2016/11/06

Christianity in Japan – Theory and Methods in the Study of Religion

Christianity in Japan – Theory and Methods in the Study of Religion



Christianity in Japan

This annotated bibliography is composed of both seminal and recent works on Christianity in early modern and modern Japan. As reflected in the selections here, the vast majority of scholarship on this topic is focused on two historical moments—the “Christian Century” of the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, and Protestant Christianity in the Meiji Period. This annotated bibliography is a first attempt to review a few frequently-cited works as well as more recent scholarship, and is by no means comprehensive. Given my own orientation as a student of history, I have also restricted this list primarily to works arising out of that discipline.*

 Anderson, Emily. “Tamura Naoomi’s ‘The Japanese Bride’: Christianity, Nationalism, and Family in Meiji Japan.” Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 34, no. 1 (2007): 203-228.
Historian Emily Anderson examines the strongly condemning responses to the publication of Christian minister Tamura Naoomi’s English-language book, The Japanese Bride in 1893, bringing to light the intersections of nationalism, religion, and family in modern Japan. In his controversial English-language publication, Tamura described Japanese marriage and familial customs and compared them to American ones observed in his travels, a comparison perceived as an attack on the Japanese family and a betrayal of Japanese Christianity and the nation at large. Nationalists and Japanese Christians, as Anderson argues, saw the work as jeopardizing Japanese Christians’ authority over a foundational aspect of Japanese society (the family) and undermining the parity that Japanese sought with Western nations, which it needed for its imperialist enterprise. As she writes, “By characterizing Japanese families—the very core of the nation—as shameful, backwards, and unhappy, Tamura was in fact defying the central argument of Japanese claims to modern legitimacy” (225). His publication thus revealed the anxieties of the Japanese nation about its position not only in East Asia, but vis-à-vis the West.
Anderson contextualizes Tamura’s publication within a larger collection of his writings as well as a host of other Japanese-language archival materials. Like Notto Thelle’s study on the Buddhist-Christian relationship, Anderson’s study interrogates the relationship between nationalism, Christianity, and anti-Westernism in Meiji Japan.
Breen, John and Mark Williams, eds. Japan and Christianity: Impacts and Responses. London: Macmillan, 1996.
Japan historian John Breen and literature scholar Mark Williams aim in this compilation, the product of a 1991 conference on Christianity in Japan, to complicate the “Western ‘impact’ and an “Eastern” ‘response’” structure used in understanding Christianity in Japan (1). They frame their study by setting in conversation two scholars—Ebisawa Arimichi, who has argued that Christianity laid a crucial foundation for Tokugawa thought, and George Elison, who declared less positively that in the Japanese context Christianity’s “cultural contribution was nil’ (Elison, qtd. in Breen and Williams, 2).
The collection covers a broad scope of topics and periods, from Christianity from the Tokugawa period to the twentieth century by Mark Mullins, Notto Thelle, Helen Ballhatchet, John Breen, Michael Cooper, Stefan Kaiser, Ohashi Yukihiro (the only Japanese scholar included), Stephen Turnbull, Christal Whelan, and Mark Williams. Collectively, they aim to show the slow but myriad processes by which Japanese interacted with Christian and Western ideas and institutions, and, importantly, the ways in which Japan contributed back to Western Christianity. Topics range from Western-style painting in Japan to the tensions between evolutionary theory and Christian theology to Japanese literary works on Christianity.
Elison, George. Deus Destroyed: The Image of Christianity in Early Modern Japan. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1973.
In this seminal work, George Elison challenges narratives of Catholicism in Tokugawa Japan—the “Christian Century”—by eschewing the “Western” point of view adopted by scholars in favor of one that approaches the topic from the “inside,” made possible by his translation of Japanese-language anti-Christian texts. (The title of his book is from an anti-Christian tract written by Japanese Jesuit convert later turned skeptic, Fabian Fucan.) The book is composed of two main sections: the first, an analysis of Christianity in Japan from entry in 1549 to its rejection by the state; the second, translations of four anti-Christian works by Japanese Buddhists, Confucians, and apostate Jesuits. Though acknowledging the complexity of the history of Christianity in Japan, Elison is quite clear in his position that Christianity failed to make any lasting positive contributions to Japan, instead reifying the state’s control over society and religion and contributing to its continued isolation. Elison’s challenge to the legacies of Christianity as well as his contribution of translated texts make this a key work in assessing Christianity both in the Tokugawa period and its continued influence in Japan today.
Hardacre, Helen. Shinto and the State, 1868-1988. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1989.
Historian Helen Hardacre aims to change the “faceless quality of research on State Shinto” by examining peripheral voices, particularly those of the priesthood, to understand interactions between the state and Shinto between 1868 and 1945. Hardacre argues that Shinto as a religion of Japan was invented after the Meiji Restoration—the word itself is “purely a modern, post-Meiji invention”—and that this invented tradition has been enlisted in the service of the creation of the modern nation (19, 4). Nevertheless, her decision to omit the 1930-1945 period from her analysis does seem to be a critical missed opportunity to bolster her argument about Shinto’s cooptation as a handmaiden of the state.
Hardacre’s work on religion draws attention to another aspect of the state-invented tennosei system on which scholars such as Carol Gluck (Japan’s Modern Myths, 1985) and Takashi Fujitani (Splendid Monarchy, 1996) have also focused. Her argument that postwar Shinto faces serious challenges because of its loss of hegemony over national symbols and because of the rise of religious pluralism also contrasts with Daniel Holtom’s more optimistic conclusion (Modern Japan and Shinto Nationalism, 1943).
—. Religion and Society in Nineteenth-Century Japan: A Study of the Southern Kanto Region, Using Late Edo and Early Meiji Gazetteers. Ann Arbor: Center for Japanese Studies, University of Michigan, 2002.
In this more recent publication, Helen Hardacre presents a detailed study of Buddhist and Shinto institutions from the 1830s to the early Meiji period. Rather than simply tracing the historical development of a single religion, she adopts the method of examining institutions (temples and shrines) within a given geographic area. A secondary aim is to examine the impact of the transition between the Tokugawa and Meiji periods on religious institutions and popular religious life. Hardacre argues provocatively that the Meiji state’s adoption of Shinto did not necessarily guarantee the dwindling of Buddhism in Japan; it was instead local factors that were most influential in the decline of Buddhist shrines. Hardacre’s point thus runs counter to that of Shigeyoshi Murakami and Thelle, who take a state-centric approach to religion in Japan.
Also in contrast to broader works like Murakami’s, Hardacre’s work maintains a sharp focus on a specific region. In the process of focusing on the local, however, Hardacre does not connect her findings to larger trends in Japanese religion; further historical and historiographical context would be beneficial to evaluating her desired contribution. It may be fruitful to compare her work with Mary Elizabeth Berry’s Japan in Print (2007), which also uses gazetteers.
Higashibaba, Ikuo. Christianity in Early Modern Japan: Kirishitan Belief and Practice. Leiden: E.J. Brill, 2001.
