Does Conscience Have to be Free? A Multiple Crossroads of Religious, Political, and Diplomatic Arguments: 1868-1874

This article will focus on the conundrum of building the political legitimacy while institutionalizing religious freedom which the newly established goisshin 御一新 government confronted. Liberation of "evil sects", which not only meant Christianity but also other religious sects such as fuj...

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Main Author: Kōichirō Matsuda
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad Complutense de Madrid 2019-07-01
Series:Mirai
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/MIRA/article/view/64981
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spelling doaj-829c82a3119f44e6a57cb83ae3cac5412021-08-06T08:48:37ZspaUniversidad Complutense de MadridMirai2531-145X2019-07-01310.5209/mira.64981Does Conscience Have to be Free? A Multiple Crossroads of Religious, Political, and Diplomatic Arguments: 1868-1874Kōichirō Matsuda0Rikkyo University This article will focus on the conundrum of building the political legitimacy while institutionalizing religious freedom which the newly established goisshin 御一新 government confronted. Liberation of "evil sects", which not only meant Christianity but also other religious sects such as fujufuse-ha of Nichiren school, was an issue which the Meiji state wanted to dodge. Western states demanded the lifting of the ban on Christianity but Japanese political leaders were vigilant against the idea. Reluctantly the Meiji state lifted the ban on Christianity in 1873 but they had started the institutionalization of Shinto as the state religion in advance. The government officials viewed that Christian faith and churches in Western countries were devised to prevent public mind from dissolution. They strived to establish an alternative version of religious authority in Japan instead of introducing the principle of conscientious freedom. However, on the other hand, a new generation of intellectuals raised the protection of the individual right of religious freedom as an urgent issue. I will analyze the diplomatic negotiations between the Western countries and the Meiji government officials, reports on the Western religious and educational systems in the Iwakura Mission records, voices of Buddhist and Shinto groups, and publications by leading intellectuals such as Nakamura Masao and Katō Hiroyuki so as to build a picture of how the concept of conscientious liberty was treated in such entangled contexts. https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/MIRA/article/view/64981Religious freedomMeiji RestorationNakamura MasanaoKatō HiroyukiKido TakayoshiKume Kunitake
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kōichirō Matsuda
spellingShingle Kōichirō Matsuda
Does Conscience Have to be Free? A Multiple Crossroads of Religious, Political, and Diplomatic Arguments: 1868-1874
Mirai
Religious freedom
Meiji Restoration
Nakamura Masanao
Katō Hiroyuki
Kido Takayoshi
Kume Kunitake
author_facet Kōichirō Matsuda
author_sort Kōichirō Matsuda
title Does Conscience Have to be Free? A Multiple Crossroads of Religious, Political, and Diplomatic Arguments: 1868-1874
title_short Does Conscience Have to be Free? A Multiple Crossroads of Religious, Political, and Diplomatic Arguments: 1868-1874
title_full Does Conscience Have to be Free? A Multiple Crossroads of Religious, Political, and Diplomatic Arguments: 1868-1874
title_fullStr Does Conscience Have to be Free? A Multiple Crossroads of Religious, Political, and Diplomatic Arguments: 1868-1874
title_full_unstemmed Does Conscience Have to be Free? A Multiple Crossroads of Religious, Political, and Diplomatic Arguments: 1868-1874
title_sort does conscience have to be free? a multiple crossroads of religious, political, and diplomatic arguments: 1868-1874
publisher Universidad Complutense de Madrid
series Mirai
issn 2531-145X
publishDate 2019-07-01
description This article will focus on the conundrum of building the political legitimacy while institutionalizing religious freedom which the newly established goisshin 御一新 government confronted. Liberation of "evil sects", which not only meant Christianity but also other religious sects such as fujufuse-ha of Nichiren school, was an issue which the Meiji state wanted to dodge. Western states demanded the lifting of the ban on Christianity but Japanese political leaders were vigilant against the idea. Reluctantly the Meiji state lifted the ban on Christianity in 1873 but they had started the institutionalization of Shinto as the state religion in advance. The government officials viewed that Christian faith and churches in Western countries were devised to prevent public mind from dissolution. They strived to establish an alternative version of religious authority in Japan instead of introducing the principle of conscientious freedom. However, on the other hand, a new generation of intellectuals raised the protection of the individual right of religious freedom as an urgent issue. I will analyze the diplomatic negotiations between the Western countries and the Meiji government officials, reports on the Western religious and educational systems in the Iwakura Mission records, voices of Buddhist and Shinto groups, and publications by leading intellectuals such as Nakamura Masao and Katō Hiroyuki so as to build a picture of how the concept of conscientious liberty was treated in such entangled contexts.
topic Religious freedom
Meiji Restoration
Nakamura Masanao
Katō Hiroyuki
Kido Takayoshi
Kume Kunitake
url https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/MIRA/article/view/64981
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