"He [The Emperor] is regarded as a living kami, loved and revered by the nation above all things on earth, and himself loving and protecting the nation, who are deemed sons of Kami Nagara and are entrusted to his care by the kami. This mutual understanding obtains between every individual Japanese and the Emperor. The Sovereign studies our needs and feels our sorrows. What more have we, then, to ask from the kami directly? Thus Shintō (doctrine of the kami) is kundō (doctrine of the Emperor), for Shintōism is Mikadoism; "the kamis will is the Emperor's will" is a maxim inscribed on the heart of every Japanese. Herein one may see the fountain-head of our patriotic spirit, whose marvellous activity has served to raise Japan in these fifty years to the level of the first-rate Powers of the world."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Shinto
15 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Shinto →
Related Quotes
"The chief ideas underlying Japanese myth are, firstly, the conception—piecemeal it is true, and inadequate—of the so-…"
"Shintō, as a theanthropic religion, has culminated in Mikadoism or the Worship of the Mikado or Japanese Emperor, as …"
"Thus, we see that the essence or life of Shintō is even today expressed in the peculiar religious patriotism of the J…"
"We [i.e., the members of the Japanese race] who have been brought into existence through the creative spirits of the …"
"There are ten or a dozen good definitions of Shintō in existence, all varying more or less according to the individua…"
"It was the indigenous religion of the ancient Japanese people and, as such, potent to foster and preserve convictions…"
"Shintō, or Kamu-nagara, is a Way of Nature. This does not mean that it is a primitive and inferior nature worship. It…"
"The Truth of Shintō is to be seen in the inevitability of its underlying doctrine. This is apparent on consideration …"
"Another distinguishing characteristic of Shintō lies in what may be called its corporateness. In many other religions…"
"Shintō has been called the Wordless Way. This means that practice is more important than mere words, that the hand is…"