Konkokyo

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Konkokyo (金光教) is a relatively new religion of Japanese origin also regarded as a type of Sect Shinto. It is a syncretic, henotheistic and panentheistic religion, which worships God under the name of Tenchi Kane No Kami, the Golden God of Heaven and Earth. Tenchi Kane No Kami is also referred to as Kami, or the Parent God.

The Crest of Konkokyo
The Crest of Konkokyo

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[edit] The Founder

Founder of Konkō-kyō. His childhood name was Genshichi, and he is also known as Akazawa Bunji. Born in the village of Urami in Bicchū Province (in present-day Okayama Prefecture) as the second son of the Kandori farming family. At age twelve, he was adopted into the Kawate household of the neighboring village of Ōtani, at which time he took the name Bunjirō. He worked assiduously for the prosperity and welfare of his family, and though he gained the respect of those around him, his family suffered a series of accidental deaths during house construction, and he feared that the deaths were the work of an evil spirit called Konjin. Bunjirō himself suffered a severe illness at the age of forty-two (in 1855), but while receiving magico-religious healing rituals, he experienced the sensation of divine healing, a religious experience that deepened his faith.

Further, Bunjirō's younger brother by birth, Kandori Shige'emon, became a Konjin-cult medium and faith healer in 1857, and Bunjirō took that as his own impetus to devote himself to Konjin. While now understanding the reasons for the Konjin deity's violence, Bunjirō also experienced the deity's compassion and began expounding on that theme. In response to a revelation from Konjin, Bunjirō gave up farming and devoted himself to proselytizing on the twenty-first day of the tenth month of 1859. Before long, the number of his converts grew, centered on a group of disciples called the deyashiro.

After the Meiji Restoration of 1868, religious policies of the new government temporarily placed limits on the movement's proselytizing activities, but this provided an opportunity to develop the doctrinal aspects of Konkō faith in works such as the autobiographical Konkō Daijin oboegaki (Memoirs of Konkō Daijin). In his later years he compiled the Oshirasegoto oboechō (Record of Revelations). Konkō Daijin died October 10, 1883, at the age of seventy

[edit] Beliefs

In Konkokyo, everything is seen as being in profound interrelation with each other. God is not seen as distant or residing in heaven, but present within this world. The universe is perceived to be the body of the Parent God. Suffering is seen as being caused by individual disregard of the relationship between all things. Konkokyo's beliefs center around the betterment of human life in this world by gratitude, apologising, mutual help and prayer. In this way, everybody can join their hearts with God to become Ikigami, a living God. It is believed that after death, all beings return to God. The spirits of the deceased do not pass on to a heaven or a hell, but remain in this world, in unity with Tenchi Kane No Kami.

One of the more remarkable beliefs of this religion is that its followers are not obligated nor required to pay any dues nor to make any donations.

There are about 1,700 Konkokyo churches in Japan, and there are about 450,000 adherents. There are Konkokyo churches or missions in the U.S., Canada, Brazil, Paraguay, and South Korea, but outside of Japan, the religion has only a limited numbers of followers.

[edit] Relationship to Shinto

In 1885, Konkokyo was registered as type of Sect Shinto by the Japanese government. Unlike Tenrikyo, Konkokyo has never renounced this classification even after it was free to do so at the end of World War II. Today, Konko groups and followers rarely give much thought (if any) to Konkokyo's technical status as a Shinto Sect—indeed, many regard it more as an independent religion than a type of Shinto. However, the philosophy, practices, and beliefs of Konkokyo are noticeably similar to modern Shrine Shinto; therefore, there are many Konko followers who consider themselves Shintoist.

[edit] External links