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         Shintoism:     more books (100)
  1. Shinto: Origins, Rituals, Festivals, Spirits, Sacred Places by C. Scott Littleton, 2002-05-02
  2. The Scandalous Message of James: Faith Without Works is Dead by Elsa Tamez, 2002-04-25
  3. Historical Dictionary of Shinto (Historical Dictionaries of Religions, Philosophies and Movements) by Stuart D. B. Picken, 2002-02-15
  4. Japanese Mythology (Library of the World's Myths and Legends) by Juliet Piggott, 1991-10
  5. Preaching for the Church Today: The Skills, Prayer, & Art of Sermon Preparation by Paul Victor Marshall, 1990-04
  6. Yasukuni, the War Dead, and the Struggle for Japan's Past (Columbia/Hurst)
  7. Matsuri: The Festivals of Japan: With Annotated Plate Section by P.G. O'Neill (Japan Library) by Herbert Plutschow, 1996-10-17
  8. Life of Jesus: Who He Is and Why He Matters by John Dickson, 2010-08-31
  9. Shinto: The Sacred Art of Ancient Japan
  10. Mysteries and Intrigues of the Bible Extraordinary Events and Fascinating People
  11. Textual Sources for the Study of Zoroastrianism (Textual Sources for the Study of Religion)
  12. The Replica Of The Ark Of The Covenant InJapan: The Mystery of MiFune-Shiro by Gene Jinsiong Cho, 2007-12-27
  13. A TOUCH OF GRACE (Shambhala Centaur Editions) by Linda Hess, 1994-11-15
  14. The History of the Sakya Tradition by Chogay Trichen, 1993-01

81. Taoism, Confucianism And Shintoism Ecards,Taoism, Confucianism And Shintoism Gre
friends loved ones. ALL cards are absolutely FREE !!! Home ReligionGreetings Taoism, Confucianism and shintoism, Choose a Card.
http://cards.eforu.com/cgi-bin/newcards/showthumbs.pl?q1=rsp_shintoism&log=eforu

82. Shinto - Wikipedia
Other languages Français. Shinto. (Redirected from shintoism). Shinto() is the native religion of Japan. It involves the worship
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shintoism
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Shinto
(Redirected from Shintoism is the native religion of Japan . It involves the worship of kami , or nature spirits. Some kami are very local and can be regarded as the spirit or genius of a particular place, but others represent major natural objects and processes, for example, Amaterasu , the Sun goddess Shinto is one of those religions that defy classification. As a highly sophisticated form of animism , deeply embedded in Japanese society, it could be regarded as a primal religion . One could discuss its use as a legitimising ideology in the militaristic phase of recent Japanese history . To the extent that most of the Japanese "New religions" since the end of the second world war have shown Shinto influence, it is a contemporary phenomenon. And one could even make a case for discussing it under the heading of

83. Shintoism Website Results :: Linkspider UK
shintoism Websites from the Linkspider UK. shintoism Directory. Complete Resultsfor shintoism Related Topics. shintoism Websites from Linkspider UK.
http://www.linkspider.co.uk/Society/ReligionandSpirituality/Shintoism/
Shintoism Websites from Linkspider UK Keyword: Shintoism Linkspider UK Directory
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84. Initial Information About Shintoism
All situations of natural beauty in Japan are by definition the hauntsof Kami, who are the multitudinous allodynes of shintoism.
http://137.148.206.25/texts/lrng-shi.html
Shinto
Deeply ingrained in Japanese culture, Shinto is a religion that has revered the natural order sun, sea, trees, waterfalls throughout its history. A religion primarily of ritual observance and festival celebration, it provides the Japanese people with many opportunities for colorful and exuberant expression. Stuart D. B. Picken's Shinto: Japan's Spiritual Roots , New York (Kodansha International), 1980, provides a good introduction. Equally good but with fewer photographs of Shinto activities is Sokyo Ono, Shinto: The Kami Way , Rutland VT (Charles E. Tuttle), 1962.
Although Shinto is the `native religion' of Japan, the name itself, Shin-to , is an old Chinese word, meaning "The Way of the Gods" the final syllable of the word, -to , is the same word as `Tao' in the language of Chinese Taoism . The Japanese themselves chose to use a Chinese name for their native religion because at that time, more than a millennium ago, Chinese was the unique language of writing in Japan, which had not yet developed a tradition of writing in its own language. The Japanese phrase meaning the same thing as the Chinese word Shinto is Kami no michi , "The Way of the Supernals." Thus the two expressions, one Chinese in origin and the other pure Japanese, are interchangeable; but for historical reasons the old Chinese name for the Japanese religion continues to be more commonly used.

