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Japanese Shintoist and Buddhist bells are used in religious ceremonies.
The Shintoist believes that kami can, and often do, affect the lives of the living.
"I am a Shintoist," the first voice said.
"I didn't know that your father was a Shintoist," Jonas said.
"My father was a devout Shintoist.
He was the son of Negi Morihide, and a Shintoist.
Not simply because he was a devout Christian, or Shintoist, but because he so well understood the many layers of human relationships.
Most Japanese are simultaneously Buddhist and Shintoist, but Shinto traditions run deepest in popular culture.
The last Buddhist, Hindu, Shintoist.
I haven't heard yet from a single Buddhist, Shintoist, Jew, Hindu, or Animists.
These historical perspectives are often claimed by Japanese Shintoist and nationalists and have been criticized from both inside and outside of Japan.
Raised as a Buddhist and Shintoist, Houston attends an Episcopal parish, but practices a polytheistic faith.
He wrote that while they worshiped at shrines or prayed before shrines, they only visited or saw temples, indicating that he was an earnest Shintoist.
Shintoist jinja are normally called shrines in English in order to distinguish them from Buddhist temples (-tera, -dera).
While vice-minister, Tokonami arranged a conference between Japanese Shintoist, Buddhist and Christian leaders in February 1912 to coordinate efforts towards social work projects and to counter political radicalism.
God was not a concept recognized by either Buddhist or Shintoist, but God was what Nangi had needed during that time, and it was to God he had prayed.
Therefore, that the president is a Mormon or Catholic or Muslim or Shintoist shouldn't automatically bar him from office, but it CERTAINLY matters.
Freedom of religion? - of course; it is one of our fundamental freedoms, but you should, if at all possible, be a Shintoist, a Confucian, a Moslem, a Buddhist or a Wahhabi.
One can hear an early echo of the problem of identity, for example, in the narrative of struggles between 'nativist' (Shintoist) and Sinophile factions at the dawn of Japanese history, as recounted in the Kojiki and Nihonshoki.
Shintoist, anti-Buddhist forces of Yuge no Moriya no Muraji (also known as Ō-muraji Yuge no Moriya) battled unsuccessfully against the pro-Buddhist forces of Prince Shōtoku and Soga Umako no Sukune.