 Comparative religions scholar Ikuo Higashibaba is interested in this monograph on popular forms of religion and “culture of ordinary Japanese followers,” whom he terms the “laity,” within the Kirishitan community in early modern Japan (xiv, xvi). He argues that these commoners practiced a form of religious syncretism that is often omitted from existent narratives of Christianity in Tokugawa Japan, which have focused on orthodox Catholic belief, and that the earlier acceptance and syncretization of Buddhism set the precedent for acceptance of foreign religions. Like Kitagawa, Higashibaba adopts a “history of religions” approach in which he places Kirishitan beliefs, practices, and symbols within their historical and cultural contexts, drawing particularly on Jonathan Z. Smith’s theoretical work (1987).
Higashibaba’s work is the most recent in a line of works on the Kirishitan community in Tokugawa Japan. His attempt to shift the focus of discussion from intellectual or theological discussions of Catholicism to popular religions provides a counterpoint to works like Elison’s. Nevertheless, it is unclear how exactly he measures the fidelity of the believers—were they really Kirishitans?—whom he makes the focus of his study. Moreover, his thesis that Catholicism became a Japanese religion is neither unique nor a significant intervention in the historiography—this work should be valued for its topical focus rather than actual argument.
Howe, John F. “Japanese Christians and American Missionaries.” In Changing Japanese Attitudes Toward Modernization, edited by Marius B. Jansen, 337-366. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1965.
John F. Howe’s contribution to a 1965 collection edited by the late Marius Jansen focuses on Japanese Christians’ experience of psychological “self-abasement” resulting from the belief that Meiji Japan was lagging behind in modernization compared to the West. Through an examination of Japanese Christian and Western missionary, Howe highlights the similarities between ten influential figures—five Americans and five Japanese—and their cooperative religious efforts, which became to be increasingly challenged by growing anti-Western and nationalist sentiment in the 1880s. Howe identifies this at the point that Japanese Christian leaders, with the exception of Uchimura Kanzo, decided to break from their Western brethren to fashion their own version of Christianity, which helped them overcome their own self-abasement.
As in his 2005 book, Howe takes a psychohistorical approach in this work. While he makes a notable attempt at showing the very personal impact of modernization and Christianity in Japan, his reasons for the selection of the main figures in his book are not clear and his narrative of overcoming “self-abasement” strikes one as a bit simplistic.
—. Japan’s Modern Prophet: Uchimura Kanzo, 1861-1930. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2005.
In a book that has generated much discussion, given the apparently vast amount of scholarship on Uchimura Kanzo (1861-1930) and the author’s provocative perspective, John Howe presents a nearly hagiographic account of Uchimura’s life as a leading Japanese Christian intellectual.[1]
Lauding a native convert’s deep engagement with and mastery of a foreign religion, Howe places Uchimura alongside “the Old Testament prophets, Dante, Luther, Kierkegaard, Carlyle, and Gandhi” (11). According to Howe, the author and theologian bridged East and West by developing a distinct “Japanese Christianity” in which he fused Japanese sociocultural values with those of Christianity, and rejected foreign missionaries in favor of his non-church movement (mukyokai). Drawing on Uchimura’s publications and correspondences, Howes attempts to intervene in the rather large historiography on Uchimura by highlighting his eschatological beliefs and emphasis on “individual faith and morality,” rather than his well-known opposition to war and founding of mukyokai (388). Unfortunately, any real critical examination if missing from this book; Howe neglects to show why people disliked Uchimura as well as incorporate what might have been useful theoretical perspectives on religion and nationalism into his work.
Ion, Hamish. American Missionaries, Christian Oyatoi, and Japan, 1859-1873. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2009.
In this monograph on Christian oyatai (foreign employees) and Episcopalian, Congregational, Presbyterian, and Dutch Reformed missionaries, historian Hamish Ion seeks to challenge the existent narrative of Christianity in late Tokugawa and early Meiji Japan—pointing out Howe’s 1965 essay in particular—which he articulates as a binary of “acceptance or rejection” (285). His thesis is that despite the missionaries’ commendable optimism and vigor, the period from 1859 to 1873 already foretold the demise of the effort to Christianize Japan, not due to any failure of the missionaries and oyatoi, but Tokugawa and Meiji state policies regarding religion and the relative lack of support from American diplomats. Like Anderson and Thelle, he thus contextualizes Christianity in Japan within the global politics and cultural exchanges of the era. Ion draws from a broad array of primary documents by the American Church mission, individual missionaries, and diplomatic materials. He also engages heavily with the secondary literature, rejecting the applicability of Said’s orientalism to oyatoi, since recording the experiences of the “other” was not a focus of missionary records.
Kitagawa, Joseph Mitsuo. Religion in Japanese History. New York: Columbia University Press, 1966, repr. 1990.
This work is a compilation of six lectures given by historian of religion Joseph Kitagawa on religion in Japan from the Heian period to the postwar period, an endeavor he calls “autobiographical” given his own background. Despite the broad scope of these lectures in both time and topics covered, Kitagawa announces that he is attempting to apply a Religionswissenschaft (science/history of religion) approach, eschewing the “peculiar Western convention to divide human experience into such semi-autonomous categories as religion, philosophy, ethics, aesthetics, culture, society, etc.” in favor of continuing the spirit of Ritsuryo, Tokugawa, and Meiji syntheses of these categorizations (xiii). It is difficult to understand exactly what Kitagawa means by a Religionswissenschaft approach, though it appears to be in the vein of Max Muller’s rejection of classifications. Rather than examine religions individually, Kitagawa attempts to understand the “universal phenomenon called ‘religion’” within the Japanese historical context (3). Of particular interest to the scholar of Christianity in Japan are Kitagawa’s fourth and fifth lectures. In the fourth, he examines the relationship between Christianity and neo-Confucianism respectively to the Tokugawa regime; in the fifth, he briefly touches on the impact of Christianity on Japanese modernization, in which Japan preserved the age-old principle of “immanental theocracy” through state Shinto.
Mullins, Mark. Christianity Made in Japan: A Study of Indigenous Movements. Honolulu: University of Hawaii, 1998.
Sociologist Mark Mullins asks in this volume how a religion comes to be indigenized, focusing appropriately on the “indigenous and independent expressions of Christianity” in Japan. He argues for a shift in understanding Christianity as a “Western” to viewing it as a “world” religion, much like Buddhism and Islam, which adapts to a given context. There is, therefore, no pure Christianity but rather localized forms. Like Higashibaba, he is interested less in the mainstream versions of Christianity, instead focusing his study on thirteen indigenous groups from the Meiji Period and onward that developed apart from the influence of missionaries and churches. The book includes discussions of Uchimura Kanzo’s mukyokaimovement, among other subgroups, the confluence of Christianity and concerns for ancestors, and a fascinating comparison of Christianity in Korea and transplanted Korean Christianity in Japan.
