1. I have faith (shinzuru) in myself. I recognize my own subjectivity and creativity and feel the worth of living in life (ikigai). Subjectivity and creativity can be rephrased as personality, divinity, and Buddha-nature.
  2. I have faith in my neighbour. The neighbour is oneself as a neighbour. If I believe in myself, I inevitably believe in my neighbour.
  3. I have faith in a cooperative society. Both oneself and a neighbour, while each possessing a unique personality, are not things that exist in isolation. Because of this uniqueness, a true interdependence, true solidarity, and true human love are established, and therein a cooperative society is realized.
  4. I have faith in the trinity of self, neighbour, and cooperative society. The self, neighbour, and cooperative society, while each having a unique personality, are entirely one. Therefore, there is no differentiation of precedence or superiority/inferiority between them, and one always contains the other.
  5. I have faith in the unity of life and nature (shizen). Life, which constitutes the trinity of self, neighbour, and cooperative society, further unites with all things in the universe.
  6. I have faith in the church (kyokai). The church is the prototype/archetype (genkei) and driving force of the cooperative society. I can only be myself by being a member of the church.
  7. I have faith in a specific religion. In other words, I am a member of the Tokyo Kiitsu Kyōkai. However, a specific religion (including the Tokyo Kiitsu Kyōkai) neither monopolizes religious truth nor is it the ultimate embodiment of it.
  8. I have faith in free religion (jiyū shūkyō). While having faith in a specific religion, the endless pursuit and improvement towards universal and ultimate truth is the core of religious life. Such a dynamic religion is called a free religion.

Subjectivity

  • Can be translated: autonomy in making independent choices.
  • Where can “ego” overlap here?
    • We need enough ego. Required in being in a body and mind.
  • Understand your ego so you can see it in your neighbor.
  • Look for the subjectivity, creativity, and ego in the neighbor.
  • I can only go out through introspection.
  • For her introspection shuts you from the world.
  • Imaoka bounced out of Christianity because charity work is ego-driven.
    • Liberation theology (let them to decide what they need).

jiyu shukyo

  • figuring it out
  • religio (community) that binds us together to be free
  • we need freedom but also a binding quality
  • doesnt have a form so it bows to others (the illiberal religions)
  • We are free but we need boundaries. Balance openness and boundaries.
  • the person who is homophobic can be welcome until he changes but there has to be boundaries

Covenant groups

  • Establish security and trust.
  • Starts open then by gentle agreement it becomes close later on.

Celia is a therapist.

  • With low self-esteem, difficult to trust others

Creed of life

  • My Life Principles
  • Find a generalized principles.
  • If you don’t buy on these things, this isn’t probably the best place for you.

Building a porous circle (not open circle).

Open circle

I still don’t have an answer to it.

These creed has to be presented in a circle

jiyu shukyo doesn’t have to look like a Sunday service.

Sunday

jiyu shukyo can be expressed in different things

We need a center of gravity to return to that is expressed into other things.

Gravity is a lovely gentle force.

To acknowledge God in everyone.

To have compassion you need to have suffered.

  • We recognize our suffering so we are able to be good.

The Wounded Healer

  • Flipping sense of self

Tatagata

  • describes the Buddha
  • The One who does come or goes (Coming and Going)

“Ring of voices"

"Intersectionality”

  • The person who has overlapping intersectionality could only tell the truth.
  • We can’t

Intersectionality is a nightmare.

It is our overlapping that is precisely why we can talk to each other.

Groups form themselves because of visible problems.

What we can’t see is what is linking us together.

Marianna Michell Frank Stephen Lawrence

Nora Bateson

  • There is no problem. There are hidden forces in play.

Questions

  1. How can the self and the neighbor be unique but not differentiated?

Faith in the unity of life and nature.

  • Human unity with the non-human

Faith in the church.

  • Are two or three people coming together already a church?
  • Perhaps this creed can be simplified not by using the word church but by emphasizing the act of “coming together,” which is always in place. So this church as an action. I can only be myself by coming together with the other human and even the nonhuman.
  • What I know is that any attempt to bring forth an alternative society needs a community. It will never succeed in isolation. A group, no matter how small, has to be established.

Faith in the religion.

  • This doesn’t work with me now because I am not affiliated to any religion. But it serves as a reminder that I could be part of one as long as I remain faithful to jiyu shukyo.

Faith in free religion.

  • What does this “universal and ultimate truth mean”?
  • Some people are against the use of this word. That nothing is universal. That having something as universal means that it relies on a rule-giver such as God or a predominant ideology such as patriarchy.
  • I sincerely wonder what Imaoka means here?

Related

References