Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Sukyo Mahikari's tekazashi – Statistics and teachings

This article examines statistical and anecdotal evidence concerning the effectiveness of Sukyo Mahikari's tekazashi (okiyome or True Light). It discusses the related teachings and the role that tekazashi plays in creating belief in Sukyo Mahikari doctrine.

Yoshikazu Okada's teachings, like many religious doctrines, are explanations of realms, beings, and spiritual forces and laws, all of which are invisible. The main physically observable and potentially verifiable components of Sukyo Mahikari teachings are Okada's claims concerning the effects of his style of tekazashi. He taught that anyone who attends the 3-day primary initiation course (kenshu) and receives a specially prepared amulet (omitama) can perform tekazashi, and thereby perform miracles like a "mini-Buddha or a mini-Christ".[1]

An opened Sukyo Mahikari amulet (omitama), and its contents (unfolded)

Okada taught that giving and receiving tekazashi purifies the spiritual aspect of a person, which automatically results in purification of the mental and physical aspects. Thus, tekazashi not only enables the practitioner to heal illness in others, it also results in the spiritual elevation of the practitioner, which Okada taught would become manifest through visible improvements in the practitioner's level of health, harmony, and prosperity. This suggests that it should be simple to use the physical evidence of the effects of the tekazashi practiced by Sukyo Mahikari members to establish the validity of Okada's teachings.

Tekazashi: The giver radiates a spiritual energy from the palm of the hand, and the recipient sits with hands in prayer position and eyes closed.

Strictly speaking, proof that tekazashi causes healing and other benefits would not prove that Okada's teachings are correct. It would, however, suggest to potential converts that Okada knew significantly more about spiritual matters than ordinary folk. Since people generally have no direct and reliable way of discovering spiritual truth for themselves, proof that even one of Okada's claims is correct carries the strong suggestion that he must have been an expert on spiritual matters. Belief in Sukyo Mahikari often begins, rightly or wrongly, with the belief that tekazashi "works".

The immediate difficulty is finding a way of establishing whether or not tekazashi achieves miracles. Potential members of Sukyo Mahikari are encouraged to take a "try it and see" approach. They are not expected to necessarily believe all, or even any, of Okada's teachings before joining Sukyo Mahikari. They are told that they are free to discover the truth of the teachings for themselves through their own experience of tekazashi, initially as receivers, and after the primary initiation course as givers and receivers of tekazashi.

The "try it and see" approach plants the idea that if tekazashi succeeds, then all of Okada's teachings are true. It also creates a foundation for the member's beliefs that is hard to shake. Members feel that their beliefs are knowledge acquired through their own experience, rather than beliefs accepted on faith, that the organization has persuaded them to believe. Most importantly, it quarantines teachings that many people might find unpalatable and/or almost impossible to believe. Even the fundamental teaching that Okada received revelations from God stretches the credibility of Sukyo Mahikari for many new members. Some former members suggest that the practices of Sukyo Mahikari conform to a mind control model.[2] If mind control mechanisms, or even ordinary persuasive mechanisms, are a factor in creating and maintaining belief in Sukyo Mahikari, the "try it and see" approach provides the advantage of keeping potential recruits and new members within range of influence long enough for such mechanisms to take effect.

To the best of my knowledge, there has been no independent scientific experimentation which would indicate whether or not any sort of energy is radiated from the hand during tekazashi, and there is little objective data on its effectiveness. Corinna Lee[3] mentions that there have been numerous "kitchen" experiments conducted by members, with patchy results. In such experiments, members attempt to test the effects of tekazashi on the rate of seed germination or the rate of decomposition of food. I have only heard of two sets of experiments conducted by trained scientists under laboratory conditions: one set was by Tebecis, the author of two books promoting Sukyo Mahikari, who reported a positive result, and the other by another Sukyo Mahikari member, who reported that tekazashi produced no change.

There are however plenty of experience stories, written by members, which describe a wide variety of major and minor health and other miracles. Several such experience stories are usually included in the monthly journals published by the organization. The first English-language book promoting Sukyo Mahikari, written in 1982 by long-term staff member A.K. Tebecis, contains numerous stories of cures, and some of these are repeated in his 2004 book.[4] The above stories of miraculous cures indicate that members do continue to believe, even after years of experience of performing tekazashi, that it not only "works", but that it is effective in a wide range of circumstances.

