Begin your journey at Kasuga Taisha Shrine, where you’ll encounter a way of thinking very different from the idea that gods reside inside buildings. The sacred presence is not confined to the shrine hall, but embodied in Mount Mikasa, the forested mountain rising behind it.
Deer, revered for over 1,300 years as messengers of the gods, roam freely through the grounds. The sound of gravel beneath your feet and the quiet breath of the forest surround you. Through these elements, experience Shinto not as abstract knowledge, but as a physical sensation—a worldview that honors nature itself and celebrates the world of the living.
In contrast, the tour then leads to Tōdai-ji Temple, where you confront overwhelming material scale and presence. See the Great Buddha, constructed at a cost equivalent to more than ¥460 billion today.
Admire a colossal structure created as a national prayer system, intended to protect the country from epidemics, famine, and instability. See the Great South Gate’s guardian statues, built in just 69 days using extraordinary engineering skill.
Notice bullet marks left on wooden pillars during the Warring States period. Unlike the refined elegance often associated with Kyoto, Tōdai-ji reveals a raw and powerful history—where state power, public anxiety, devotion, and survival are laid bare.
The tour concludes with a Zen Calligraphy (sutra copying) experience at Tōdai-ji. After facing the outward-directed prayer embodied by the Great Buddha, your attention turns inward. Let go of the need to intellectually understand the text, focusing solely on the physical act of tracing each character.
Experience Buddhism’s core concept of “emptiness (kū)” not through thought, but through the body. This is not about belief or religious instruction, but about encountering Buddhism as lived experience—quiet, grounded, and deeply personal.