Goshintai

Beliefs & Concepts

Goshintaigoshintai / 御神体

The sacred physical object in which a deity resides — a mirror, sword, jewel, mountain, or rock.

The goshintai is the physical vessel in which a deity dwells — the most sacred object within a shrine. Common forms include mirrors, swords, and jewels (magatama), though mountains, rocks, waterfalls, and trees also serve as goshintai. It is kept in the innermost chamber of the honden, rarely seen even by priests.

The most famous goshintai are the Three Imperial Regalia: the Yata Mirror (Ise Grand Shrine), the Kusanagi Sword (Atsuta Shrine), and the Yasakani Jewel (Imperial Palace). Shrines where mountains serve as the goshintai — such as Ōmiwa Shrine (Mt. Miwa), Fuji Sengen Shrine (Mt. Fuji), and Afuri Shrine (Mt. Ōyama) — preserve the most ancient form of Japanese worship, venerating nature itself as divine.