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- State_Shinto abstract "State Shintō (国家神道, Kokka Shintō) is a neologism introduced during the Occupation of Japan in 1945 to identify certain aspects of Japanese patriotism as "religious". The Meiji Constitution adopted a separation of church and state based on the Prussian model, but the American-authored Shinto Directive redefined this separation and privatized some elements of the Japanese government, creating the concept of "State Shinto". In the Empire of Japan, shrines were considered secular organs of the state, a classification that garnered no serious opposition from the Japanese public.When in the early Meiji Period the Japanese defined the concept of "religion", they often argued that Shinto was not a "religion." They also distinguished Shrine Shinto from what is identified with the category called Sect Shinto today. At first, a ritual bureau called the Jingi-kan was established to propagate kokugaku-related information, but the Diet of Japan rejected calls to make this a "state religion", and it was soon disbanded. Religious scholar T.E. Maxey calls it "grossly inaccurate" to describe the Jingi-kan using the Western concept of "established religion." According to the scholar Jason Ānanda Josephson, It is inaccurate to describe shrines as constituting a "state religion" or a "theocracy" during this period since they lacked a single organization, standard doctrine, or idea of conversion. Jolyon Baraka Thomas writes that the Empire of Japan's constitutional system "should be considered a secular system rather than a system of state religion." It seems clear that a number of rules were established to keep shrines separated from sectarian doctrines and religion in general. For example, preaching at shrines was forbidden, shrine officials were prohibited from conducting funerals, and the use of the torii gate was restricted to government-owned shrines. In a 1911 article, the head of the Home Ministry declared that attendance at shrines was not a matter of religious faith but of respect for one's ancestors and the nation. In 1936, the Catholic Church's Propaganda Fide announced that visits to shrines had "only a purely civil value".After the surrender of Japan American Occupation authorities determined that Japan had constructed a "state religion". In December 1945, the elements of this State Shinto were announced and privatized. On 1 January 1946, Emperor Shōwa issued a statement, sometimes referred to as the Humanity Declaration, in which he quoted the Five Charter Oath of Emperor Meiji and announced that he was not an Akitsumikami and Japan was not built on myths. As a result of the privatization of shrines, Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo, a monument to war dead, has become a "religious corporation".Template:Source?".
- State_Shinto thumbnail Empire_of_Japan_50_sen_banknote_with_Yasukuni_Shrine.jpg?width=300.
- State_Shinto wikiPageID "2926778".
- State_Shinto wikiPageLength "9915".
- State_Shinto wikiPageOutDegree "32".
- State_Shinto wikiPageRevisionID "682006601".
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Association_of_Shinto_Shrines.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Category:Empire_of_Japan.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Category:Japanese_nationalism.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Category:Shinto.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Charter_Oath.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Congregation_for_the_Evangelization_of_Peoples.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Diet_of_Japan.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Emperor_Meiji.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Emperor_Shōwa.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Empire_of_Japan.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Five_Charter_Oath.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Hirohito.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Home_Ministry.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Humanity_Declaration.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Jingi-kan.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Jingikan.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Kokugaku.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Meiji_Constitution.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Meiji_Period.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Meiji_period.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Ministry_of_Education,_Culture,_Sports,_Science_and_Technology.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink National_Diet.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Neologism.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Occupation_of_Japan.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Sect_Shinto.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Separation_of_church_and_state.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Shinto_Directive.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Shinto_sects_and_schools.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Shinto_shrine.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Shrine_Shinto.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink State_religion.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Surrender_of_Japan.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Theocracy.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Torii.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Yasukuni_Shrine.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink File:Empire_of_Japan_50_sen_banknote_with_Yasukuni_Shrine.jpg.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLinkText "''Koshitsu Shinto''".
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLinkText "Shinto became the state religion".
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLinkText "Shinto".
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLinkText "Shintoism was set as the state religion".
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLinkText "State Shinto".
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLinkText "fundamentalist shinto".
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLinkText "government supported shrines".
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLinkText "state Shinto".
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLinkText "state religion".
- State_Shinto hasPhotoCollection State_Shinto.
- State_Shinto wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- State_Shinto wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:JapanEmpireNavbox.
- State_Shinto wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Nihongo.
- State_Shinto wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- State_Shinto wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Religion_and_politics.
- State_Shinto wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Source%3F.
- State_Shinto subject Category:Empire_of_Japan.
- State_Shinto subject Category:Japanese_nationalism.
- State_Shinto subject Category:Shinto.
- State_Shinto hypernym Neologism.
- State_Shinto type Article.
- State_Shinto type Article.
- State_Shinto type Religion.
- State_Shinto type Thing.
- State_Shinto comment "State Shintō (国家神道, Kokka Shintō) is a neologism introduced during the Occupation of Japan in 1945 to identify certain aspects of Japanese patriotism as "religious". The Meiji Constitution adopted a separation of church and state based on the Prussian model, but the American-authored Shinto Directive redefined this separation and privatized some elements of the Japanese government, creating the concept of "State Shinto".".
- State_Shinto label "State Shinto".
- State_Shinto sameAs Staats-Shintō.
- State_Shinto sameAs Sintoísmo_estatal.
- State_Shinto sameAs Shintoxc3xafsme_dxc3x89tat.
- State_Shinto sameAs Negara_Shinto.
- State_Shinto sameAs 国家神道.
- State_Shinto sameAs 국가신도.
- State_Shinto sameAs Statsshinto.
- State_Shinto sameAs Xintoísmo_estatal.
- State_Shinto sameAs m.03gq5b1.
- State_Shinto sameAs Thần_đạo_Quốc_gia.
- State_Shinto sameAs Q1197248.
- State_Shinto sameAs Q1197248.
- State_Shinto wasDerivedFrom State_Shinto?oldid=682006601.
- State_Shinto depiction Empire_of_Japan_50_sen_banknote_with_Yasukuni_Shrine.jpg.
- State_Shinto isPrimaryTopicOf State_Shinto.