According to a survey conducted by Winston Davis, 39% of the 688 Sukyo Mahikari members he questioned reported having experienced some sort of healing miracle that they attributed to tekazashi, including some cases of serious problems being cured (a tumour, asthma, etc.)[5] A much smaller study at an Australian Sukyo Mahikari center indicated that, out of 55 members who reported having health or personal problems at the time they became members, 5 reported a cure, 3 claimed there was no change, and the remaining 47 indicated an improvement.[6] These figures are reasonably consistent with anecdotal evidence that suggests that dramatic cures of serious problems occur very rarely, and significant improvements or cures of long-term problems occur only occasionally. However, relief from less serious conditions (colds, backaches, minor injuries, headaches, burns, etc.) appears to be a more-or-less daily occurrence.

The above figures give the general impression that tekazashi can, and at times does, achieve miracles, but they also suggest a degree of failure, despite the fact that all the interview subjects were Sukyo Mahikari members. There is no statistical data on the frequency of it failing to achieve any observable effect on recipients who are not Sukyo Mahikari members. (Members would argue that tekazashi always "works", in the sense that it is purifying spiritually, regardless of whether or not we observe any result.) It would be useful to know what proportion of potential recruits have not joined Sukyo Mahikari after receiving tekazashi, and to know what proportion of those people rejected Sukyo Mahikari because they observed no benefit from receiving tekazashi.

Extensive anecdotal evidence suggests that the number of Westerners who have joined Sukyo Mahikari after receiving tekazashi is certainly less than 10%, probably less than 5%, and possibly less than 1% of all those who have received tekazashi at least once. Some who do not join do report a beneficial effect from tekazashi, but it is not uncommon for non-members to comment that "nothing happened" as a result of receiving tekazashi. It is also not uncommon for members of Sukyo Mahikari to leave within a year of joining. Tebecis is quoted as acknowledging that, "only 10% of members who do kenshu [attend the primary initiation course] are 'serious enough' to remain" (no time frame is mentioned).[7]

If less than 10% of people who have experienced tekazashi eventually join Sukyo Mahikari, and only 10% of those remain to become long-term members, then over 99% of people who have experienced tekazashi ultimately decide not to practice it. This suggests that the "try it and see" approach to Sukyo Mahikari teachings largely fails. Yet long-term members are apparently convinced that tekazashi is highly effective, and devote many hours daily to it over 10, 20, or even 30 years.

The above suggested (though impossible to confirm from statistics) failure rate of the "try it and see" approach relates to the relatively immediate observable effects of tekazashi, such as the cure of a specific current problem. The other promised benefit mentioned above is that the spiritual purification and elevation achieved by regular tekazashi over an extended period becomes manifest as improved health, harmony, and prosperity. Okada warned to expect ups and downs, but stated that an upward trend would be obvious within five years at the most.[8] Thus, even though spiritual elevation itself is not perceptible, long-term improvements in members' lives would be. So far as I am aware, no objective data concerning this matter exists, but, as Lee notes, most members subjectively evaluate their lives as having improved since joining Sukyo Mahikari.[9]

If Okada's teachings are true, one would expect that those who have been dedicated members for around 20 years would be relatively problem free. In particular, if they had no serious health problems at the time of joining the organization, one would expect a high level of health. However, anecdotal evidence suggests that more than a few long-term members have eventually developed serious and/or chronic health problems, suggesting at least some degree of failure in terms of the promised long-term benefits of tekazashi as well.

Experience of tekazashi does support belief in the teachings of Okada, in that belief would probably not be created if there were never any observable effects from tekazashi. However, Sukyo Mahikari also relies on its teachings to support belief in the effectiveness of tekazashi. The teachings govern the way members interpret their experience of tekazashi, and ensure that the failures to achieve anticipated results are interpreted as being either indicators of success or an irrelevancy.