This book is based on fieldwork that the author conducted primarily in the Kanto and Kansai regions. Perhaps most provocative in this work is the author’s validation of syncretistic, indigenous Christian groups as critical, defining incarnations of Christianity, rather than heterodox deviations from the theological standard, by placing them at the center of his argument on the nature of universal religions. Mullin’s science of religion approach stands in stark comparison to studies oriented to theological belief.
Nirei, Yosuke. “Globalism and Liberal Expansionism in Meiji Protestant Discourse.” Social Science Japan Journal15, no. 1 (2012): 75-92.
Historian Yosuke Nirei charts the liberal Christian arguments of Uchimura Kanzo (1861-1930) and his Protestant colleagues in this recent article. He argues that Uchimura adopted the ideology of liberal expansionism, defined as espousing “Japan’s expansion through peaceful and economic means in tandem with British and American imperialism and emigration overseas,” to justify the Sino-Japanese War and Japan’s advance in Asia (75). Rather than citing political or economic justifications alone for expansionism, Uchimura developed a brand of expansionism ideologically driven by the ideals of freedom and rhetoric of civilization. (Later, he would advocate complete pacifism as his theology became more conservative, but Nirei’s focus is on his earlier, liberal convictions.) The large part of this article is composed of comparisons that Nirei draws between Uchimura and his contemporaries Takekoshi Yosaburo, Tokutomi Soho, and Yamaji Aizan, as well as Leo Tolstoy, which makes for rather dense reading.
The extent of Uchimura’s massaging of Protestant theology to fit the Japanese political and cultural contexts, as Nirei shows, accords with many other studies included in this bibliography on the “indigenization” of Christianity. Here, Nirei shows that indigenization did not simply occur at the level of popular, “common” practices, but at an intellectual, discursive level as well. Greater contextualization with the Japanese religious milieu at the end of the twentieth century, as well comparisons with Western liberal theology, are also opportunities for expansion.
Oshiro, George M. “Nitobe Inazō and the Sapporo Band: Reflections on the Dawn of Protestant Christianity in Early Meiji Japan.” Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 34 (2007): 99-126.
The title of historian George Oshiro’s article is misleading, because it supposes a much broader scope than the author actually takes. Oshiro presents a short biographical sketch of Nitobe Inazo (1862-1933), best known for his 1990 publication of Bushido but also a Protestant Christian internationalist who grappled with “attain[ing] a genuine Christian faith free from the taint of foreign culture” (99). Oshiro narrates Nitobe’s childhood interest in and openness to Christianity, followed by his time at Sapporo Agricultural College (SAC) during which time he made friends with Miyabe Kingo, Uchimura Kanzo, and others of the “Sapporo Band.” Oshiro draws attention to Nitobe’s doubts about Christianity, especially its soteriological aspects, and argues that it was only in meeting the Quakers while studying at Johns Hopkins a few years later that he found real, satisfying answers to his spiritual questions.
Where Oshiro comes far short is in providing his promised “reflections” on Protestant Christianity at large in early Meiji Japan. Oshiro’s sketch of Inazo also lacks a serious engagement with the question of how Quakerism quelled—theological, or otherwise—Nitobe’s worries that “he could not, to be intellectually honest, believe in the grace of an all-loving Savior,” as well as how to set Nitobe’s evolving religious views in the broader religious and intellectual context of Meiji Japan (111).
Paramore, Kiri. Ideology and Christianity in Japan. 1st ed. Hoboken: Taylor and Francis, 2010.
Drawing on a rich array of Japanese anti-Christian texts from 1600 to 1900, intellectual historian Kiri Paramore seeks to challenge existent conceptions of anti-Christian discourse in the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries (the “Christian Century”) and in the nineteenth century as disparate, stressing instead the discursive continuities between the two periods. He thus discards the couching of anti-Christian discourse in the Tokugawa period in a “religious paradigm” versus the placement of Meiji Christian discourse in a the political context. Paramore instead argues that anti-Christian discourse was less about Christianity itself and more about power and conflicts in domestic politics in both the Tokugawa and Meiji periods. Secondarily, he also seeks to dispel the common “Western vs. Eastern” trope that has characterized the reception of Christianity in the Tokugawa period.
In Paramore’s narrative, religion is co-opted by politics; one may therefore draw parallels between Paramore’s work and those on state Shinto, as well as Perelman’s dissertation on the political motives of missionaries.
Perelman, Elisheva Avital. “The Exponent of Breath: The Role of Foreign Evangelical Organizations in Combating Japan’s Tuberculosis Epidemic of the Early 20th Century.” Ph.D. diss., University of California, Berkeley, 2011.
In this recently submitted dissertation, historian Elisheva Perelman brings under critical examination the work of foreign Christian evangelical missionaries in the Meiji and Taisho periods during both a time of modernization and the unattended spread of disease—specifically, tuberculosis—in Japan. Though Japan saw the rise of science research and modern medicine under the Meiji and Taisho states, tuberculosis also spread unchecked at a rapid pace amongst the urban population and received little governmental attention. Perelman argues that the foreign missionaries who did attend to Japanese tubercular were ruled by political interests. Missionaries focused their attentions on evangelism to the nation’s elite so as to gain financial support as well as the marginalized sick so as to ingratiate themselves to the government by filling a public health need; her answer to the quintessential question of whether missionaries are truly selfless is rather damning. Furthermore, the political motives that laced their medical work “made individuals with a disease into a collective, and, in doing so, removed their agency, essentially creating pawns for the constantly evolving chess games between the organizations and the government” (4).
This work creatively draws together themes of disease, evangelization, gender, and modernization, drawing on an array of missionary archives, hospital records, and Japanese-language sources. Perelman also importantly raises the methodological question of discerning intent and motive, particularly relevant in studying foreign missionaries, to which she provides one response.
Thelle, Notto R. Buddhism and Christianity in Japan: From Conflict to Dialogue, 1854-1899. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1987.
Missiologist Notto Thelle examines the Christian-Buddhist relationship between 1854 and 1899 by placing it in a larger political and social context. Before 1890, Buddhists saw the newly imported Western Christianity as a threat to their power and social order, whereas Christians dismissed Buddhists as innocuous and irrelevant due to corruption and lack of “spiritual vigor” within its ranks (249). With the passage of the Meiji Constitution in 1889, Thelle argues, the tables were turned and Christianity was placed on the defensive. Nevertheless, in this period debates over nationalism that had driven the two religions apart also worked to bring them into friendlier dialogue. He seems to have identified one critical period in which Christianity became part of Japan’s syncretistic religious fabric (a characterization found also in Hardacre and Byron Earhart’s works).
Thelle draws on a rich variety of primary sources by various Japanese leaders and Buddhist and Christian publications. The work is, however, not without faults: Thelle’s use of the terms “Buddhist nationalism” or “Christian nationalism” are not accompanied by clear definitions. More importantly, the author ignores the impact of State Shinto and the 1873 repeal of the ban on Christianity, significant points in Japanese religious history.


