Friday, April 15, 2016

Roadblocks to the Gospel: Foreigner

"Gaijin! Gaijin!" Unless you are ethically Asian while in Japan you will run into at least one kid that will yell "gaijin" at the top of their lungs while pointing at you. Even though adults don't say that, you know they are thinking it. When you walk though the train station many heads will suddenly turn towards you, and every eye is glued on you. You feel like a mix between a superstar and a freak show.

"Gaijin" is Japanese for foreigner literally meaning, "outside person." While there is technically a more polite version (Gaikokujin lit. "outside-country person"), it is shortened to gaijin. It is not meant to be rude, although some people view it as rude, but is meat to be non-formal. In Japanese there are several levels of politeness and different levels uses different conjugations etc. Whereas English does not have any levels for politeness because of this, Japan often sees English, and English-speaking people, as people who don't care about politeness.

While in Japan, unless you are ethically Japanese, you will always be viewed as an outsider. This is not a racist thing, but rather a cultural thing. America has been called the land of immigrants. Even someone who is Native American knows people whose ancestors immigrated to America. It is not unusual to walk down the street and see people who are ethically from Europe, Asia, Africa, and South America. The way we realized that someone is not American is not by their skin/hair/eye color or by their religion, but by if they have an accent.

Now consider Japan.

Almost everyone in Japan is a Native Japanese person. Only 1.22% of the population is not Japanese, and many in Japan are from China and Korea. For thousands of years,  no take-over of Japan has been successful. The country was was rather isolated because it was an island. When Europeans cam over to trade, many ports would not accept them or imposed harsh trade sanctions. When missionaries came over, many were killed--crucified and left on display. Many Japanese believers were also killed.

Being Japanese is a source of pride and history. Many can trace their family lines back many generations--all Japanese.

No matter how many Japanese customs you follow, or how good your Japanese is, or how dark your hair or eyes are--you will never be Japanese. You will always be considered an outsider.

But that does not mean you are not accepted. You can be accepted in your community, gain lifelong friends, and meet people who will judge you on your character rather than your skin color.

An Opportunity too Great to Miss

But being foreign give us an incredible opportunity! 

Let me explain. 
Because we are not Japanese, we can question the way Japan works. 
We can believe in Christianity and (generally) not suffer the social consequences. 
We can not follow all the Japanese customs and not be considered rude. 
We can ask questions about Shintoism and Buddhism and compare them to Christianity. 
I think you get the point. 

But perhaps the best opportunity comes from the ability to speak English. Right or wrong, it is what it is. Many people will seek out foreigners simply to learn about a different culture and practice/learn English. 

This is an opportunity far too great to miss. 

People are seeking us out, why would we waste such an opportunity? Many will agree to read the Bible because it is an important text in English. Also, the Bible is one of the easily accessible text that will have English and Japanese side-by-side. Japan is an unreached country, meaning most people have NO ACCESS to the gospel. They have never heard about the gospel, and many couldn't find a Christian if they tried. 

Even if they don't accept the gospel, having access and knowing what the gospel is so much better. As Christians, we can never force someone to believe the gospel.  All we can do is present what we know, and pray that God would touch their heart. 

Never stop praying!

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Roadblocks to the Gospel: Harmony



Many who go to Japan, especially during sakura season, say that Japan is peaceful. Peace is something that is promoted in Christianity. Romans 12:8 reads, "If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone."


Image result for sakura flowers
Sakura flowers
There are several cultural things that fit into the Japanese ideal of harmony that do not follow the Bible. I will try to stay away from semantics,  but understanding the difference between Christian's harmony and Japan's harmony is key. 

Don't Rock the Boat!

We have all heard the phrase, "Don't Rock the Boat," but have you ever stopped and considered what that really means? 
The phrase means, "don't cause an argument just for the sake of the argument." Basically if you are in a group project and everyone but you agrees to do it one way, you should just go with the rest of the class. 
In Japan this phrase is taken to the extreme. Unless you are the boss or leader of the group, you are never to go against the flow. If the culture demands it, you follow. Often this is a good thing, like leaving the handicapped seats on the trains unoccupied, but is really a nice form of peer pressure. It also can have very negative affects. 
In Japan, many companies have "drinking parties." While attendance is mandatory, it is very strongly encouraged (as in you may loose your standing in the company or be fired if you don't go). At these parties you are encouraged to drink as much as the rest of the people. They have to drink how much the boss drinks. This can lead to an endless cycle of alcohol abuse.  