The most basic teaching that supports tekazashi is passed on to potential recruits almost immediately. They are told that all illnesses are physical "cleansings". Any pain or fever is a sign of "toxins" melting, and any discharge is the elimination of toxins. Thus, feeling better and feeling worse are equally regarded as signs of tekazashi "working". Any improvement in health is attributed to tekazashi, and any illness/cleansing that occurs is an indication that the person is becoming more purified (healthier). Many people naturally experience the onset and disappearance of viruses and minor ailments at least occasionally. A person who receives tekazashi regularly can attribute both the onset of any illness and the cure to tekazashi.

According to Tebecis, "What we mistakenly call diseases or illness are actually cleansing reactions that help to restore the soul-spirit to its original purity", and "The cleansing processes are Divine methods for restoring people to health, peace and material welfare".[10] Okada taught that all illness/cleansing results from our spiritual impurity, as do financial problems, accidents, or any other type of misfortune. All types of misfortune are regarded as "cleansings" which erase spiritual impurities. Okada taught that all people have accumulated spiritual impurities, or negative karma, in our present and past lives and that we have also inherited negative karma from our ancestors. Sukyo Mahikari members are taught to be grateful for any misfortune, since it erases karma/impurities and leads to spiritual elevation, and therefore to improved health, harmony, and prosperity.

However, as mentioned above, in other teachings Okada promised that regular practice of tekazashi would lead to spiritual elevation and improved health, harmony, and prosperity. Tekazashi is presented as being the easier method of erasing impurities, but some misfortune is often also to be expected, particularly for people with a heavy karmic load. Okada taught that, with regular tekazashi, big problems would become medium-sized problems, medium problems would become small problems, and small problems would become no problem. Thus, if a member of Sukyo Mahikari experiences severe ill-health or a lot of misfortune despite regular long-term tekazashi, this is interpreted as evidence of particularly heavy karma, and it is assumed that the person karmically deserved something even worse. In addition, it is often assumed that God, having superior wisdom, has specifically arranged for the person to be "cleansed" by severe or long-term misfortune in order to use that person for some sort of special mission as soon as s/he is sufficiently purified.

In the early days of SMBK and Sukyo Mahikari, promotion of tekazashi as a healing mechanism was quite explicit. In "Gotaidanshu" (Interviews with Okada), Okada is quoted as reporting that God told him to "raise your hand and cure people of diseases".[11] In a 1972 interview quoted in "Daiseishu: Great and Holy Master", a Mahikari spokesperson responded with, "Cancer? Oh yes, we cure cancer. Typhus, cholera? Certainly."[12] However, in teachings attributed to Okada in "Sunkyo", published in English translation by Sukyo Mahikari in 1984, Okada claims that God told him "There are two categories of miracles: those which are given according to merit and those which are given for the sake of encouragement". He explains that some miracles result from spiritual elevation, but many are given by God "for the sake of demonstration to others" even though the recipients of such miracles have not yet been of much service to God.[13]

Increasingly, starting in the 1980s in western countries, Sukyo Mahikari began to stress that the purpose of tekazashi is not primarily healing, but spiritual elevation and service to God. Since the earliest days of the organization, the primary initiation course textbook has included a chart showing the various points of the body to which tekazashi should be directed in order to treat particular diseases. In the 2004 edition of this textbook, a statement has been added above this chart stating that "The purpose of the art of True Light [tekazashi] is not to heal illness".[14]

In his 2004 book, on the topic of evolution of the Sukyo Mahikari group, Tebecis writes that "One misconception was that Mahikari was regarded as an organization for healing and other self-benefit". With time, he writes, "the organization has been enabling people to gain a deeper understanding that benefits are not the aim in themselves but a means towards awakening to the power of God".[15] These quotes accurately reflect the message conveyed by Okada's teachings as a whole, but Tebecis fails to acknowledge that such "misconceptions" are created by the primary initiation course promise that members will experience obvious improvements in health, harmony, and prosperity within 5 years. Within 5 years, members are likely to absorb the message that selflessness and service to God are the main virtues. Might this not deflect attention from whether or not the promised benefits materialize? Or, if noticed, would members dare demonstrate shallow understanding and selfishness by questioning the validity of this promise?

