PL Kyodan | |
---|---|
パーフェクト リバティー教団 | |
Type | Japanese new religion |
Patriarch | Takahito Miki (御木徳一) |
Headquarters | Tondabayashi, Osaka Prefecture, Japan |
Founder | Tokuharu Miki |
Origin | 1924 |
Hospitals | PL Hospital (PL病院) |
Secondary schools | PL Gakuen Junior & Senior High School (PL学園中学校・高等学校) |
Other name(s) | Church of Perfect Liberty |
Official website | www |
PL Kyodan (short for "Perfect Liberty Kyodan"), or the Church of Perfect Liberty (パーフェクト リバティー教団, Pāfekuto Ribatii Kyōdan), is a Japanese shinshūkyō (new religious movement) founded in 1924 by Tokuharu Miki (御木徳一; 1871–1938), who was a priest in the Ōbaku sect of Zen Buddhism.[1] The stated aim of the Church of Perfect Liberty is to bring about world peace.[2] It is headquartered in Tondabayashi, Osaka Prefecture, Japan.
Teachings
PL teaches that "Life is Art" and that humans are born to express their own unique individuality in everything they do, "creating true art".[2] To assist them in improving their lives and overcoming hardships, church members are taught why they have these problems and are guided in solving them by the Patriarch (known as oshieoya-sama, 'teacher-parent') and church ministers.[2]
Precepts
PL does not have a holy book, but it has 21 PL Precepts (PL処世訓21ヵ条) which were announced by Tokuchika Miki on September 29, 1947. They became the basic teachings of the Church.[1]
- Life is art (人生は芸術である)
- To live is to express one's self (人の一生は自己表現である, hito no isshō wa jiko hyōgen de aru)
- God appears through one's self (自己は神の表現である, jiko wa kami no hyōgen de aru)
- Being annoyed limits your expression (表現せざれば悩がある)
- One's self is lost by being emotional (感情に走れば自己を失う)
- Efface your self conceptions (自我無きところに汝がある)
- Everything exists in relativity (一切は相対と在る)
- Live as the sun (日の如く明かに生きよ)
- Human beings are all equal (人は平等である)
- Love yourself and others (自他を祝福せよ)
- Always be with god (一切を神に依れ)
- Everything has a way according to its name (名に因って道がある, na ni yotte michi ga aru)
- There is a way for men and a way for women (男性には男性の,女性には女性の道がある)
- World peace is everything (世界平和の為の一切である)
- All is a mirror (一切は鏡である)
- All things progress and develop (一切は進歩発展する)
- Grasp what is most essential (中心を把握せよ, chūshin o haaku seyo)
- Each moment is a turning point (常に善悪の岐路に立つ)
- Begin once you perceive (悟る即立つ)
- Live maintaining equilibrium between mind and matter (物心両全の境に生きよ)
- Live in perfect liberty (真の自由に生きよ, shin no jiyū ni ikiyo)
Membership
The church claims to have more than one million followers worldwide and 500 churches located in ten countries.[5]
Most of the parishes are located in Japan, but due to the active missionary work in the 1960s PL was established in South America and the United States as well. In the 21st century it also has a presence in Canada, Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, and Peru. The Oceanian headquarters was founded in the 1990s in Brisbane, Australia. Small communities exist in Europe as well, especially in France, Portugal, and Hungary.
1970 saw the construction of the 600-foot-tall (180 m) PL Peace Tower, a monument to all the people who have died in war, from the beginning of time.[1]
Organization
PL's spiritual leader, the Patriarch, is called Oshieoya-sama ('Father of the Teachings'). The third and current Patriarch of the church is Takahito Miki.[1] Miki is also the vice president of Shinshuren, the Federation of New Religious Organizations of Japan.[6]
The second Patriarch, Tokuchika Miki, visited the Holy See three times, and met two popes to improve inter-religious cooperation.[1]
References
- ^ a b c d e Church of Perfect Liberty (July 11, 1996). "PL History". Archived from the original on November 4, 2007. Retrieved 2007-11-02.
- ^ a b c "What is PL?". Canada: Church of Perfect Liberty. 2010. Archived from the original on 11 April 2017. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
- ^ Church of Perfect Liberty Canada (2010). "Teachings". Archived from the original on 5 July 2016. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
- ^ 沼田健哉. "パーフェクトリバティー教団研究序説" (PDF) (in Japanese). p. 197. Retrieved 2025-01-31.
- ^ Church of Perfect Liberty (September 27, 2007). "PL Home Page". Archived from the original on November 3, 2007. Retrieved 2007-11-02.
- ^ Rissho Kosei-kai (December 2004). "RK World News Archives 2004". Archived from the original on 2007-11-16. Retrieved 2007-12-06.