In Christianity, we are told to live at peace with those around us. But we are to be uncompromising on moral issues. We live at peace in the world, but we do not live as the world. Many people in Japan don't understand why we would abject to certain activities because by objecting to them we might inconvenience someone else. We rock the boat--and will not yield to doing what we believe is wrong for the sake social convince.

But that's the way it has always been done! 

In Japan, there is only one way to do anything--the Japanese way. In America we have people from all over the world that have live in America for many years. "There's more than one way to skin a cat." In my classes at ESU I know people from China, Japan, India, South Korea, Brazil, Bolivia, and various countries in Europe. Japan does not have this multicultural perspective. Almost everyone is, well, Japanese.  
Japan has been a strong nations for thousands of years. Many practices in Japan have been practiced for as long as the country has existed. In comparison, the United States is a new country with not unique cultural practice that are uniquely American. 
In the same way, Shintoism and Buddhism have been the religions in Japan for thousands of years. Christianity seems like some kind of new religion from the West that has nothing to do with them. You are either Shinto or Buddhist or Shinto-Buddhist because it as been that way for thousands of years and Japan has been peaceful (at times) under those religions. 

Honor your Family

Matthew 10: 34-39 "Not Peace, But a Sword"
Do not think that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I have not come to bring peace, but a sword. For I have come to set a man against his father, and a daughter against her mother, and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law. And a person's enemies will be those of his own household. Whoever loves his father or mother more than me is not worthy of me, and whoever loves his son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me. And whoever does not take his cross and follow me is not worthy of me. Whoever finds his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life for my sake will find it. 

To become a Christian in Japan, it often means you will lose your family. Many lose their friends as well. This is a sad truth. Japan has the freedom of religion, but Christianity is not accepted among many people in Japan. 
Becoming a Christian (there) is like saying your family doesn't matter to you. It is seen as rejecting those around you, both family and friends, and rejecting your culture and heritage (Japan), for some religion in the West. It is seen as a betrayal to what Japan holds dear. 

Sunday, April 10, 2016

Not Ashamed to be Alive

For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation. Romans 1:16

Be not conformed to this world. Romans 12:2

As missionaries, we are the ones who don't conform to this world. People can pass off as Christians and still be conformed to this world, but missionaries can't. Who moves around the world, endures hardships, learns a new language and culture, while leaving theirs behind?

...Stuff is no match for "the power of God."
Lost people have always be cold to the Gospel. To use the terminology in Ephesians 2, they are DEAD to the gospel. We expect corpses to be cold, but not the living. That is why Christians get rebuked for lukewarmness, not the lost (Revelation 3: 15-17)....

Never before have I understood this. Now I know that Christians don't have the choice to be cold (to the gospel). If we are alive, why are we still without a pulse? Now I understand your spiritual health can have setbacks,  but it just doesn't stop. For non-Christians, they were never alive. How can you expect someone to act alive if they have not been raised to life? The dead cannot raise the dead. Nor can those who are alive. Only the one who is the source of life can raise the dead. It is not on my own power that I can be a missionary, but God's power alone.

...We tend to look at the people and say, "This gal would make a great Christian." or "That people group will never turn to Christ." That is a Christ-less way to look at the world. The first statement assumes some natural merit in the sinner. The second denies the savior's power.... 

What we should really say is that everyone would make an amazing Christian. Oftentimes the people we think would be farthest from the Gospel are the ones hearing God's knocking.

Our job is simply to proclaim the faith, faithfully and expectantly. Yes, some will reject the Truth, others will delay, but some will believe (Acts 17:32-34). 
No Satanic effort to halt the advance of the Gospel can be ultimately successful, but perhaps the Devil's best strategy to date is this global cooling of the Christian church through our own materialism and defeatist attitudes. Have the people around us become cold to the gospel? Perhaps the better question is this: Have we? 

The italicized portions of this text were taken from Gospel Meditations for Missions.

Friday, April 8, 2016

Hey! Listen!

"God, surprise me!"

By praying this who knows what will happen? Here is what we do know: God can/will do much more than we can hope or imagine. We also know that God is faithful. 

Give yourself away

Jesus literally gave up everything for me. How could I not do the same? But I am selfish and want things for myself. It should not be how can I get ahead, but how can I serve others.