Discussions with devoted members indeed indicate that, once a member believes that tekazashi is effective and comes to believe unconditionally that Okada's teachings are true, the focus of a member's daily life moves to trying to live in accordance with the teachings. This means trying to "think spiritually", "tune in with God" and "put God first". Members are taught that if they sincerely try to serve God in everything that they do, God will protect them and provide whatever they need. If, conversely, they focus on their own selfish needs, they will then be "tuning in" with low-level selfish gods and inviting the influence of negative spirits. Members are taught that their innermost attitudes have a profound effect on what happens in their daily lives. They need to be sincerely grateful for everything that occurs (including misfortune). They need to be humble, obedient, cheerful, and burning with enthusiasm to serve God. Any misfortune that occurs can be interpreted as being an admonition from God brought about by incorrect attitudes or incorrect behaviour. (Or, as stated above, the misfortune may have been caused by the person's bad karma…one never really knows.)

The intertwining of the teachings concerning karma, spiritual purification, and tekazashi make it impossible to know if long-term tekazashi has any effect at all. The amount of karma (if karma exists) cannot be measured, the level and rate of spiritual elevation (if that concept is valid) cannot be measured, and the details of the arrangements that God supposedly makes either to purify people or as "demonstration miracles" are not knowable. In short, it is logically possible that a member of Sukyo Mahikari might experience exactly the same level of ill-health and misfortune without tekazashi as with it.

The numerous online articles and comments written by former members generally do not deny that miracles occasionally occur. Some former members remain convinced that a spiritually purifying/healing energy flows from the hands during tekazashi, but they view this as being a universal energy available to anyone, rather than something that requires membership in Sukyo Mahikari and the wearing of the Sukyo Mahikari amulet.[16] Some such people, after leaving Sukyo Mahikari, have chosen to practice some other form of tekazashi, such as pranic healing, Reiki, or a personal less-formalized variation.

Other former members hold the opinion that spiritual energies do not exist. Another invisible and insufficiently well-know realm, the subconscious, may be responsible for the effects of tekazashi.[17] The slight trance induced by the actions of the recipient of tekazashi…the specific posture, closing the eyes, and focusing on an imaginary stream of healing energy entering through the forehead…may facilitate a self-hypnotically induced physical healing. Or, a simple placebo effect may be responsible for tekazashi sometimes being effective.

In "Spontaneous Remission and the Placebo Effect", Stephen Barrett states:

"Many studies suggest that placebos can relieve a broad range of symptoms. In many disorders, one third or more of patients will get relief from a placebo. Temporary relief has been demonstrated, for example, in arthritis, hay fever, headache, cough, high blood pressure, premenstrual tension, peptic ulcer, and even cancer."[18]

This might explain why the "try it and see" approach is partially successful. Perhaps the people for whom tekazashi is effective all belong to this "one third or more of patients". If so, one would expect that all members of Sukyo Mahikari would regularly observe health benefits from practicing tekazashi, even if nothing at all emanates from the hand during tekazashi. Alternatively, given the rather high failure rates suggested above, statistical chance may be sufficient to explain the occurrence of the miracles that are attributed to tekazashi.

For the above reasons, I suggest that it is not possible to prove whether tekazashi achieves miracles or does nothing at all. In practical terms, this impossibility does not appear to hinder belief in Okada's teachings. Tekazashi does not need to be effective in order to "validate" Okada's teachings. All that is needed is the occurrence of some events that appear to be caused by tekazashi, and a body of theory that explains away any failure to achieve anticipated results.



[1] Mahikari Primary Course Reference Textbook (Takayama, Sukyo Mahikari, 2004) p.5

[2] http://members.ozemail.com.au/~skyaxe/mindcontrol1.htm [Accessed November 2007] This article gives an outline of Steve Hassan's mind control model and applies it to Sukyo Mahikari practices and culture.

[3] Corinna Lee, "The Cloister without Walls" (sociology thesis submitted September 1986, Australian National University).

