RT Article T1 What does it mean to be a Christian nationalist in Meiji Japan?: Religion, nationalism and the state JF International journal for the study of the Christian church VO 23 IS 4 SP 309 OP 327 A1 Ichijō, Atsuko 1967- LA English PB Routledge YR 2023 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1881262642 AB The article aims to better understand Christian nationalism by investigating the cases of Uchimura Kanzō and Nitobe Inazō, two well-known Christians of Meiji Japan. In Meiji Japan, Christianity was a recently re-introduced and foreign faith which was not aligned with the Japanese way of life. However, both Uchimura and Nitobe converted to Christianity in their youth and dedicated their life to the development of Japan. The article investigates what made this possible. It pays particular attention to the relationship between politics and religion and the Meiji government’s attempts to adopt the western view of the relationship to the nascent Japanese state. It argues that the invention of state Shintō as a non-religion but an indispensable part of the Japanese polity by the Meiji government created space where Christian faith and Japanese nationalism could co-exist, the space which was increasingly squeezed as Meiji turned to Taishō and then to Shōwa. K1 Meiji Japan K1 Nitobe Inazō K1 Shintō K1 Uchimura Kanzō K1 Civil Religion K1 Separation of church and state DO 10.1080/1474225X.2023.2260284