Obey God

The only way I can find true fulfillment is by doing what God has planned for my life. The only way to do that is to obey God. "She has real lasting fulfillment in her heart, finding the joy that only comes when we say no to ourselves and yes to God." (Brown Like Coffee pg. 126)

Seek God

I don't know all that God is capable of. He can save the most evil hear, When God says to witness to someone--obey. Would you deny them access to the Gospel?!? God will always who up, I just have to seek him. "I don't even believe in God, but God was in that room. What happened?!" (Brown Like Coffee pg. 127)

How can I impact eternity? 

"She is leaving behind a wake of impact that will last into eternity." (Brown Like Coffee pg. 128) This goes back to the question: "What is my calling?" And, "What does God want me to do right now?" 

Surrender

The only way that God can use me is if I surrender and obey him with my whole self. Not, "Do I have the strength?" But, "Will I obey?" 

Pray for opportunities 

Again, God can/will do so much more than we can hope or imagine. If we pray for opportunities to share the gospel we will get them. The real question is will I have the courage to share my faith/the truth?  The second coming/death is much too close to not pray for opportunities!

Make disciples of all Nations

This is God's command  in Matthew 28:18-20. As an aspiring missionary, this is a verse that I hold close to my heart, but I often forget the ALL nations part. Yes, "all nations" includes Japan, but it also includes ALL NATIONS. I can't just be passionate about Japan! I have to be passionate for the Gospel to reach ALL nations and EVERY person in the world. 

God's dreams become my dreams

What are my dreams right now? Honestly, to watch Netflix for the next week uninterrupted. Now, I don't claim to be God, but I can say with confidence that Netflix is not God's dream. I know that it is not God's calling for my life. Anytime my dream is not to tell the Lost about Jesus and grow deeper in my relationships with Christ, we have a problem. A big problem called SIN and IDOLATRY.

True sorrow for those who do not believe the Gospel

The world is broken and lost and we have the answer! Those who do not believe the Gospel will be in Hell forever. Let me say that again. They will be in HELL FOREVER. How can your heart not break? We are Hope to a Hopeless world. Weep and cry for the Lost!

Pour out my Life

After all it is not mine. I was bought at a price. He poured out His life for me. How could I not do the same? 

Culture: Food

So far I have had several interesting foods. I have liked most of them, but it has been quite the experience.

The first place we went to was a conveyor belt sushi place. Yes, you heard me, a place that serves sushi in a conveyor belt. It takes a whole new meaning to food being delivered directly to you. You are sat down at a table and at one side of the table a conveyor belt has sushi going around to your table and other tables.
 But let's say that you don't see your favorite sushi or want to order something like soba (Japanese noodles), then what do you do? Well, they have that covered! At each table is a touchscreen menu that allows you to order sushi, soba, and drinks. They even had a menu in English (although "first bonito concrete floor" does not seem like a good translation).
You are seated at your table and then the free-for-all begins.

I could go on and on about all the new an interesting foods in Japan, but this one takes the cake.


Saturday, July 4, 2015

Tokyo Team

Airport
After Peter’s flight left we came to our nearly empty terminal. Sitting across from us was a couple going to Brazil. They struck up a conversation with us and asked where we were going and what we would be doing there. We told them that we were going to Japan in a Trek 7 trip. Although we didn’t know a lot of the details at the time, we told them that we would be doing different things there including teaching English. They were excited and told us that they were Christians and that several people they knew were Christians.
The woman then asked if we were “praying folk,” to which we excitedly said “yes!” She pulled out her phone and tuned on the lock screen. “It’s my son.” On the lock screen was a young man in a hospital garb, bald, smiling, going through chemo. She told us how he his cancer was one that was hard to cure and that he was going through chemo in a desperate attempt to save his life. What amazed me more was this man’s attitude. He saw his diagnosis as having no downside. Either he live and got to spend more time with his wife and kids, or he got to go be with Jesus. Even though he wasn’t there, his faith, and his parent’s faith, amazed us, affirming our decision to go on this trip.
Please pray for their son, Brent.