[4] A.K. Tebecis, Mahikari: Thank God for the Answers at Last (Tokyo: L.H. Yoko Shuppan, 1982), and A.K. Tebecis, Is the future in our hands? (Canberra: Sunrise Press, 2004)

[5] Winston Davis, Dojo: Magic and Exorcism in Modern Japan (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1980), p. 201

[6] Lee, p. 37

[7] Lee, p.85

[8] Day 1 of the Primary Kenshu lecture. These lectures are presented orally by different lecturers, but the lecturers are provided with a standard script which they are expected to follow verbatim.

[9] Lee, p. 37

[10] Tebecis, 1982, p.214

[11] Gotaidanshu (Interviews with Okada), published by Sukyo Mahikari, 1985, p. 280-281

[12] Kentaro Shibata, Daiseishu: Great and Holy Master, translated by Sukyo Mahikari Headquarters, (Tokyo: L.H. Yoko Shuppan, 1993) p.194

[13] Okada, Sunkyo; Great Guideposts on the Path of Divine Wisdom, edited by Sukyo Mahikari (Tokyo: L.H. Yoko Shuppan, 1984) p.38

[14] Primary kenshu textbook, 2004, p.56

[15] Tebecis, 2004, p.50-51

[16] Dean and Jean Logan, "Mahikari – Search For The Truth", at http://home.earthlink.net/~delogan/expstory.htm [accessed September 2007]

[17] After Mahikari blog, http://anne987.blogspot.com/2005_12_01_archive.html [accessed January 2008]

[18] Stephen Barrett, "Spontaneous Remission and the Placebo Effect", at http://www.quackwatch.org/04ConsumerEducation/placebo.html [accessed September 2007]

Monday, February 25, 2008

真光の神:「『スの神』と呼べ」 - Call me "Su-God"

To the English reader,

Yoshikazu (Kotama) Okada, the founder of Mahikari, said as follows:

"If we classify the religions of the world into two groups, we can say we have, on the one hand, the monotheistic religions, and on the other, the polytheistic religions. In fact, there is no division here. It is correct to say there is one God, Su God, but there are also many gods who were divided from Him. Thus, the fact is that there are many gods at the same time that there is one God." ---- "Daiseishu", English version, p.113

According to him, the truth is that there is one God (which is Su God) and that there are many gods at the same time. In this way, it sounds as if there were no conflicts between monotheistic religions and the polytheistic religions. Is it a profound truth, or is he delirious?

There are no accurate definitions of these two groups to start with. The way he sees them is simply that monotheistic religions claim one God while polytheistic religions many gods. So simple. . . so primitive . . . that he is able to meddle with the words confidently, creating certain illusions as a result.

He also claims this "one God", Su God, is the Creator of everything on heaven and earth, and that this God is the same as Amaterasu-okami, Brahma Deva, or Kannon, Yahweh or Jehovah, Allah, etc.

You may know Okada's claim that his God told him to call Him Su-God.

Do you know another of his claims that his God also told him to make mankind call Him "Su-God" uniformly from now on? According to Okada, his Su-God dislikes the various names used up until now and He is annoyed by them.

Can you imagine what would happen if Mahikari sent out a notice to religious leaders all over the world, saying that the Creator God has recently given their 'holy' founder of Mahikari a new command to make all the religions call Him Su-God, and asking them to call Creator God "Su-God" from now on?

----Phoenix3000


【岡田光玉曰く「一神即多神」】

真光で「スの神」と呼んでいるのは、宇宙天地万物創造の主神(ぬしがみ)で、万物万霊共通の大親神である、と主張しています。この神は仏教では「聖(正)観音」「梵天」、キリスト教では「主(しゅ)」「天の父」「ヤハエ、エホバの神」、神道では「天照(アマテラス)大神」「天之御中主(アメノミナカヌシ)大神」、回教では「アーラの神」等々と各々呼んでいる(『崇教真光30年史』p24)、つまり、同一であるとしています。

