Some of the teachings of Shinto are; donâ??t forget the teachings of the ancestors. Shinto also teaches the people to respect their elders and do not commit evil acts.
shrine
No, one does not need to be native Japanese to be involved with the spirit world as portrayed by the Shinto religion. In fact, there have been a number of Shinto priests ordained who were not native Japanese. Anyone who accepts the basic values of Shintoism and lives by the ideals of Shinto would, according to those teachings, be able to interact with the Kami.
Shinto, which is the native religion of Japan. But samurai followed teachings of buddha too. After 1500 many japanese converted to Christianity, including samurai.
Samurai followed Buddhist religious teachings as well as the practices of Japan's own native religion , Shinto .
The dhamma.
That which is hateful to you, do not do to others.
Hersey is the belief that contradicts basic church teachings! Hope I helped
Shinto is a very strange religion, it technically has no main prophet of which its teachings are based off of. Shinto has been around since around 500 BC, and probably earlier. It was influenced by Chinese culture, which is why the actual name "Shinto" was derived from the Chinese term "shin-tao". It has been passed around from generation to generation, following no main teaching. If you could consider Confucious a prophet, he is the closest thing to it. the first influencing text on Shinto was the teachings of Cunfucious. And if you really want to go far out, the imperial family/ government has always had a great influence on the religion until the end of world war II where the imperial family was forced to renounce its claim to divinity. -OZ
Yoshida Shinto
they are suffering, death and starvation
Karma, Dharma and Samsara