PRAY YAMANOTE


 For those of you who, like me, can’t read kanji (Chinese characters) the lime green train line is the Yamanote (Yah-mah-no-teh) train line. The Yamanote line makes a circle around the middle of Tokyo. The ministry gathers believers to ride the whole Yamanote line and pray for Tokyo. Each time they also get off at one of the many stations and pray for the station.
Our group met the group at one of the train stations. Many Christians were gathered, both short-term teams like Trek 7 and long-term missionaries, all praying for Japan to glorify Christ. We rode the Yamanote line, praying for the people riding on the train along with praying for Japan as a whole. Some people prayed quietly in groups, others read their Bibles, some sat or wrote quietly, and some listened to worship music.
We got off at the Shinagawa (She-nah-gah-wah) station. This station is over 100 years old, making it one of the oldest stations in Tokyo. It is near many offices in Tokyo and many salary men get off at this station. In Japan, an average work week is about 60 hours a week or more. The Japanese try to find meaning in their work and rank instead of in Christ. Despite all the time and effort they put into their work, many realize that it seems fulfilling and commit suicide.
Praying in the train was an amazing experience. Despite the fact that it took over an hour to ride the whole track, we didn’t run out of things to pray about. I have the feeling that we could ride the train line from the first train (5:00AM) to the last train (11:00PM) and not run out of things to pray about.
Colossians 1:9-14
And so, from the day we heard, we have not ceased to pray for you, asking that you may be filled with the knowledge of his will in all spiritual wisdom and understanding, so as to walk in a manner worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing to him, bearing fruit in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God. May you be strengthened with all power, according to his glorious might, for all endurance and patience with joy, giving thanks to the Father, who has qualifies you to share in the inheritance of the saints in light. He as delivered us from the domain of darkness and transferred us to the kingdom of his beloved Son, in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins.


Sunday, June 21, 2015

Day 1: Arriving in MN

I arrived in MN safe and sound (despite the fact that both planes had lots of turbulence). I met the other team mates that I will be working with. My team will have three girls and two boys.
We had a pizza dinner and played intense Uno (our game lasted at least twenty-five min.).

Friday, June 19, 2015

Count Down: 2 Days

Where is home?

Being a Christian, I have heard the phrase "we're not home yet." While I agree with what the phrase is saying, where would our "home away from home" be? While I am tempted to say "with my family" or "in my house" (both are true), that is not really the point of being "aliens and strangers" where we live. It does not mean that we won't or don't have a home down here (on Earth). Our homes on Earth are more like temporary living arrangements. It is like living in a tent. It is not something you would want to do forever, but it gets the job done. 

Aliens and Strangers

First let me define what I don't mean by "home." Home is not the building that you live in. To keep is simple I'll call that a house. House=building. Families move, but they still live in a home.
I also don't mean a place. Like "the mountains feel like home to me" is not what I am getting at. 

We are called to live as aliens and strangers. That means that we live our lives (according to the Bible) and because we follow the Bible, our actions will stand out. People who don't belong stand out. Let's say you see a picture. this picture is black except for a single green dot. What do you notice first? While you take in the black background, your eyes are drawn to the green dot because it stands out. In the same way a Christian's actions are to stand out against the world. 
Christians don't fit the world's idea of normal. They don't meet the status quot. However you want to say it, there is something that separates Christians from the rest of the world.

Re: Home?

So, if out home is not a building, or a place we live, where is it? Our home is with other believers. When I am in a group of believers, I get this feeling of wholeness. This thought of, this is where I am meant to be. Most people would call it contentedness. I think of it more along the lines of true freedom. When I am in a group of people following God, I can be who I am because they will love me no matter what. They will spur me on to be better that I thought I could be. They will be happy when something good has happened to me, and sad when something bad has happened. 
Each person might have a different race, gender, interest, or background, but we are all united by one thing: Jesus on the cross. 

Church Shooting

This week there was a shooting at a historic black church. When the shooter was caught he said his goal was to start a civil war between whites and blacks. Rather than causing racial tensions to become even more strenuous, it has had the opposite effect. It has united the black communities and the white communities. 
Nothing was more powerful than the picture I saw on TV. In a nearby church, a service was being held in honor of those who died. The entire church was full. Every seat was full. People were crammed in to every isle. It was like a massive sea of faces, half of them black, and half of them white. But in that church I noticed one thing even more--a group of true believers praying for a community, who, thorough tragedy, was slowly being healed. 

Saturday, June 13, 2015

Count Down: 8 Days

"Christianity 13" was written by Mark Reid (ZthePhoenix) in a app (for D.S.) called Flipnote. Flip note was accessible by most countries and was a site where people could publish animations or messages. This was one of many Flipnotes to help Christians and Non-Christians through out the world. I hope it changes your life as much as it changed mine. 

