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Monday 19th January, 05:51 AM JST
People pray at Meiji Shrine on Sunday.
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Latest 15 of 17 Total Comments Show All
PuffinMuffin at 10:03 AM JST - 19th January
like once or twice in a year maybe? I can't get used to praying in shrines here, sometimes I just go along with the crowds or friends and family, for a change of scenery.
nandakandamanda at 10:53 AM JST - 19th January
In India many people pray to Lakshmi the Goddess of Wealth. A single function God/Goddess. In Japan there is this similar concept. Externally it is a custom inherited from your elders. You learn how to bow your head and how to clap your hands to play the part. Internally you mutter a wish for the health of your family, or for success in a, b, or c, depending on the shrine you have chosen. Some businessmen might throw in 10,000 yen. A bit like the lottery, I wonder? My wife reckons 5 yen is good. 1 yen is not appropriate, but 500 yen too much. 10 yen, 50 yen or 100 yen if she can't find a 5 yen coin in her purse. Internally she feels something large and indefinable in front of her and she addresses that, and she guesses it stretches to god/God but she doesn't think anything else about it, and says she has never really questioned it.
kwatt at 11:18 AM JST - 19th January
I think Japanese are generally not daily religious people but they become religious sometimes because they want to make wishes come true. Shrine seems to be only place where some god listen to you.
shouganaika at 11:56 AM JST - 19th January
such a trusting honest society, that's why the donation boxes have huge wooden slats to stop people stealing from god
flugelschmidt at 12:08 PM JST - 19th January
Cheapskates, the only way to get god to really listen is to get one of those priests with the funny hat to take your extremely generous donation directly and mediate for you.
shouganaika at 12:19 PM JST - 19th January
at Yushima shrine, incredibly popular with students wishing to pass tests, they have a 3 tier menu from which you can choose to donate 3,000 5,000 or 8,000 yen. I asked the priest how they were different his reply was "that's your mind" I think his zen like answer really meant, how stupid do you feel?
Betzee at 12:40 PM JST - 19th January
I have a question: are they really paying money to the temple or is for the monks to attend to the well-being of their deceased forebearers and family members in the afterlife? Only monks are able to do this; mere mortals cannot, though they will feel the wrath of unhappy ancestral spirits.
toopool at 01:09 PM JST - 19th January
Money is important in Japanese and many other Asian societies. A gift of money is a big gesture when you give it to someone. Unlike the West where a gift of money is considered lazy or even downright insulting. A small, symbolic gift of money to the gods or shrine has a different significance to your westernised view. Don't try and see it as a materialisation of religion. Anyway, I think you can spare 15 yen to help your New Years wish come true.
Betzee at 01:29 PM JST - 19th January
This is true. I don't know about Japan, but in many Buddhist countries it's common to find peddlers selling paper "fake" money (along with incense) around temples which people buy to burn for their deceased family members in the afterlife.
norinrad21 at 02:27 PM JST - 19th January
****Smartacus
With an economy in the tubes, one could always use a prayer
Seiharinokaze at 02:46 PM JST - 19th January
Then what about Mark 12:41-44? I personally am doubtful about the effect of throwing money there for your wishes though, not necessarily because they all seem to put in out of their surplus.
NeoJamal at 03:17 PM JST - 19th January
So many one yen chuckers at Narita-san these days. Now back before the bubble burst..
OhioDonna at 06:27 AM JST - 4th February
Pay to pray?
Good_Jorb at 07:14 AM JST - 4th February
More like paying homage to whichever god/goddess happens to be worshipped there, not unlike sacrificing a goat or what have.
Good_Jorb at 07:14 AM JST - 4th February
*or what have you.