*In compiling this bibliography, I am building on work completed for HISTORY 396D: Modern Japan in Fall Quarter 2012 at Stanford University, which focused more broadly on religion in Japan.
[1] James L. Huffman, review of Japan’s Modern Prophet, by John F. Howes, Monumenta Nipponica 62, no. 3 (Autumn 2007): 366-369; Shibuya Hiroshi, review of Japan’s Modern Prophet, by John F. Howes, Church History 78, no. 1 (March 2009): 147-151; John F. Howes, “Responses to comments on Japan’s Modern Prophet,” Church History 78, no. 1 (March 2009): 151-158.
One comment on “Christianity in Japan
  1. dili optim says:
    Youre so cool! I dont suppose Ive learn something like this before. So nice to find any person with some unique thoughts on this subject. realy thank you for starting this up. this web site is one thing that is needed on the internet, someone with somewhat originality. useful job for bringing something new to the web!

Susan Townsend - The University of Nottingham

Susan Townsend - The University of Nottingham



Susan Townsend

Associate Professor, Faculty of Arts
  • TOWNSEND, S. C., 2015. Simianization: Apes, Gender, Class, and Race. In: Simianization: Apes, Gender, Class and Race: Racism Analysis Series B. Yearbooks Lit Verlag. 171-194
  • TOWNSEND, S. C., 2014. The Great War and Urban Crisis: Conceptualizing the Industrial Metropolis in Japan and Britain in the 1910sIn: MINOHARA, T., ed., The Decade of the Great War: Japan and the Wider World in the 1910s Brill. 301-322
  • TOWNSEND, S.C., 2013. The 'miracle' of car ownership in Japan's 'Era of High Growth', 1955–73 Business History. 55(3), 498-523
  • TOWNSEND, S.C., 2010. Jidōsha no machi Nagoya to Eikoku Bāmingamu no hikaku sengo fukkō-shi' [Envisioning the Motor City: A comparison of post-war reconstruction in Nagoya, Japan and Birmingham, England]. In: ONE HUNDREDTH ANNIVERSARY COMMEMORATION OF THE ADMINISTRATION OF THE CENTRAL WARD OFFICE COMMITTEE, ed., Nagoya-shi Naka-ku seishikō 100 shūnen kinen [Nagoya City: a one hundredth anniversary commemoration of the administration of the Central Ward Office] Nagoya Central Ward Office. 224-236
  • TOWNSEND, S.C., 2009. Miki Kiyoshi, 1897-1945: Japan's itinerant philosopher Brill. 
  • TOWNSEND, SUSAN C., 2007. Lost in a World of Books: Reading and Identity in Pre-War Japan Literature Compass. 4(4), 1183-1207
  • TOWNSEND, S.C., 2003. Senjika no dai-Nihon teikoku ni okeru bunka, jinshu, kenryoku [Culture, race and power in Japan's wartime empire]. In: KOSUGI, M. and TOWLE, P., eds., Senso no kioku to horyo mondai [the problem of war memories and captivity] Tokyo: Tokyo University Press. 145-160
  • TOWNSEND, S.C., 2002. 'Yanaihara Tadao and the British Empire as a Model for Colonial Reform'. In:DANIELS, G. and CHUSHICHI, T., eds., The History of Anglo-Japanese Relations, 1600-2000: Vol. 5: Social and Cultural Perspectives Basingstoke : Palgrave Macmillan. 227-46
  • TOWNSEND, S.C., 2001. Yanaihara Tadao to dai-Eiteikoku - Shokuminchi kaikaku no moderu toshite [Yanaihara Tadao and the British Empire as a model for colonial reform]. In: DANIELS, G. and TSUZUKI, C., eds., Nichi-Ei Koryushi 1600-2000 [The History of Anglo-Japanese relations 1600-2000] 5: Shakai bunka [social and cultural persperctives]. Tokyo: Tokyo University Press. 166-181
  • TOWNSEND, S.C.., 2000. Yanaihara Tadao and Japanese colonial policy : redeeming empire Richmond : Curzon. 
  • TOWNSEND, S.C., 2000. Culture, Race and Power in Japan's Wartime Empire 1931-1945. In: TOWLE, P, KOSUGE, M. and KIBATA,Y., eds., Japanese Prisoners of War London : Hambledon Press. 103-116
  • TOWNSEND, S.C., 1996. Yanaiharo Tadao and the Irish question: a comparative analysis of the Irish and Korean questions, 1919-36 Irish Historical Studies. ISSUE 118, 195-205
  • TOWNSEND, S.C., 1995. Yanaihara Tadao's Comparative Critique of Japanese and British Colonial Policy 1923-1937 Japanese Perspectives on Imperialism in Asia. 31-54
  • Japan's quest for Empire 1931-1945 01/01/1900 00:00:00

