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Seicho-no-ie Information

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Seicho-no-Ie, sometimes rendered Seicho-no Iye (生長の家 seichō-no ie [seːtʃoː no i.e]), is a syncretic, nondenominational, monotheistic, New Thought religion/philosophy, one of the Shinshūkyō (or new religious movements) in Japan that have spread since the end of World War II. It emphasizes gratitude for nature, the family, ancestors and, above all, religious faith in one universal God, inheriting its basic characteristics from Buddhism, Christianity and Shintoism. Seicho-no-Ie is the world's largest New Thought group.[1] The phrase means "The Home of Infinite Life, Wisdom and Abundance".

Contents

History

In 1930, Dr. Masaharu Taniguchi, working as an English translator, published the first issue of what he called his "non-denominational truth movement magazine", which he named "Seicho-no Ie" to help teach others of his revelations. This was followed by forty volumes of his "Truth of Life" philosophy by 1932. Over the next forty years he published an additional four hundred–odd books and toured many countries in Europe, South America, and North America with his wife Teruko, to lecture on his revelations personally. Ernest Holmes, founder of Religious Science, and his brother Fenwicke were of great assistance to Taniguchi. Fenwicke traveled to Japan and co-authored several books, with one called The Science of Faith becoming a cornerstone of the denomination.[2]

Taniguchi died in a Nagasaki hospital on June 17, 1985, at the age of ninety-one.[3] Today the president of Seicho-no-le is Masanobu Taniguchi.

New York HQ on east 53rd Street (Manhattan)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Masaharu Taniguchi." Religious Leaders of America, 2nd ed. Gale Group, 1999. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Gale, 2008.
  2. ^ Science of Mind magazine, Dec 2008, volume 81, number 12, pages.17-18
  3. ^ Associated Press (1985-06-18). "Religious leader Taniguchi". The Montreal Gazette. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=3H0xAAAAIBAJ&sjid=2qUFAAAAIBAJ&pg=5839,3948635. Retrieved 2010-01-07.

References

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External links

Religious Science/Science of Mind
Beliefs Spiritual mind treatment · Power of choice
Founder Ernest Holmes
Notable ministers Fenwicke Holmes · Raymond Charles Barker · Stuart Grayson · Louise Hay · Michael Beckwith · Joseph Murphy · Jean Houston · Terry Cole-Whittaker · William Hornaday
Largest groups Centers for Spiritual Living · Seicho-No-Ie · Affiliated New Thought Network · Global Religious Science Ministries
Influences Divine Science · Ralph Waldo Emerson · Emma Curtis Hopkins · Thomas Troward · Mary Baker Eddy · Phineas Parkhurst Quimby · Emmet Fox
Other The Science of Mind · Science of Mind magazine

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