Present life (現世, gen sei, utsushi yo) is a religious term meaning the current life someone is living in right now.[1][2] It is distinct from the next life or past life [ja] in religions which believe in reincarnation or the Everlasting world in Shinto, or the afterlife in Abrahamic religions.

Many religions provide means to gain worldly benefits (現世利益, Genseiriyaku) or benefits in the present life in addition to in other lives.[3]

Shinto

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In Shinto, the word "present world" is historically read as "Utsushiro", meaning this world or the real world in which people live. In contrast, there is the land of God as the so-called heaven, paradise, and the land of Death or Yomi as the so-called hell, which is called Tokoyo Yomi as the land of the dead, or Yomi as the land of the dead.[4]

In the Himorogi and Panza beliefs, which are said to be the beginning of Ko-Shintō, huge trees and stones in forests, mountains, and rocks are said to be Yorishiro of the gods, and at the same time, Iwakura means "border between the everlasting world and the present world". In Shrine Shinto as well, the Chinju no Mori and the broad-leaved evergreen trees planted in them represent the Shinto realm and at the same time are boundaries, which prevent the events of the everlasting world and the present world from coming and going easily.[5] It is also a warding, which prevents the events of the everlasting world and the present world from coming and going easily.

Worldly benefits in Shinto

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Since ancient times, people have prayed to the guardian deities of the local community, such as the Ujigami or Chinjujin, for rain, sun, insects, and disease, as part of the collective will of the community members of the village or other clans. Even today, this traditional culture has taken root in "festivals. Nowadays, in order to respond to the heartfelt wishes of individuals, Shinto priests and miko (priestesses and priestesses of Shinto shrines) perform a ritual prayer and Kagura-mai (dance performance) in front of the gods, and the prayers are obtained through the offering of a tamagushi (sacred skewer) by the person who prays. The types of personal wishes are classified into the following categories: disease remedies (for oneself and one's family), family safety, prosperous business, and relief from hardships in life.[6]

In general, the position of worldly benefits in religion tends to be downplayed, but in Japan, they are recognized as inseparable from the other benefits of religion.

Buddhism

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The present life is one of the "Traiyadhvika [ja]" in Buddhism, past life [ja], present life [ja] and next life. Apart from the temporal back and forth, Purification has the concept of "Impure Land and Pure Land". The word "Impure land" means "defiled world" and corresponds to the present world, and Pure land to the Everlasting world.

In the Vajra Prajnaparamita Sutra, it is written, "All saṅkhata [ja] dharma is like a dream and a shadow of a bubble," suggesting that the Buddhists understood this world as a dream and a bubble, something fleeting. Thus, Buddhism had a negative view of this world.[7]

Worldly benefits in Buddhism

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In Buddhism worldly benefits are said to be obtained by reading scriptures, chanting the Shingon mantra [de] and Daimoku [fr], praying, and building temples, pagodas, and Buddhist statues.

In Japan, after the arrival of Buddhism, a policy of gaining benefits from this world was adopted, such as the construction of Buddhist statues as a national policy, as in The Great Buddha of Nara [ja]. Then, in response to the people's desire to pray for benefits in order to recover when calamities struck and life failed, the Shingon and Tendai Esoteric Buddhism that flourished from the late antiquity to the Middle Ages were introduced, such as the Kajikito [ja]

By the time of the Kamakura Buddhism [ja] period, as in the Hōnen, " If one's illness is cured and one's life is prolonged by praying, then where would one die?"[8]

Christianity

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In modern Protestantism, the emphasis on creation [fr] was thoroughly denied, which led to the denial of this life and the orientation toward the next life only, but eventually Akira Ikeda explained that, as modernization progressed, the emphasis on the next world was lost, and the focus shifted to the present world.[9]

Islam

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In Islam, dunyā (Arabic: دُنْيا ) refers to the temporal world and its earthly concerns and possessions,[10] as opposed to the hereafter (ʾākhirah).[11][12] In the Qur'an, dunyā and ākhira are sometimes used dichotomously, other times complementarily. Islam does not a priori dismiss the world as "evil". Instead, this world is defined as "the field of ākhira" and the place of examination.

In literature

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Edogawa Ranpo is known to have often written on colored paper, "this world is a dream, and the dream of the night is the true thing".[13]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Kojien 5th edition
  2. ^ Digital Daijisen
  3. ^ "现世利益的解释和意思 - 现世利益是什么解释? - 佛学大词典". foxue.bmcx.com. Retrieved 2022-12-25.
  4. ^ "うつし世 | 美し人【うましびと】 一般社団法人 日本美術工藝協会". www.umashi-bito.or.jp. Retrieved 2022-12-26.
  5. ^ 神奈備祭について
  6. ^ 文部科学省(文部省)『全国宗教世論調査報告』(1953)
  7. ^ "『禅の言葉「一切有為法」』". 明日通信 (in Japanese). Retrieved 2022-12-25.
  8. ^ "祈り". www5a.biglobe.ne.jp. Retrieved 2022-12-15.
  9. ^ 東京大学出版会『宗教学辞典』 p.189-190 【現世】池田昭 執筆
  10. ^ "The Truth of the Life of This World - Harun Yahya". 2006-03-19. Archived from the original on 2006-03-19. Retrieved 2022-12-25.
  11. ^ "Eschatology (doctrine of last things)". Britannica. Retrieved 18 April 2022.
  12. ^ "Afterlife (akhirah)". BBC. GCSE WJEC. Retrieved 16 April 2022.
  13. ^ ヘルスプレス - 最晩年の江戸川乱歩は「パーキンソン病」と闘いながら口述筆記で執筆(佐藤博)

Literature

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