Self and Other in the Theology of Robert Barclay

Self and Other in the Theology of Robert Barclay - eTheses Repository

etheses.bham.ac.uk/1584/1/Nakano11PhD.pdf
by Y Nakano - ‎2011 - ‎Cited by 1 - ‎Related articles
52 Inazo Nitobe was a central figure in Japanese Quakerism. He is still ... and supernatural world (Rufus M. Jones, The Later Periods of Quakerism, vol. 1.
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the western spirit ofChristianity would make a contribution to the modernisation of the country after the Meiji Restoration (1868), (and would contribute to the establishment of a new liberal democratic and pacifist regime after the SecondWorldWar).50 This caused a serious issue how Japanese Christians should think of the traditional religious contexts, such as Shinto, Buddhism and Confucianism,51 but particularly it was claimed by its new adherents that Quakerism was the most appropriate and most easy-accessible western religion for the Japanese people. Inazo Nitobe (1862-1933)52
says that ‘they [Christian sermons and books] were not at all convincing
to me. Only in Quakerism could I reconcile Christianity and with Oriental thought.53’Thus, Quaker faith has been optimistically accepted as a universal method of self-cultivation which would nurture a consequential development of the entire society and the world.54 As a result of the syncretism with the traditional religions (which stress the awakening of real self or moral development), 55 Japanese Quakerism has further enhanced its own liberal modernist
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50 Dohi, A History of Protestant Christianity, pp. 43-47, 55-57 and 449-450, p. 417 and 434. See also Drummond, AHistory ofChristianity in Japan, p. 186, pp. 273-274.
51 Confucianism had been the main ethical base of the ex-ruling class, namely the samurai class, who constituted the larger part of Japanese Christians after the Meiji Restoration. For some Christians, such as Joseph Hardy Neesima (1843-90), a founder of the Doshisha schools, Confucianism was detestable in its tyrannical nature, whilst for many other Christians the dedication to Jesus Christ was understood in terms ofthe samurai loyalty to the lord (Drummond, AHistory ofChristianity in Japan, p. 178).

52 InazoNitobewas a central figure in JapaneseQuakerism. He is still symbolic within themovement in Japan. He was an agriculturist, educator, and also worked as the under-secretary-general of the Leagues ofNations from the years of1920 to 1926, so that he would be a bridge between Japan and the western countries. See the article of‘Nitobe Inazo’inGen Itasaka, ed. KodanshaEncyclopedia ofJapan (Tokyo: Kodansha, 1983).

53 InazoNitobe,‘AJapaneseViewofQuakerism,’inNitobe Inazo Zenshu (TheWorks ofInazoNitobe), 15 vol. (Tokyo: Kyobunkan, 1970), p. 335.
 This paper was an English lecture presented at the University ofGeneva in
1926.

54 ‘the Confucian idea of benevolence –dare I also add the Buddhist idea of pity? –will expand into the Christian conception of love. Men have become more than subjects, having grown to the estate ofcitizen; nay, they aremore than citizens–beingman.’(InazoNitobe, Bushido, The Soul ofJapan: An Exposition ofJapanese Thought, 10th revised and enlarged ed. (NewYork: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1905), p. 186).

55 Nitobe found the similarity between Christianity and oriental thoughts in terms of cosmic consciousness, namely the same idea found in early Liberal Quakerism: ‘Eastern philosophy loves to contemplate on the identity of individual life with the life of the Whole. ...this cosmic consciousness is the experience of many minds among all the races of the world. It is an experience whereby man is convinced beyond a shadow of doubt that he is a Spirit and that his Spirit is in close communion with the Spirit of the Universe.’(Nitobe, ‘A Japanese View ofQuakerism,’pp. 337-338). He continues that ‘The central doctrine ofQuakerism is the belief in thisCosmic sensewhich they call the Inner Light’(Nitobe,‘AJapaneseViewofQuakerism,’p. 340).
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2016/11/04

한국 무교회주의 운동사의 검토 - 교보문고 스콜라

한국 무교회주의 운동사의 검토 - 교보문고 스콜라

한국 무교회주의 운동사의 검토

: 한국교회사적 평가를 중심으로

A review on the Korean non-Church movement history:on the soil of Korean church history

서정민(Seo Jeong-Min) 저

간행물명 : 신학사상

권/호 : 神學思想 2009년 가을호 (제146집) / 2009 / 213~244 (32pages)

발행기관 : 한국신학연구소

간행물유형 : 전문잡지

주제분류 : 기독교신학

파일형식 : PDF

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초록

한국어초록

한국교회사에 있어‘무교회주의 운동’에 대한 이미지는 크게 두 가지로 구분된다. 첫째, 긍정적 이미지로 한국 기독교가 민족사적 사명을 수행해 나갈 수 있게 하는데 있어 가장 탁월한 신학적 성찰을 제공한 바 있다는 것이다. 그리고 이러한 무교회주의 전통을 지닌 이들의 정열적인 성서연구와 그 성과, 또한 그들 개인이 지닌 깊은 영성과 경건, 윤리적 실천력 등은 그 긍정적 이미지를 이야기할 수 있는 대표적 항목이 아닐 수 없다. 둘째, 부정적 이미지는 이들 그룹을 하나의‘섹트’(sect)로 볼 수 있는 견해이다. 이는 교회 내부로부터는 지속적인 문제제기를 해 온 바, 그 내용은 기독교로서의 가장 중심적인 신학적 항목의 하나인‘교회론’의 문제였다.

한국 무교회주의 운동은 해방 전의 전기와, 해방 후의 후기로 시대를 구분할 수 있다. 본 논문에서는 전기 무교회 그룹의 성서조선사건이 1940년 함석헌의 구속과 연관성이 있는 것으로 파악하였고, 기존에 논란이 되었던 그의 구속날짜와 석방날짜를 새롭게 밝혔다. 또한 전기 무교회 그룹과 일본 무교회 그룹 간의 깊은 교류와 연대에 대해서도 살펴보았다. 전기의 무교회 운동은 1942년 성서조선사건에서 절정을 이루면서, 수난기‘한국민족기독교’의 신학적 전통을 수립했다고 평가할 수 있다.

그러나 후기 운동은 철저한 개인 경건과 성서연구로 몰두하여 역사적인 역할을 감당하지 못한 약점을 지니고 있다. 한국 무교회주의 운동의 과제는 개인적 신앙을 승화하여 지금 현재 한국의 민족사회가 지속적으로 지니고 있는 역사적 문제, 곧 분단 극복의 문제, 사회 양극화의 해소 문제, 문화적 다양성의 상호 교섭 문제, 환경문제와 창조질서 보존의 문제, 생명에 대한 존중과 경외와 그에 대한 기독교적 이해의 지평을 확장하는 문제 등이 있어 그 전통에 입각, 더욱 강력한 예언성과 실천성을 발휘하는 데 있다.



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영어 초록

Korean Non-church movement is said to have two opposite images. First, it has been praised to provide the most outstanding theological introspection which enabled Korean church to complete its historical mission of the time. Passionate study of the Bible along with its abundant fruit, profound spirituality and piety, and assiduous practice of moral deeds were typical features of the members of the Movement. On the contrary, it has also been said to exercise negative influences on the Korean Christianity. Korean Church regarded it merely as a ‘sect’as the name suggests because the ecclesiology of the Korean Nonchurch group, one of the most major theological issues, seemed suspicious.