85. Shintoism
shintoism, 1. ing. sinto dini. (tsan chan, 10.05.2002 0035). Copyright(c) 19992012 Sourtimes Entertainment. Bu sayfada yazilanlarin
http://sozluk.sourtimes.org/show.asp?t=shintoism

86. Ämnesordsökning
Titel, Det tror vi på! judendom kristendom - islam - hindusim - buddhism- sikhism - shintoism - taoism / Andrew Langley. Ämneskod, Cm.
http://katalog.morbylanga.se/sv/opac/sok_amnesord.asp?TextAmne=Shintoism&Host_nr

87. Shintoism And Japanese New Religions
shintoism and Japanese New Religions. Shinto; World Religion Shinto;Basic Terms of Shinto; Shinto Myths. Japanese New Religions Recent
http://www.ualberta.ca/~ebenzvi/101/shinto.html
Shintoism and Japanese New Religions
Japanese New Religions

88. Searchalot Directory For Shintoism
Related Web Sites. The Interi Shinto Homepage An introduction to Interishintoism. ALLFaiths Press®shintoism - Some basic facts about shintoism.
http://www.searchalot.com/Top/Society/ReligionandSpirituality/Shintoism/
Home Search News Email Greetings Weather ... Global All the Internet About AltaVista AOL Search Ask Jeeves BBC Search BBC News Business Dictionary Discovery Health Dogpile CheckDomain CNN Corbis eBay Education World Employment Encyclopedia Encarta Excite Fast Search FindLaw FirstGov Google Google Groups Infomine iWon Librarians Index Looksmart Lycos Metacrawler Microsoft Northern Light Open Directory SearchEdu SearchGov Shareware Teoma Thesaurus Thunderstone WayBackMachine Webshots WiseNut Yahoo! Yahoo! Auctions Yahoo! News Yahooligans Zeal Sponsored Links Top Society Religion and Spirituality : Shintoism Related Web Sites
  • The "Interi" Shinto Homepage - An introduction to Interi Shintoism. It includes various topics of importance to the person seeking an understanding life and death.
  • International Shinto Foundation - Intro to Shinto, publications, etc.
  • ALLFaiths Press®Shintoism - Some basic facts about shintoism.
  • - A site from Jinja Online Network League.
  • Sacred Texts: Shinto - Full text of English translations of the Yengishiki, and excerpts from the Kojiki and Nihongi.
  • Kannagara Jinja - Shinto Shrine located near Granite Falls, Washington,USA. Licensed branch shrine of the 2000 year old first shrine of Mie Ken Ichi no Miya (first Shrine of Mie prefecture), Tsubaki O'Kami Yashiro - established in 3 B.C. (in the 27th year of 11th Emporer Suinin) - one of the oldest and most prestigious shrines in Japan.

89. International Shinto Foundation
Welcome! You are visitor! Last Update March 13, 2003 UPDATE (The past updating) 3/13 Announcement of "The 3rd World Water Forum" in Kyoto. = Click Here ! 2/28 The address of the New York center changed. Go to What's the ISF? = How to reach us?
http://shinto.org/menu-e.html
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90. Shinto & Buddhism: Wellsprings Of Japanese Spirituality
Short article by Paul Watt examines these two traditions that form the basis of Japanese spirituality.
http://www.askasia.org/frclasrm/readings/r000009.htm