さらに、世界の宗教は一神教・多神教・汎神教という三つの範疇に分類することができる、として、次のように説明しています。

  一神教というのは、この世界は天地創造の唯一絶対神が主宰していらっしゃるという考え方になります。多神教というのは、その絶対神がたくさんの神々に変化してご活動され、神霊界のいくつかの次元にわたってそれぞれにご活躍されているというものです。そして、万象悉く神様の霊質を分与されている、すべてが神様のご意志の顕現であり、物質化したものということからいえば汎神ともいえるわけです。
  けれども、神霊界は、一神で多神で汎神で、それで唯一神が最高神であるというのが実相です。これが崇教真光の教義教理の根本にあり、ここが既成の宗教とはっきり違う点の一つです。
  ......(省略)....
  此の度、神様は天地創造の神様のことを「スの神と呼べ」と救い主様にお示し下さっておられます。  ーー『崇教真光30年史』p24−25

崇教真光のこの説明では、真光は一神教・多神教・汎神教を全部含み、どんな宗教にも合い、諸宗教を統合するかのようで、これが他宗教にはない、真光だけの特徴である、と印象付けようとしています。

ここでの一神教・多神教・汎神教という三つの範疇の説明は崇教真光の説明であって、ごく限定された捉え方です。諸宗教を統合するかのように聞こえますが、実は真光の世界観を説明しているに過ぎません。これをもって、一神教・多神教がわかったとするならば、ひどい勘違いになってしまいます。一神教と多神教の概念は、ここでの崇教真光の記述ほど簡単ではありません。教団の説明を鵜呑みにせず、真光の世界から一歩出たところで調べ、考えるべきでしょう。試しに「一神教と多神教」をネットで検索してみるのもよいでしょう。

例えば、一神教とは、唯一つの神だけを認め、信仰の対象とする宗教、との定義があります。すでに認めている神があって成り立っている宗教においては、その宗教で説く神以外の神は、信仰の対象にはならず、場合によっては邪教として排斥もします。「自分のところの神は、あそこの神と同じ天地創造の神だ、呼び名が違うだけだ」と真光が言い張っても、他宗教にそれで通るでしょうか。しかも真光も、自分のところの神こそ一番大元の神である、としているのです。

岡田光玉(本名:岡田良一)は、モウシェ、イエス、釈尊と、頻繁に引き合いに出しますが、マホメットにはほとんど触れません。〔注1〕 マホメット(ムハンマド)の興したイスラ(ー)ム教(今日では回教とはあまり言わないようです)は、キリスト教に次ぐ、世界三大宗教の一つです。イスラム教では『アッラーのほかに神なし』とし、アッラー(アラー、アラーフ)以外の一切の神を否定するとのことです。そこに真光が、「神霊界の実相は一神で多神で汎神で、それで唯一神が最高神です。この最高神の新しいお告げにより、私達はこの神を『スの神』と呼んでいますが、あなた方がアーラの神と呼んでいる方と同じ神です」と説明したら、どうなるでしょう。

一神教・多神教についての光玉の言葉としては、次のものがあります。

  世界の宗教を分類してみると、一神教と多神教とに分かれますが、ほんとうは一つ、主(ス)神は、一神です。一神から分かれている一神即多神で、一神が、本当なのです。 ーー『大聖主』p142

「なんだかわからないけど、神の世界には奥の奥があるそうだから、真理なのだろう」と感心して聞くか、それとも、「この人は訳の分からないことを分かったように自信を持って言っているが、これ、誤摩化しではないの?」と思って聞くか、分かれ道になるところかもしれません。

一神教と多神教の定義もなく、曖昧な言葉でかき回して、「..一神が本当なのです」と結んでも、つかみどころがなく、読み手の描くイメージに頼っています。光玉の言うことは何が何でも真理であるという先入観に捕われていない人にとっては、戯言のように聞こえても当然でしょう。『嘘にて本当にて嘘』といったような光玉の言い回しの類いです。


【「スの神」と呼べ】

「スの神」という呼び名について、光玉は自信満々に、次のように言っています。

  ...神様の名はまたあとで研究しますけど、ミロクだ、天照主だ、メシアだ、何だというのは神様嫌がっておられます。私には「主(ス)と呼べ」と言っておられます。
 (シュテルナー女史「それは宗教には関係なく・・・」)
  どの宗教も「スと言え」とおっしゃっておられます。今は、火の洗礼期で間に合わないから神様も急いでいらっしゃるのがよくわかるんです。だからわれわれの方では「主(ス)」と申し上げてます。
  主(ス)の神。バイブルでは「主(シュ)」ですけど「主(ス)」が本当なんです。  ーー『御対談集』p188

