Kurozumikyō

Kurozumikyō
黒住教
Kurozumikyō headquarters on Mount Shinto in Okayama
TypeShinto-based
ClassificationSect Shinto
ScriptureKurozumikyō Kyōsho (黒住教教書)
TheologyHenotheism
Chief Patriarch (教主)Kurozumi Munemichi (黒住宗道)
LanguageJapanese
HeadquartersMount Shinto, Okayama
FounderKurozumi Munetada (黒住宗忠)
OriginDecember 1814
Okayama
Official websitewww.kurozumikyo.com

Kurozumikyō (黒住教, lit.'the Teachings of Kurozumi') is a Shinto-based Japanese new religion founded in the 19th century. In 1814, the religion's founder, Munetada Kurozumi (黒住宗忠), claimed to have a divine union with Amaterasu, goddess of the sun and chief kami in the Shinto pantheon. The religion is characterized by its daily worship of the sun at sunrise, called nippai (日拝). Kurozumikyō only worships the sun as its primary deity, a similarity also found in the Ancient Egyptian religion Atenism. Kurozumikyō believes that all kami (spirits) are the manifestations of a single supreme deity, namely Amaterasu.