

Everlasting Life and Everlasting Death in Japan
This is a little something about my church back home that I wrote up for a friend who has a missions prayer group.
JAPAN
In a country of about 127 million people, less than 1% are Christian, and that 1% includes pretty much anyone and everyone who claims to be Christian, so the real number of true believers is far lower. For some basic facts and figures about the country, you can take a look at the CIA World Factbook about Japan.
In addition to having so few Christians, there are few missionaries. As far as we know, after living and ministering in Tokyo for over 25 years, the Mitaka Evangelical Church is the only postmillennial, paedobaptist, paedocommunionist church in the entire country!
Some mission boards are pulling missionaries out from Japan because it is one of the most expensive countries in the world to live in (for example, it costs about one million US dollars to buy a piece of land 1/10 or 1/12 of an acre) and Japanese people are not receptive to the Gospel. It is more economical to send missionaries to countries where they can support an entire missionary family for less than a tenth or twentieth of what it would cost to support them in Tokyo.
Most Japanese people do not consider themselves religious at all, but they are superstitious and practice a philosophically impossible syncretism combining Buddhism (ancestor worship, via China via India) and Shintoism (emperor worship and Japanese racism). One of the weird results of this religious combo is that many see no problem believing in BOTH reincarnation AND in heaven and hell. For more info, here is a tidy little article about religion in Japan with concise explanations about Shintoism and the Japanese flavour of Buddhism. There is a short section about Christianity in Japan that’s pretty good, too.
Setting aside religious philosophies, to put it simply, though, ancestor worship is the religion of Japan. In many families, if you quit worshiping your ancestors, you cannot be a member of the family.
This, of course, creates all kinds of problems for Japanese Christians. A few families in our church have been disowned for refusing to worship dead parents and relatives at funerals and memorial services (which occur every so many days after death, and then regularly every few years for 50 years after death) and in the shrines set up for the dead in every home.
There is also a yearly festival for the dead, one of the major consecutive holidays of the year, so as you can see, refusing to worship the dead causes family friction all year ’round.
Historically, one of the main problems in the Japanese church for the last few centuries is compromise with ancestor worship and emperor worship (esp. during WW2).
MITAKA EVANGELICAL CHURCH
The Mitaka (mee-TAH-kuh) Evangelical Church started a little over 25 years ago. Due to prohibitively high land prices, it is still meeting in my grandmother’s home where it started. The church now has about 125 members, half of whom are children high school age or younger. Most of the members are younger couples with young children. The average age of our church is just 22 years old.
Although there is no persecution in Japan, it is definitely a pagan country and there are various difficulties for those who are living there as Christians. Specifically, the biggest problems would be ancestor worship (see above) and education, which are related.
Public schools are beginning to push emperor worship and private schools are impossibly expensive, especially since most of the church families have numerous children, so with a very few exceptions, all the church children are taught at home.
There’s some info about our church here.
PRAYER REQUESTS
- Pray that God will send more long-term missionaries to Japan, especially to Tokyo, where over 10% of the population is located and where people are most receptive to the Gospel.
- Pray that God will provide us with land and a building so that we can expand the ministry. The house is packed full beyond capacity (the foundations are starting to tilt, even) and we are in sore need of a place to gather during the week for classes for adults and children. Here is some info on how you can help us by letting us help you.
“Everlasting Life and Everlasting Death in Japan” has been splattered on 4 times.
Hi Emeth. Interesting about Japan. I would love to visit the Mitaka Evangelical Church in Japan. The church seems very interesting. (If you haven’t noticed, I have started to use a hotmail address)
Hi Emeth.
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Hey Emeth, I’ve been reading some of your recent entries and laughing. Fifty four billion months of pregnancy! WOW! Anyways, I hope you’ve been feeling better since you wrote this.
Also, I’ve just started teaching myself Japanese. (Nobody around here speaks it.) Any helpful suggestions?
Love,
Claire
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The Dane | 10:26 AM, Wednesday, November 29, 2006
That’s pretty wild. Out of curiosity, how many amillennial, paedobaptist, think-paedocommunion-is-iffy-at-best churches are there in Japan?
More importantly, I guess, how many honest Christian churches do you think there are (forgetting eschatalogical and sacramental concerns and focusing more on essential Christianity, like the sufficiency of Scripture, the deity of Christ, and the efficacy of the gospel)? I have a friend who’s planning to go to Japan as a missionary in the next few years.