  神様はまた私に、この一番元の芯の神様を「ス(主)と称名せよ」ともおっしゃっております。現在迄この大元の神様を多くの宗教が、それぞれ色々な名前をつけて呼んでおります。これは地域と時代と民族によって、勝手に、人間のほうからお徳を慕ってご称名申しあげたもののみ名で、おのおの変わったり、異なっているだけで、神様としては、いろいろの名前をつけられてうるさいし、誤解するから、今後の人類にはことごとく「ス(主)と称名させよ」といわれているのである。 ーー『神霊界の実相と神経綸』 真光誌263 (昭和59年8月号)p36

これまでに呼ばれた名を嫌がっている、とか、いろいろの名前を付けられてうるさい、というのも、ちょっと次元が低くて、光玉の神は天地創造神らしくない神です。

それはさておき、「スの神と呼べ」と神が光玉に言ったとのことですが、光玉がそう言った、ということだけが確かなことです。天地創造の神が光玉にそう言ったのか、ということになると、実は何の確証もありません。一人の人間の妄想の中で起こったことかもしれません。結局は作り話、つまり捏造なのかもしれません。昭和34年の『最初の啓示』の話と同じです。

現代に天地創造の神が地上の一人の人間を選んで話しかけたなどということを聞いても、人は普通信じません。〔注2〕 でも信者(組み手)は光玉の言葉を事実であるという前提で信じてしまっています。しかしながら、どこまでも光玉という人間が言ったことであって、天地創造の神が光玉にそう言った、と証明する事実はどこにもありません。

不幸にして真光に関わった、たいていの人は、手かざしが効くから、とか、効くみたいだから、ということで、何かあると思い、光玉の説く真光の世界のことを本当のこととして聞く姿勢が出来てしまい、この『真光の業』が、光玉の教義教理を裏付けているとしてしまいます。しかし、「手かざし」が、必ずしも光玉(真光)の説明するようなものではないことを示す事柄が段々と出て来ています。〔注3〕 つまり、手かざしが効くように思えても、それで光玉の言うことが正しいことにはならない、ということです。

「手をかざせ、光玉と名のれ」と命じられたとする昭和34年の『最初の啓示』からして、光玉の主張には現実世界の彼自身の経歴に関した事実との矛盾が見られます。歴史を辿れば、手かざしが自分を通して初めて万人に許されたとする光玉の主張とは合わない、別の事実が出て来ます。御み霊の中味が空でも、御み霊がなくとも、浮霊・霊動現象が起こります。また、似たような現象は真光とは関係ないところでも見られます。しかし、ごく限られた情報、しかも、歪んだ情報で操作されている真光の世界に引き込まれてしまうと、真光以外のところでも同様の現象がある、『真光の業』と呼ぶものには他の説明も可能である、ということを聞いても受け入れられなくなります。ましてや真光は魔の光である、真光こそが集団霊障である、といった、外の世界から真光を見た場合の批判など、考えてみることもできないでしょう。

さて、光玉によれば、天地創造の神は「スの神」と呼べ、今後の人類にはことごとく「スと称名させよ」と言っているとのことですので、仮に、「この度、天地創造の神より、どの宗教でも自分のことを『スの神』と呼ばせるように、とのお達しが真光の創始者を通してありました。従って、今より人類は天地創造の神様を『スの神』と呼んで下さい」と諸々の宗教の指導者に通知を出したとしてみましょう。どういう反応があると思いますか。

「はい、わかりました」と、世界中で、キリスト教徒が「主(シュ)よ」のかわりに、「スよ」「スノカミよ」と呼ぶようになり、イスラーム教徒が、「アラー」のかわりに、「スノカミ」と呼ぶようになりますか?

