| |
| | Jinja Shinto: Jinja (The shrine) |
 | | In English, a shrine is considered to be a building in which the ashes or personal belongings or an image of a dead is contained. |
 | | Jinja, however, enshrines, in fact, only the spirit of Kami, and religious services are performed in the form of worshipping an object in which the spirit of Kami is believed to reside. |
 | | Each shrine has its own status according to various reasons such as the hierarchical status of the enshrined Kami, or the historical background of a shrine, or relationship of Kami with a community or the state, or popularity of the enshrined Kami among people. |
| jinja.jp /english/s-4a.html (575 words) |
|