, even
1
Since the writing of these words, there has occurred the tragic
suicide of General —
and Countess Nogi, at the time of the funeral
of the late Emperor, Meiji Tenno, who passed away July 30th,
1912.
130 THE FAITH OF JAPAN
quired in Chugi.
As an illustration of the old-time education of
ready to die for your lord and for your father?' The
boy, then, would reply in the same frank manner,
as making a sacred pledge, 'I am ready to die,
if
I am
ready to die/ But even among the bold
and daring Satsuma samurai were some weak-
translation from "Bushido" by I. Nitobe.
2 Vol.
4, No. 1.
134 THE FAITH OF JAPAN
1
W. G. Aston, "Shinto," p. 93.
137
I38 THE FAITH OF JAPAN
evangelists.
A belief in the communion of saints found its way
into the writings of Kuya, especially in his work
entitled "Wojo Yoshu," The Principles of Birth
in Pure Land. He opens with a description of the
miseries of various states of existence and closes
X
M. Anesaki, "Buddhist Influence upon the Japanese," in
"Transactions of the Third International Congress of the History
of Religion." Vol. i, pp. 155-156.
MIRAi: THE IDEA OE EUTURE LIFE 145
1
Muro-Kiuso in "Shuntai Zatsuwa" written in his seventy-
fifth year.
MIRAi: THE IDEA OF FUTURE LIFE 151
ancestors.
1
A professor of sociology, Dr. R. Yendo, once secured a list of
the objects for which prayer was offered at one of the popular
Shinto shrines in the Province of Echigo (Yahiko Jinsha). The
list shows, among 9860 cases of prayer offered during a year, 7109
for prosperity and the safety of families, 549 for personal safety,
458 for safety on the sea, 411 for business success, 306 for the real-
ization of personal desires, 269 for recovery from sickness. The
proportionately large number of prayers for families should be in
particular noticed.
156 THE FAITH OF JAPAN
iS7
158 THE FAITH OF JAPAN
superstition
—ghost-stories
and strange tales of
answers to prayer abound; but such things are
held lightly, and the educated class for the most
basal principle
—"Filial piety is the mother of a
1
Keiroku Tsuzuki, in "Fifty Years of New Japan," Vol. ii,
p. 486.
the faith: old and new 161
1
A more liberal policy has prevailed since 191 2.
1 62 THE FAITH OF JAPAN
may be promoted.
Thus sanctioned and stimulated by the Im-
perial Oath, the renaissance sprang forward at a
doubtful if
Japan could have leaped at a bound
to a recognized place among the leading nations
of the earth.
1
The oath consists of five articles. The translation is by Prof.
deeply affected.
The wave of zeal for preserving the national
Government."
Movements like the Young Men's Christian
Association have secured valuable assistance from
ward it.
end by thinking
cestors will little of God Himself.
Amaterasu-omikami, 8
salvation, 92-4; Amida doc-
Amida (Amidaism), 20, 21, 94-
trine, 94 seq.; modern prop-
106, 141-2
aganda, 101; believers' con-
Analects of Confucius, 8, 12,
fessions, 102-4; contrasted
13, 57, 59
with Christianity, 105; Ni-
Ancestor worship, 29, 34, 37,
chiren, 107-110; tariki pre-
139, 161, 183
vails over jiriki, 112; criti-
Anesaki, Prof. M., quoted, 144
cized, 112; approaching
Aston, W. G., quoted, 37, 139
Christianity, 113; influence
Asvagosha, 99
on Bushido, 115 ; transmi-
Atheism, 106, 1 11, 170 communion of
gration, 141;
saints, 143-4; pantheism,
B
149, 153; revived, 165-6;
Bon festival, 144-5 Max Miiller on Buddhism
Book of Changes, 53 and Christianity, 181
Bradford, Amory H., quoted, Bureaux of Religions and
103 Shrines, 2
Capt, quoted, 114
Brinkley, Bushido, 11, 23, 114 seq., 153
Buddhism: scope and influ-
ence, 3, 75 ; affected by
Christianity, 3, 104-7, XI 3>
165; introduction, 13, 75; China (Chinese), 15,16, 17,52,
rise and decline, 15; pat- 98, 121-2
ronized by Shotoku, 15, Christianity: in sixteenth cen-
16; sects, 17, 18; seculariza- tury, 3, 23, 66, 71; modern,
tion, 19; effect on Shinto, 104, 157 seq.; and Buddhism,
5, 19, 46; northern and 3, 104-7, 113, 181; and pa-
185
i86 INDEX
Inkyo, 85 Kublai, 22
Iroha syllabary, 19, 82 Kudara, King of, 13
Ise, 45 Kumagai-Naozane, 85
Ishiguro, Surgeon-Gen., Kumazawa-Banzan, n, 62
quoted, 69
Kurozumi-Munetada, 8, 36, 151
Ito-Jinsai, 11
Kuruma, T., quoted, 77
Ito-Togai, 11 Kusunoki-Masashige, 70, 145
Izanagi, 137 Kuya, 20, 94, 143
Izanami, 137
149
Saigio, 85 Simplicity, 50
Saigo-Takamori, 131 Sin, 1 1 2-3, 169
Saint Paul, quoted, 105, 127, Smiles' "Self-help," 163
Tennoji temple, 15
Tenrikyo, 8
128
Tokugawa, 9, 10,
Yamaka-Soko, n
Toshinari, 83 Yamato Damashii, 117
Transitoriness, 81 Yomei. See Wang-Yang-Ming
Transmigration, 105, 141
Yoritomo, 20
Troup, J., quoted, 107
Yoshida-Shoin, 69
Young Men's Christian Asso-
ciation, 173
Uchimura Kanzo, quoted, 60
Unity, 88
V Zazen (Yoga), 89
Virtues, The five, 57 Zen sect, 22
n
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