Wellsprings of Japanese Spirituality
Article written by Paul Watt for the Asia Society's Focus on Asian Studies, Vol. II, No. 1, Asian Religions AskAsia The Japanese religious tradition is rich and complex, encompassing within it both complementary and contradictory trends in religious thought and practice with an ease that may occasionally puzzle the Western observer. At the very heart of the tradition stand Shinto, the indigenous religion of Japan, and Buddhism, the Indian religion that reached Japan in the sixth through eighth centuries A.D. from Korea and China. Throughout the long course of Japanese history, it has been these two religions that have contributed most to the Japanese understanding of themselves and their world. Shinto
Shinto was the earliest Japanese religion, its obscure beginnings dating back at least to the middle of the first millennium B.C. Until approximately the sixth century A.D., when the Japanese began a period of rapid adoption of continental civilization, it existed as an amorphous mix of nature worship, fertility cults, divination techniques, hero worship, and shamanism. Unlike Buddhism, Christianity, or Islam, it had no founder and it did not develop sacred scriptures, an explicit religious philosophy, or a specific moral code. Indeed, so unself-conscious were the early Japanese about their religious life that they had no single term by which they could refer to it. The word Shinto , or "the Way of the kami (gods or spirits)," came into use only after the sixth century, when the Japanese sought to distinguish their own tradition from the foreign religions of Buddhism and Confucianism that they were then encountering. Thus, in its origins, Shinto was the religion of a pristine people who, above all, were sensitive to the spiritual forces that pervaded the world of nature in which they lived. As one ancient chronicle reports: in their world myriad spirits shone like fireflies and every tree and bush could speak.

91. URI
About URI. News Events. Peacebuilding. Youth.
http://www.uri.org/religions/shinto/
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The purpose of the United Religions Initiative is to promote enduring, daily interfaith cooperation, to end religiously motivated violence and to create cultures of peace, justice and healing for the Earth and all living beings.
Introduction
People Spiritual Beliefs Sacred Practices
Shinto
A Portrait by Naofusa Hirai Professor at Kokugakuin University, Tokyo (Emeritus); assistance was graciously provided by Professor H. Byron Earhart of Western Michigan University From A Sourcebook for Earth's Community of Religions
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92. International Association For Religious Freedom
Shinto Traditions Edited from JapanGuide Web Site (Kinboshi Media).Session Co-ordinator Yoshinobu Miyake. Shinto (the way of the
http://www.iarf-religiousfreedom.net/co_wo_shinto.html

93. Books / Religion & Spirituality / Other Eastern Religions / Shintoism
Browse our most popular books titlesfrom 1 to 14. 1. A Year in theLife of a Shinto Shrine John K. Nelson / Paperback / Published
http://www.bookmag.com/books/religion---spirituality/148.html
Books Other Eastern Religions / Shintoism
Browse our most popular books titlesfrom 1 to 14.
A Year in the Life of a Shinto Shrine
John K. Nelson / Paperback / Published 1996
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Book of Tea
Kakuzo Okakura, Okakura Kakuzo / Hardcover / Published 1956
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Book of Tea
Kakuzo Okakura / Paperback / Published 1966
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Norito : A Translation of the Ancient Japanese Ritual Prayers
Donald L. Philippi / Paperback / Published 1991
The Gardeners of God : An Encounter With Five Million Baha'Is
Colette Gouvion, et al / Paperback / Published 1993
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Shinto (World Religions)
Paula Hartz / Hardcover / Published 1997
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The Japanese Cult of Tranquillity
Karlfried G. Durckheim / Paperback / Published 1992
On Understanding Japanese Religion
Joseph Mitsuo Kitagawa / Paperback / Published 1987
A Popular Dictionary of Shinto
Brian Bocking / Paperback / Published 1997
I Am Shinto (Religions of the World (Rosen Publishing Group).)
Noriko S. Nomura / Library Binding / Published 1997
Textual Sources for the Study of Zoroastrianism (Textual Sources for the Study of Religion)
Mary Boyce (Editor) / Paperback / Published 1990
Kurozumikyo and the New Religions of Japan
Helen Hardacre / Paperback / Published 1988
Japanese Religion : A Survey of the Agency for Cultural Affairs
Agency for Cultural Affairs, et al / Paperback / Published 1981

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