Christianity 13

What is a Christian?
Many people going to church on Sunday makes then a Christian.
Others assume that they are Christian because their family is Christian.
Or because they say grace before they eat.
Or maybe they know the Ten Commandments, and can even recite the books of the Bible.
Sorry to say but that stuff doesn’t make you a Christian.
That’s like calling yourself a good person just because you give to charity.
A criminal can give to charity.
Being a Christian is so much more that going to church or being a good.
“The Lord does not look at the things man look at. Man looks at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart.” I Samuel 16:7
You can’t fool God.
Yet, that is what many of us think we’re doing.
We pretend, day in and day out, hiding behind what we think is a ‘Christian’ mask.
You wanna know what a real Christian is?
A follower of Jesus Christ.
“Any of you who does not give up everything he has cannot be my disciple.” Luke 14:33
Jesus said that.
He has already looked at you heart. He knows who’s real and who isn’t.
Today’s ‘Christians’ value this world and things that they have more that salvation.
They’d rather watch T.V. that go tell someone, “Hey Jesus loves you and wants to save you.”
“Hey, I go to Church on Sunday!” Okay, what did you do for that rest of the week?
“Well I would give up anything for Jesus!” No. You wouldn’t.
How do I know? Because you said ‘I would.’
Jesus didn’t ask if you would or not.
He said, “Any of you who does not give up everything he has cannot be my disciple.”
If you said ‘would’ then that means you haven’t yet.
We tend to put Jesus on a waiting list. We want to get all of our fun in first.
Then maaaybe on your deathbed you’ll call on Jesus.
You may not even get a deathbed.
More and more people these days, especially teens, are instantly cut off from this life.
They don’t get a chance to utter that final prayer.
You could pray right now. But hey, it’s your choice not mine.
I thought I was a Christian before. I just wanted to go to heaven.
The idea of knowing God had never crossed my mind.
But when I said “Jesus, my life and everything in it is yours….”
That’s when I crossed the border between fake and real.
I didn’t even know that I could know God until then.
People think being saved is all about going to heaven.
If you are truly saved, you’ll go to heaven, but the most important part of salvation is knowing God.
Nothing even compares to this.
When you know Him, it won’t matter to you when someone tells you ‘God’s not real.’
When you know Him, you do everything in your power to accomplish his will.
You sacrifice time. You sacrifice money. And even Talents and gifts to do his will.
All because you love him.
Because from the moment you begin to know God, you’ll understand what love really is.
This is something you can only understand by experiencing it yourself. I can’t make you know God.
I can’t reveal Him to you. You have to search for Him.
God says you’ll find him if you search with all our heart.
He’s not hiding from us.
We are hiding from Him.
We bury ourselves in the cares and worries of this world, just to keep our minds busy.
That way, we won’t have to ponder, “Why am I here?”
That is what our minds are programed to wonder.
We were made with that question embedded in our minds, so that we would look for the answer.
So, what is the answer to all of this?
God says, “I AM.”

May the Lord bless all who read this.

Monday, June 8, 2015

Count Down: 13 Days

Are all Christians Called to Missions?

            I have often heard that the answer to this question is yes, but with some qualifiers. They say that all Christians should be “Mission Focused.” While I agree, being “mission focused” and being a missionary are completely different.

The Call to Missions

            Only some Christians are called to Missions. They have to be willing to leave everything behind in order to spread the Gospel. They have to be able to travel and use skills they have for missions. Missionaries are called to “go and tell.” The rest of the Church is to be “come and see.”

“Come and See”

            Those Christians who are not called to missions still have an important job to do in the Church. If you are not involved with your Church, you’re not doing it right. “Missionaries plant churches. Most Christians are the Church (Gospel Meditations for Missions).”  So, if the vast majority of Christians, what must the church do?

Support Missionaries

            If the Church does not support missionaries, how can the (universal) Church grow? People in the Church are called to (1) live like Christ and (2) be prepared to share their faith. That is all that is talked about in the Bible. However, growth is paramount for the Church.

Welcome new believers


            The Church must welcome new believers, regardless of their background. If the Church does not welcome people, who would want to be saved? This is bigger than you might think. I know many people who quit going to Church because they felt outcast there. They thought “If God’s people don’t want me, then God does not want me.” As the Church you are literally to represent God on earth.