Korean Non-church movement is able to be divided into two periods, before and after the Liberation. This thesis attests the ‘Sung-Suh Chosun(the Bible and Korea) event’is related to the custody of Ham Sukhun in 1940 and the exact date of his custody and release which has been a disputed issue is newly verified. Also, the close connections and solidarity between the former period of Korean Non-church Movement and Japanese Non-church Movement are pointed out. It can be estimated that the former Non-church Movement reached its peak with the

breakout of the ‘Sung-Suh Chosun(the Bible and Korea) event’, establishing the theological tradition of ‘ Korean National Christianity’in the suffering period under Japanese occupation.

However, since the group of the latter movement totally gave themselves up to each individual piety and Bible studies, they could not discharge its historical role. Now the mission required for Korean Non-church movement is to sublime individual faith so that it could exercise stronger prophecy and practice imparted by the precursors on the current issues of Korean society, such as division of the two Koreas, inter-negotiations of social diversities, polarity of the society, environmental problems, disrespect for life and so on.



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목차

초록

1. 서론: 한국 무교회주의 운동의 이미지

2. 한국 무교회주의 운동의 시기구분

3. 우치무라(內村鑑三)와 전기 한국 무교회주의 운동 그룹

4. 전기 한국 무교회주의 그룹과 일본 내 무교회주의자들 간의 연대

5. 함석헌의‘계우회 사건’과‘성서조선사건’의 상관성

6. ‘한국민족교회’와 김교신

7. 해방 후 무교회주의 운동의 추이

8. 결론: 한국 무교회주의 운동의 과제

참고문헌

Abstract

宗教の内面性・主体性から社会性へ:赤江達也『「紙上の教会」と日本近代』(2013)#1 - f**t note

宗教の内面性・主体性から社会性へ:赤江達也『「紙上の教会」と日本近代』(2013)#1 - f**t note



2014/01/06

宗教の内面性・主体性から社会性へ:赤江達也『「紙上の教会」と日本近代』(2013)#1



読書, k_キリスト教史, k_日本史





 無教会キリスト教に注目して近代宗教について捉え返そうとした、赤江達也『「紙上の教会」と日本近代』を読みました。まずは「はじめに」、「序章 無教会キリスト教とは何か」、「終章 「紙上の教会」の日本近代」を中心に、全体を簡単に要約した読書メモを。なお、第一・二・三章については、別途まとめてあります。



赤江達也『「紙上の教会」と日本近代――無教会キリスト教の歴史社会学』岩波書店、2013年。





 しばしば「日本的キリスト教」と称される無教会キリスト教。内村鑑三にはじまり、矢内原忠雄、南原繁などが信仰したこの無教会思想・運動は、個人主義的・実存主義的な志向をもち、教会の制度的な権威を相対化することを目指していたと捉えられてきた。その思想は、内村などの先生が弟子たちに対して聖書講義をおこなう集会において養われ、同時に、先生が発刊した雑誌を通じて人々に広げられた。このとき、無教会に関する先行研究では、無教会運動の中心的な社会基盤は集会であり、雑誌はあくまで副次的なものであると評価されている。

 そのため、これまでは先生の思想と集会ばかりが注目され、雑誌メディアが検討されることはほとんどなかった。このことは、19世紀末に端を発する宗教観、すなわち、宗教を個人の主体性や普遍的超越性から捉える見方が支配的であったことに由来している。このプロテスタント中心主義的、信仰中心主義的な見方は、日本近代宗教史でもしばしば採用される宗教観でもある。そのため、このような視点にたった先行研究は、主体レベルに着目して宗教を捉えることに終始し、その社会的な次元への着目をおそろかにしてきてしまったのである。これまでの無教会研究が内村の主体性・内面性ばかりに注目してきたことも、このような宗教観に関連している。すなわち、先生の思想を分析することに価値を置く見方においては、必然的に先生と弟子との直接的な交流がおこなわれる集会へと注目することにつながり、間接的な接触に過ぎない雑誌は軽視されることになるのである。

 そこで本書は、雑誌メディアに着目して無教会運動を捉え返すことを試み、それによりこれまでとは違った無教会像を提示しようとする。宗教学では、無教会のように活字メディアを駆使して、宗教=知識として人々に広めようとするタイプの宗教は「知識(人)宗教」と呼ばれ、一定程度の関心を集めてきた。しかし著者は、その概念が知識人という上からの視点を強調し過ぎていることを問題視する。たとえば無教会研究では、内村鑑三や矢内原忠雄といった強い個性とそれに従う弟子という構図のもと、先生の研究ばかりが進められている。それに対し著者は、「読者宗教」という新たな概念を提起することで、その共同体を構成していた数多くの読者の存在へと注目を喚起する。そして、その読者の存在こそが無教会の本質的な部分であったと主張するのである。というのも、無教会運動では師弟関係の小さな集会が多く存在していたことから、先生中心主義的になりやすかった。そのため、それは権力の硬直化という、無教会が最も忌避するものにつながる恐れがあった。しかし、雑誌すなわち「紙上の教会」では、信徒=読者は一人が複数の先生をもつことができ、先生の権威をつねに相対化することができる。そして、こういった読者共同体こそが、当時の無教会運動に厚みをもたせていたものなのである。事実、かつて内村が自らの事業の後継者について語ったとき、その人物は身近で彼の薫陶を受けたような者からではなく、内村から時間的にも空間的にも隔たった見知らぬ者、すなわち雑誌・書物メディアの読者からあらわれるだろうと述べていた。

 さて、本書は無教会の歴史社会学的分析であるため、その主題は宗教であることに間違いないが、同時に政治、学問、思想といったトピックにも触れている。たとえば著者は、無教会運動に注目することで、啓蒙思想とキリスト教の関係をめぐる新たな主題への着目を喚起している。大正期の教養主義は内村というキリスト者によって先導され、その時代に学んだキリスト教知識人たちが戦後改革の際に世間から大きな期待を背負うことになった。とくに戦後に活躍したキリスト教者は第二世代の無教会主義者であったが、彼らは内村から継承したキリスト教ナショナリズムを前面に打ち出した主張をおこなっている。こういった人物は、戦時下でも信仰を守り、戦争に反対したと捉えられがちである。しかし、本書の議論で明らかになるのは、彼らの全体主義・民族主義への傾斜および天皇への思慕である。第二章では矢内原の思想のなかに全体主義への志向が確認され、第三章では矢内原や南原の目指した「精神革命」において天皇の役割に対する大きな期待が示されるのであった。

