Abstract :
The purpose of this study was to conduct a descriptive analysis of multiple
dimensions of religious belief and practice among older people in Japan with data
from a nationwide sample. Six dimensions were evaluated: religious affiliation,
involvement in formal religious organisations, private religious practices, the
functions of prayer, belief in punishment by supernatural forces, and beliefs about
the afterlife. In addition to describing these dimensions for the sample as a whole,
tests were performed to see if they varied by age, sex, marital status, education
and for those living in rural or urban areas. The findings suggest that even though
older people in Japan are not highly involved in formal religious institutions, they
engage frequently in private religious practices, and that while many older people
in Japan do not endorse some religious beliefs (e.g. about the quality of the afterlife),
there is strong adherence to others (e.g. beliefs about punishment by supernatural
forces). It was found that older women are more deeply involved in
religion than older men, and that levels of religious involvement appear to be
higher in rural than in urban areas. Less pronounced differences were found with
respect to age, but compared to the ‘young-old’, the ‘ oldest-old ’ aged 75 or more
years were more deeply involved in those aspects of religion that take place
outside formal institutions
Keywords :
TARO FUKAYA , religion , Beliefs , religious observances , older adults , Japan