Abstract

A large majority of Japanese people describe themselves as mushūkyō, ‘non-religious’, even though they participate in several religious-related cultural practices that socialize them to accept spiritual attitudes without the mediation of organized religion. This phenomenon fits well into the ‘spiritual but not religious’ formula of the contemporary Northern European and North American sociological debate, in which the ‘religion’ and ‘spiritual’ categories denote interdependent, although not always reciprocated, domains. Drawing upon two sets of qualitative data on women belonging to five religious organizations (Shinnyoen, Risshō kōseikai, the Roman Catholic Church in Japan, Sōga Gakkai, and God Light Association (GLA)), in this study, I argue that the religion–spirituality distinction not only fails to capture the empirical reality of contemporary Japanese religions, it also does not take into account new modalities of religious and spiritual experiences of people with such affiliations. Their experiences are expressed through the socio-cultural milieu and the language of religion and spirituality available to them in contiguous and complementary ways. In this respect, the aim of this article is to discuss such aspects of Japanese women’s religious and spiritual experiences that have often eluded scholars writing on Japanese religiosity in order to broaden the focus of reflection to include the mushūkyō aspect and the presumed religion–spirituality mismatch.

Highlights

  • In April 2016, two strong earthquakes hit Kumamoto prefecture in southern Japan

  • By looking at Japanese women’s responses to explore possible interrelations between religion, non-religiousness, and spirituality, this study suggests that active religious participants are likely to be more solicited than those with only loose or no ties to any religious community to experience spirituality in their everyday lives, because they are offered a cosmology and a language that address directly the spiritual world

  • The numerous religious-related collective rituals and events in which the Japanese participate as non-religious members of society socialize them to accept values, moral sensibilities, and a culture of spirituality that is grounded in everyday life and that does not set symbolic boundaries between believers and non-believers

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Summary

Introduction

Aiko-san, a member of Shinnyoen in her late thirties from Kumamoto city, recalled a spiritual story: My mother lives alone in the countryside. She called in the middle of the night after the quake and asked [me] to bring her water and food. I was driving fast, roads were quite damaged. I looked around and up on the side of the road, there was a white figure. It wasn’t like a human, a sort of a light, a white spirit form. I felt I had no control over my body: my foot went deep into the brake and my car stopped. (Interview held on 7 July 2016)

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