The Way of the Kami with Rev. Ann Evans & Rev. Taishi Kato
QUICK SUMMARY
Shinto has no dogma, no scripture, and no conversion, so what is it? In this episode, we sit down with two Shinto priests. Rev. Ann Evans, one of the few Shinto priests in North America and a certified forest therapy guide, describes the moment a gravel walkway lined with towering cedars felt like home, chants a purification prayer for us, and explains why forest bathing is her “side door to Shinto.” Then Rev. Taishi Kato, heir to a 1,000-year-old shrine in Japan, reveals why the most important practice of a Shinto priest is sweeping leaves.
IN THIS EPISODE, WE EXPLORE
* [00:00] Cold open: “It was an incredibly spiritual experience for me, and it just was home”
* [00:30] Dave and Fr. John introduce the Shinto episode, the traditional religion of Japan, with two priests as guests
* [01:30] Meet Rev. Ann Evans: Shinto priest, ANFT-certified forest therapy guide, and author of Shinto Norito: A Book of Prayers
* [03:00] Ann’s story: a Presbyterian upbringing in Pasadena, a Japanese exchange student, and the shrine ceremonies that moved her before she understood them
* [05:00] The walk that changed everything: approaching Tsubaki Grand Shrine through towering cedars — “it just was home”
* [06:30] Shinto and her Christian heritage: from “is this true?” to “it just is”, no dogma, no scripture, no conversion
* [09:00] What is Shinto? The way of the kami, and why humans are innately pure and innately bright
* [11:30] Misogi: cold-water purification in waterfalls, rivers, and the ocean, and why cold condenses spiritual energy
* [14:00] Translating kami for the West: angels, saints, and loosening up our language
* [16:00] Fr. John’s observation: misogi sounds baptismal, ritual, archetypal, and what incense and cold water share
* [19:30] Life at the shrine: daily offerings of rice, water, sake, and salt; morning prayer; and ceremonies from baby blessings to business success
* [22:00] Ann chants the Harai no kotoba, the prayer of purification, in Japanese, then translates it
* [24:30] Why prayers stay in Japanese: kotodama, the belief that the sound of a word carries a soul
* [26:30] No evangelists here: from ancient Ko-Shinto in the forests to Shrine Shinto, and Rev. Yukitaka Yamamoto’s vision of bringing Shinto to America in 1987
* [30:30] Miyazaki, Totoro, and the Kodama: what Ghibli films get right, and why Shinto must be experienced before it’s understood
* [32:30] The torii gate: crossing from the secular to the sacred, plus the shimenawa rope and zigzag shide
* [33:30] Heaven as “the high plain”: the unseen world, 50 days of prayer for the departed, and gratitude for ancestors who can still see us
* [36:00] Forest bathing (shinrin-yoku) explained: “the forest is the therapist, and the guide opens the door”
* [41:00] Why forest bathing isn’t a hike: covering an eighth of a mile in three hours, and what changes when you let yourself be led
* [43:00] Chapters of a spiritual life: how Ann’s practice has evolved from young children to young grandchildren
* [45:30] Listening without agenda: holding a space people are welcome to step into or not
* [46:30] Where to find Ann: Matsuri Foundation of Canada, and the true meaning of “matsuri”, two hands offering a branch in gratitude
* [48:30] Meet Rev. Taishi Kato: eldest son of a family that has served their 1,000-year-old shrine for generations
* [50:30] Why 70–80% of Japanese people visit a shrine on New Year’s Day
* [51:30] The most important practice of a Shinto priest: cleaning the shrine grounds
* [53:00] Why it would be easier to cut down the 400-year-old trees and why sweeping their leaves is the point
* [54:00] Dave’s closing reflection: there are no shortcuts in the spiritual journey, and what our traditions prepare us for
* [55:00] Next episode preview: Elizabeth Schrader Polczer on the Gospel of John and Mary Magdalene
MEMORABLE QUOTES
“I was standing on this long gravel walkway with these huge towering cedar trees all around me, and it was an incredibly spiritual experience for me, and it just was home.” — Rev. Ann Evans
“In Shinto, we don’t become Shinto. You don’t get converted to Shinto. It’s like Shinto just exists.” — Rev. Ann Evans
“The forest is the therapist, and the guide opens the door.” — Rev. Ann Evans
“The most important practice for a Shinto priest is to keep cleaning the grounds.” — Rev. Taishi Kato
ABOUT ANN EVANS
Ann Evans is a Shinto priest and ANFT-certified forest therapy guide and an author and spiritual teacher whose work explores the relationship between humans, spirituality, and nature. She is the founder and director of the Matsuri Foundation of Canada, which operates Shinmei Spiritual Centre in British Columbia, a branch shrine of Tsubaki Grand Shrine in Mie Prefecture, Japan, one of the most important shrines in the Shinto tradition, with a history spanning more than 2,000 years. Ann has been instrumental in establishing one of the few Shinto shrines in North America and is the author of Shinto Norito: A Book of Prayers, an English-language collection introducing readers to Shinto prayer and ritual practice.
Connect with Ann: matsuri.ca
ABOUT REV. TAISHI KATO
Taishi Kato is a Shinto priest at Hattori Tenjingu Shrine in Japan, born the eldest son of a multi-generational family serving their 1,000-year-old shrine. He holds a Master of Arts in Religions of Asia and Africa from SOAS, University of London, and is committed to introducing Shinto to people around the world. He represented Shinto at the Religions for Peace 10th World Assembly, represented Japanese religious leaders at the G20 Religion Summit in Indonesia in 2022, co-produced an illustrated book of “Shinto moments” with two American collaborators, and in 2023 published The COVID Pandemic and the World’s Religions.
RESOURCES MENTIONED
* Matsuri Foundation of Canada / Shinmei Spiritual Centre: matsuri.ca
* Shinto Norito: A Book of Prayers by Ann Llewellyn Evans
* Tsubaki Grand Shrine, Mie Prefecture, Japan — and Tsubaki Grand Shrine of America, founded in Stockton, California in 1987
* Association of Nature and Forest Therapy (ANFT) — Ann’s forest therapy certification
* Hattori Tenjingu Shrine — where Rev. Taishi Kato serves
* Studio Ghibli films mentioned: My Neighbor Totoro, Spirited Away, Princess Mononoke
* Writers referenced: Carl Jung and Joseph Campbell on ritual and archetype
* Previous episode: Nikky Singh on Sikhism
* Next episode: Elizabeth Schrader Polczer on the Gospel of John and Mary Magdalene
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