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教会・大学の外部としての雑誌と「紙上の教会」:赤江達也『「紙上の教会」と日本近代』(2013)#2Add Star



読書, k_キリスト教史, k_日本史





赤江達也『「紙上の教会」と日本近代――無教会キリスト教の歴史社会学』岩波書店、2013年、35–119頁。

「紙上の教会」と日本近代――無教会キリスト教の歴史社会学

「紙上の教会」と日本近代――無教会キリスト教の歴史社会学

作者: 赤江達也

出版社/メーカー: 岩波書店

発売日: 2013/06/27

メディア: 単行本

この商品を含むブログ (13件) を見る



 「第一章 無教会の出現」では、1890年代から1900年代に焦点を合わせ、内村鑑三(1861–1930)が構想した「無教会」の初期の思想・運動が検討される。内村は渡米しているときからも、制度としての教会に懐疑的な考えをもっていたが、1891(明治24)年の不敬事件を機にその批判的な態度を顕在化させる。この事件は、第一高等中学校の入学式で、明治天皇の教育勅語に対する礼拝を内村が拒否したために、過激な愛国主義をもつ生徒たちから激しく非難され、のちに同じキリスト教徒からも批判されたというものである。先行研究では、内村の礼拝拒否は彼の強いキリスト教信仰に基づくものであるとされてきた。しかしながら、キリスト教者の中でも、天皇にまつわるものへの敬礼はキリスト教精神に反しないとする考えもあり、内村もそう考えていた。さらに言えば、内村は自らが愛国的キリスト教者であると認めていた。そういった側面に注目することで著者は、内村自身の言葉にもとづき、彼がとった行動は礼拝の拒否というよりためらいであったと指摘する。つまり、内村は教育勅語へのお辞儀が礼拝なのか敬礼なのかをすぐには判断できず、曖昧な態度をとったに過ぎないのである。しかしながら、愛国的な生徒だけでなく、キリスト教者からも批判を浴びた内村は、愛国的キリスト教者であることの難しさを悟るのであった。事件の二年後に井上哲治郎へ宛てた書簡において内村は、愛国主義とキリスト教が両立しうるという議論を展開するが、結局まわりからは理解されることがなかった。そういった状況のなかで、内村は同年に出版された著書『基督信徒の慰』において、はじめて「無教会」という言葉を用いたのであった。

 それでは、内村は「無教会」としてどのようなものを想定したのであろうか。その言葉を最初に用いたとき、内村は組織と建築からなる教会に代わるものとして、大自然からなる「宇宙の教会」という概念を提示した。その後、1901(明治34)年に『無教会』という雑誌を創刊したときには、無教会概念の再定義をおこなっている。まず「宇宙の教会」を無教会信者の教会として捉え直し、次に読者たちの投稿によって構成されるその雑誌を「紙上の教会」として定義したのである。内村はここにおいて、学校や教会の外部におけるキリスト教信仰を推し進めようとしたのである。その構想を打ち立てる前に、内村は新聞記者の論説委員や女学校の校長をつとめたり、日曜学校や生活改良運動といったキリスト教的運動へのコミットをおこなっていた。しかし、学校や教会などの組織が主導するキリスト教信仰ではなく、「紙上の教会」の読者共同体を主体とする新たなキリスト教信仰のあり方を提示したのであった。

 内村が提案したこの無教会思想・運動は、しばしば「日本的キリスト教」であると捉えられてきた。しかし、無教会は国内だけでなく中国・アメリカ・メキシコにも波及しているし、その雑誌が英語で出版されるなど、そのネットワークは国際的な広がりをもっていた。植民地の台湾・朝鮮でも「紙上の教会」建設が進められており、たとえば朝鮮では1927(昭和2年)年に『聖書朝鮮』が創刊されている。その創始者である金教臣(1901–1945)は、日本で内村の聖書講義に参加していたが、帰朝後は内村の思想を批判的に継承する。内村が紙上の教会の読者として「神が選び給ひし国民」である「見えざる公衆」を想定し、キリスト教ナショナリズムを唱えたことに多くを学びながら、金はそれの朝鮮バージョンすなわち「純粋な朝鮮産キリスト教」を生み出そうとしたのである。このように、無教会主義においてはナショナリズムはその中心にあった。そのため、1930年代以降は日本と朝鮮との間での対立が顕在化していくことになる。

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無教会第二世代とキリスト教ナショナリズム:赤江達也『「紙上の教会」と日本近代』(2013)#3Add Star



読書, k_キリスト教史, k_日本史





赤江達也『「紙上の教会」と日本近代――無教会キリスト教の歴史社会学』岩波書店、2013年、121–209頁。

「紙上の教会」と日本近代――無教会キリスト教の歴史社会学

「紙上の教会」と日本近代――無教会キリスト教の歴史社会学

作者: 赤江達也

出版社/メーカー: 岩波書店

発売日: 2013/06/27

メディア: 単行本

この商品を含むブログ (13件) を見る



 「第二章 無教会の戦争」では、1910年前後から敗戦までの時期に着目し、内村の構想した無教会が人々にどのように受け止められ、発展させられていくかが検討される。その際、無教会第二世代の人々による取り組みが注目されるが、彼らが内村から継承したのは「紙上の教会」という思想よりも、キリスト教ナショナリズムであったことが指摘される。

 内村不敬事件が起きた頃の一高は、熱烈なナショナリズムをもって内村の態度を批判した。しかし明治末から大正期に入ると、当時の「エリート文化としての教養主義」が、一高を無教会運動へと急速に接近させることになる。つまり、一高や帝大が独自の神学校などをもっていなかった無教会運動への人材供給を担うようになり、逆に無教会運動がアカデミズムにも影響を与えるようになったのである。その後、そういった教養主義文化をさらに拡大させるのを手伝ったのが、1913(大正2)年に創立した岩波書店である。その創始者・岩波茂雄(1881–1946)は内村の門下生であったが、無教会主義が既成教団から宗教を解放しようとすることに共鳴し、自らの出版事業をいわば「紙上の大学」として位置づけ、学芸を特権階級の独占から奪い返そうとしたのであった。

 このようにして広がっていった無教会運動であったが、内村の晩節にさしかかると、第二世代の無教会主義者が生まれてくる。内村が60歳となった1921(大正10)年頃には、彼の聖書研究会や雑誌『聖書之研究』の後継問題が話題にあがっていた。その後継者としては、内村の右大臣・左大臣とされた畔上賢造(あぜがみけんぞう;1884–1938)や塚本虎二(1885–1973)が有力視されたが、結局、彼らは内村の集会・雑誌を継ぐことはせず、独立の道を選んだ。1930(昭和5)年に死亡した内村であったが、それまでに多くの無教会第二世代が誕生することになった。彼らもまた、内村と同じように各地で集会を開き、雑誌を創刊することで、無教会運動を展開したのである。

