Hōnō

Beliefs & Concepts

Hōnōhōnō / 奉納

The act of presenting offerings — goods, money, or performances — to the gods or Buddha.

Hōnō encompasses all offerings presented to the divine: lanterns, torii gates, fences, sake, rice, and fruit, as well as performing arts like kagura, sumō, and noh. Each offering expresses gratitude, devotion, or supplication through a tangible form.

Sumō wrestling originated as hōnō-zumō (offering matches), and the ring rituals still carry sacred significance — the yokozuna's ring-entering ceremony is a divine offering, and salt is scattered to purify the dohyō. The thousands of vermilion torii at Fushimi Inari Taisha are all hōnō — each one donated by a worshipper praying for "tōri" (passage/success), with the gates accumulating over centuries into the breathtaking tunnel seen today.