まずそんなことはあり得ないでしょう。光玉の『スの神』は随分と現実離れした要求をしていることになります。



〔注1〕マホメット(ムハンマド)のことに触れている箇所を一つ見つけました。

   ..伊勢神宮に参りましても、そこのアラマツリノミヤは重大なお宮で、アラミタマ(荒魂)と申し上げておりますが、こちらがヒ=火の方で、内宮の方にはニギミタマ(和魂)として水の方のみ魂をお分けしてある状態です。
   マホメットはこのことを知っていましたから、アーラの神(陽の神)と表現している。アーラは火の回転、陽の神霊の中でも陽の霊の回転、[チョンの印] を中心にして左回転で陽霊ということで、日本のアラミタマから取ったことは明らかです。  ーー『神向き讃詞 解説』p124

 荒魂と和魂に関して、真光色に染まっていない、伝統的な説明がありました。真光の組み手は、光玉や教団が言っていることの方が絶対だとして無視するか、真光は理屈じゃないからそういうことはどうでもいい、手かざしあるのみ、と、それ以上考えないでしょうが。
      
   荒魂とは神の荒ぶる魂であり、天変地異を引き起こし、伝染病を流行らせ、人心を荒廃させて戦争へと駆り立てるのです。これに対して、和魂とは優美で穏やかな魂を指し、人間に自然の恵みをふんだんに与え、人類社会を平和に導くのです。  ーー「新しい日本の歴史」(ここ:http://blog.so-net.ne.jp/nihonnsi/archive/20080114-0--10

 「マホメットはこのことを知っていた」と光玉は明言していますが、マホメット(570年頃ー632年)と日本の神々との接点はどこにあったというのでしょうか。マホメットの意識していたのはユダヤ教やキリスト教です。それに『アラー』の語源も、アラビア語から来ているとのことで、日本のアラミタマから取ったという説はこじつけでしょう。それを光玉は自信を持って「日本のアラミタマから取ったことは明らかです」と宣言しています。

 また、『崇教真光30年史』には、下記の記述があります。

    回教ではマホメットがホ(炎)を名に表現し、アーラ(天陽)の神と称名したのも「神は光なりき」を表しております。 ーー『崇教真光30年史』p26

 マホメットはモハメッドとも表され、最近は標準アラビア語に近い発音ムハンマドで表されるようになったということです。が、モハメッドやムハンマドと表された場合、『ホ』が現れなくなります。「マホメットがホ(炎)を名に表現した」という崇教真光の言霊の説明(光玉がどこかでそう説いていたのでしょうが)は成立しなくなります。また、アラーというのも、アラビア語で、神、賛美といった意味があるようですが、「光」という意味はありませんでした。ご自分でも調べてみるとよいでしょう。

〔注2〕宗教界の権威者達による「真の道」の天杖でも光玉の『み魂』が裏付けられたという、光玉(真光)の主張をそのまま事実として信じている組み手がそのことを説明した書き込みがありました。この天杖という神伺いの件に関しても、明らかな嘘が混じっていて、この『神託』が客観的な裏付けになるとはとても言えません。現実の事実を聞いても、信者は「批判派は知らないからだ」と言ってはねつけ、信者の頭の中では、真光の主張の方が事実になってしまっている見本です。この書き込みに対し、次の書き込みがありました。

    神の神示というけど、事実だと証明できるか。たとえば俺が神の神示があったと言ってもお前は信じないだろう。
    俺も光玉の言うことは精神異常者の戯言としか言いようがない。当然お前もだ。   ーー真光関係者集合(50)-989

〔注3〕大本教から発展した世界救世教の浄霊が真光以前からありましたし、似たようなものとして、霊気、気功、ハンドヒーリング等があります。また、手かざしの効果としては、暗示・催眠効果、プラシーボ効果等、が考えられます。次の書き込みも参考になるでしょう。
 
    最近、手かざしとは「催眠効果によるインチキ霊動」と「偶然の治療をあたかも手かざしの効果であるかのごとく思い込ませる手口」が明白になりました。 ーー真光関係者集合(50)-616
     
    催眠誘導的なものじゃないかって意見もあるね。
    なんにしても、霊動が出るから真光が正しいってことにはならん・・・ 
    霊動?だから何?でいいんじゃなかろうか。  ーー真光関係者集合(50)-752


ーー火の鳥Phoenix3000