Shinto is an ancient faith of forests and snow-capped mountains. It sees
the divine in rocks and streams, communing with spirit worlds through
bamboo twigs and the evergreen sakaki tree. Yet it is also the manicured
suburban garden and the blades of grass between cracks in city paving
stones. Structured around ritual cleansing, Shinto contains no concept
of sin. It reveres ancestors, but thinks little about the afterlife,
asking us to live in, and improve, the present. Central to Shinto is
Kannagara: intuitive acceptance of the divine power contained in all
living things. Dai Shizen (Great Nature) is the life force with which we
ally ourselves through spiritual practice and living simply. This is not
asceticism, but an affirmation of all aspects of life. Musubi (organic
growth) provides a model for reconciling ancient intuition with modern
science, modern society with primal human needs. Shinto is an unbroken
indigenous path that now reaches beyond its native Japan. It has special
relevance to us a