 内村がそうであったように、無教会第二世代もまたその職を辞して運動に没頭したが、矢内原忠雄(1893–1961)のような兼業伝道者もこのときにあらわれている。矢内原は学生時代に内村に学び、いったんは就職したが、1920(大正9)年に帝大に「植民政策学」講師として呼び戻され、1930年前後から無教会キリスト者として積極的に活動するようになった。矢内原と言えば、盧溝橋事件が発生した1937(昭和12)年に戦争を批判したことで大学を追われたことが知られており、しばしばキリスト教精神に基づいて非戦を訴えた人物として描かれてきた。しかし、矢内原の戦争に対する考えを無教会主義思想との関連に着目して捉え返したとき、彼の違った一面がみえてくる。すなわち、矢内原は確かに全体主義を批判していたが、それに対抗して彼が提示したアイディアは「真の全体主義」というまた別の全体主義であったのである。そして、真の全体主義の精神は、教会を脱却した無教会が純化したキリスト教として提供すると考えたのであった。戦時下に入ると、無教会の思想は全体主義とナショナリズムの精神へと交錯するようになる。このときに矢内原が示した日本的キリスト教の思想は、「天皇制国家対キリスト教」というしばしば用いられる単純な構図では捉えることができないだろう。このように、第二世代の無教会主義者たちは内村の「紙上の教会」というアイディアよりもむしろ、そのキリスト教ナショナリズムを継承したのであった。



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キリスト教知識人による戦後改革と無教会第三世代:赤江達也『「紙上の教会」と日本近代』(2013)#4Add Star



読書, k_キリスト教史, k_日本史





赤江達也『「紙上の教会」と日本近代――無教会キリスト教の歴史社会学』岩波書店、2013年、211–301頁。

「紙上の教会」と日本近代――無教会キリスト教の歴史社会学

「紙上の教会」と日本近代――無教会キリスト教の歴史社会学

作者: 赤江達也

出版社/メーカー: 岩波書店

発売日: 2013/06/27

メディア: 単行本

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 「第三章 無教会の戦後」では、戦後はじまるキリスト教ブームから1970年代までの時期が検討される。戦後の知識人たちは、それぞれが新たな理想を提示していこうとするが、そのときに中心的な役割を果たしたのがキリスト教知識人、とりわけ無教会主義者であった。無教会派の人々は、戦時下で非転向を貫いたという「殉教者効果」(竹内洋)、あるいは大学や教団から相対的に自由であったことなどにより、戦後啓蒙思想の旗手として大きく期待された。しかしより重要であったのは、無教会運動が特定の団体からは自由であるようにみえ、戦後憲法における信仰の自由、および教育基本法における公教育の中立性を、説得的に主張することができたという点であった。

 戦後の無教会運動の代表者である南原繁(1889–1974)や矢内原忠雄は、キリスト教ナショナリズムによる「精神革命」を主張した。たとえば、戦後最初の東大総長となった南原は、新しい日本文化を創造するために、戦中に軍国主義者や国家至上主義者によって濫用されてきた日本民族の神話を、日本神学の枠内から解放し、ヨーロッパ政治思想史へと組み入れようと主張している。このとき、日本にはルネサンスと宗教改革が必要であるとされ、前者は既に天皇の人間宣言によって達成されているが、後者はこれからキリスト教によって精神を内的・宗教的に変化させることが目指されるべきであると主張した。矢内原もまた、戦争の原因を「日本精神」に認めながら、今こそそれを近代主義的・平和主義的に換骨奪胎すべきであえると論じた。その際、民主主義の精神であるキリスト教、なかでも無教会がまずもって受け入れるべきだと主張している。同時に矢内原は、天皇が教会に行かずとも、ただ聖書を読むだけで、天皇のキリスト教化ひいては日本精神のキリスト教化が進むと期待したのであった。ここからもわかるように、しばしば戦後の進歩的な思想家として捉えられる南原および矢内原は、実のところ、進歩派のなかの保守派、オールド・リベラルなのであった。だからこそ、戦後すぐに人々から支持を得ることにつながったのである。

 南原や矢内原は、大正啓蒙期に思想を育んだ無教会第二世代であったが、戦後には内村にも会ったことがないような第三世代があらわれてくる。それにより、無教会運動は新たな展開をなしとげる。一方では、欧米で聖書学を学んだ関根正雄(1912–2000)によって「無教会の神学」が目指された。もともと無教会主義は神学に対し否定的な態度をとることが多かったが、関根は無教会のセクト化に対する危機感から、無教会を神学的に捉えることで、開かれた論争空間を形成しようと試みたのであった。もう一方では、手島郁郎(1910–1973)の「キリストの幕屋」運動における霊性運動が進められた。手島は聖霊の直接的な働きを強調することで、これまでの無教会とは違った方向性を示した。しかし、その活動は1952(昭和27)年に女性信者が神癒の過程で死亡してしまうという「清瀬事件」にまで発展し、無教会主流派との間に大きな軋轢が生まれることになった。このときに問題となったのは、無教会における正統と異端の境界である。矢内原はその幕屋運動を異端であると断罪したが、ある者を異端であると言うときにその者の正統性の主張することは、反制度主義的な無教会の理念と反する恐れがある。そのため無教会の別の者は矢内原のような仕方ではなく、あくまでその判断が教会のものではなく個人的なものであるとして、幕屋運動を無教会から除外するしかなかったのである。

 1960年代前半になると第二世代の伝道者が相次いで引退し、1961(昭和36)年には矢内原が死亡してしまう。このとき、戦後長らく続いてきたキリスト教知識人の時代が幕を閉じることになる。かつて、普遍性を志向する知識人たちが、キリスト教の普遍性にかこつけて、戦後改革を先導してきた。しかしながら、この時代にはキリスト教の普遍主義はもはや世間には共有されなくなってしまっていた。たとえば、1960年代半ばに丸山眞男(1914–1996)と学問上の師である南原が対談したとき、南原が前提とするキリスト教普遍主義を丸山は理解することができなかった。こうして、1957(昭和32)年時点では3~5万人いた信徒数も、1966(昭和41)年には1万5千人と大幅に減少し、1970年代には無教会運動は第三世代によって担われていくことになる。

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