Hashizume Daisaburo, author of the best-selling book Fushigina Kirisutokyo (Wonders In Christianity) lectured at a meeting held on Jan. 14 at the Japan Christian Center in Tokyo, under the auspices of the Kanto Program Center, Nippon Christian Academy. In his book Hashizume, a professor at Tokyo Institute of Technology, presents Christian doctrine and history from a sociologist’s viewpoint in an easily understandable way. To the Japanese church, the growth of which has come to a halt at one percent of the population, Hashizume offered frank advice in his lecture about the church’s way of doing things and proposed the strategy to increase the number of Christians as follows.
Become a more open church
The reason my co-author Osawa Masachi and I chose the title “Wonders ” In Christianity was to attract the attention of the 99 percent of the Japanese people who are thinking, “What is Christianity doing?” and “Even so, I would not go to any place like a church.” Average Japanese people who are not Christian arbitrarily keep their distance from Christianity, have no understanding of it, and are on guard against it.
First of all, an issue at point on the Christian side is the sense of the church as being closed from within. Churches in North America and other places operate under the clear principles that anyone may come to church; no church registration is required; and no name is asked for, even on the first visit. Also, anyone may enter at will and listen to the sermon. Japanese people consider the church building a kind of “house,” and this type of thinking creates the perception that some persons are “inside” and some “outside.” For those “outside,” the church becomes a very difficult place to enter.
Make a study of rival religions
My next thought is that believers do not use enough general vocabulary words. It is necessary to stand in the place of the unbeliever and converse first by using the vocabulary of the person being addressed. Believers must put their own beliefs in parentheses and, in their minds, assume the state of the unbeliever. Thus, the unbeliever will want to come to church; and with this kind of approach, the unbeliever will want to read the Bible. Next in order, doubts will be settled, and then it may develop that a person might even want to be baptized. This is the course that must be considered and tried.
Among the Japanese population, 99 percent may be unbelievers, but no one is completely unrelated to faith. Each has a type of religious life. To engage in mission work in Japan, it is necessary to study the rival religions of Japan and develop a roadmap of the kind of words that if used, will acquaint unbelievers with the church.1
Understand different situations in China and Korea
Currently, there is a surge in the number of Christian believers in Korea and China. For the people on the Korean Peninsula who have been intimately accustomed to the Confucian worship of their ancestors, grandfathers, and fathers, the advancement of city life has caused a breakdown of traditional society as well as a weakening of Confucian culture. Into the wide-open space in those empty hearts, the worship of the “Father in Heaven” of Christianity has entered. It is said that at present, 30 to 50 percent of Korean people have become Christians. Currently in China, “house churches” are spreading rapidly, and even conservatively estimated, the number of Christian believers is said to be over 100 million people. Confucianism is China’s national religion, and with the demise of the eminent father Mao Tsedong, there was a need to make up for that loss.2
On the contrary, Japan is the country of the eminent mother. So even if there is a gaping hole in their hearts, it is hard for the Christian faith to become the faith that fits “just right.” What is to be done about the part that does not fit? This relates to the most important point of the strategy. In Japan, Christian events have been accepted as part of its annual activities. Wedding ceremonies are held at churches (or Christian-style wedding chapels) and is where the largest number of weddings takes place. Its kindergartens and schools are making inroads, as are the specialty areas of Christianity, like hospitals and hospices.
First increase the number of those who sympathize with Christianity rather than focusing on the laity
The first thing to be considered, even by Christianity, is increasing its groups of supporters. Supporters may be persons who have not been baptized, although they comfortably go in and out of the church and even participate in its outside activities. These supporters would have a broader network of persons and could widen the church’s ties: going from church members to supporters and then on to the supporters’ friends, who ordinarily relate to and do not ignore even Buddhist believers and persons in Soka Gakkai. Traditionally, many festivals and other annual events have played an important part in village life that helping everyone get along well together. However, the shrines and temples at the center of these events are becoming hard to maintain. As a cooperative body in an area where there is aging and a shortage of workers, I can envision, as a strategy, a widened structure of outreach. For example, Christian churches could conduct such functions as funerals, which they could not do if Christianity was not a religion.
Make more use of the Bible
It is an advantage that the Bible can be easily understood by anyone who reads it. Outside the church building, for example at a public hall or gathering place, a kind of Bible study could be offered that is aimed at persons who, following retirement, want to better understand life and the world situation. Anyone would be welcome and, while consulting commentaries, everyone would read the Bible together.
Another advantage of the church is that it is an international organization with translations of the Bible in English, French, Chinese, and other languages, thus enabling the study of those languages. So persons like children or housewives could be included. Reading the Bible and studying it in English would also be helpful.
So my proposal is that we consider many of these new types of strategies. In the blogs of people who have read Wonders In Christianity, I read the comment by many people that they would like to try something. The number of people reading the Bible has increased, and so I think this has been helpful in propagation and evangelism. The seeds have been planted. Following this, how the harvest will be done is left up to each one of you. (Tr. RMT)
—Summarized by Nishio Misao, member
Suginami Church, West Tokyo District and
KNL Editorial Committee member
Based on an article in Shinto no Tomo
(Believers’ Friend), April 2012 issue
_______________________
*Editor’s notes:
1. The number of Japanese people registered as believers throughout the country by Shinto shrines, Buddhist temples, and Christian churches are: Shintoists, 52 percent (106,498,381 persons); Buddhists, 43 percent (89,674,535 persons); Christians, 1 percent (2,121,956 persons); and various other faiths, 4 percent (9,010,048 persons). These statistics were issued by the National Cultural Agency in Dec. 31, 2009. [As methods of calculation vary among the religious bodies, the combined number of believers exceeds the total population of Japan.]
2. Statistics quoted are from sources used by Hashizume.
やっぱりふしぎなキリスト教…なぜ日本で成功しな いのか?
橋爪大三郎(はしづめ だいさぶろう)氏の講演から
東京の日本キリスト教会館で、日本クリスチャンアカデ ミー関東活動センター主催による、ベストセラー『
もっと開かれた教会に
共著者の大澤真幸さんと私が考えて、『ふしぎな キリスト教』というタイトルにしたのは、「
まず、クリスチャン側の問題点としては、教会が 内側に閉じているような気がする。
ライバル宗教の研究を
つぎに思うのは、言葉のボキャブラリーが少な い、ということです。まず、相手のボキャブラリーで語り、
不信仰の99%の日本人にしても、全く信仰と無関係ではなく、
韓国、中国とは異なる事情を理解する
最近、韓国や中国でキリスト教徒が急増しています。父親や祖父、
ところが、日本は偉いお母さんの國です。心に ぽっかり穴があいても「ちょうどよかったキリスト教」
信徒より、まずシンパを増やす
キリスト教でも、サポーターの層を増やすことを まず考えた方がいいと思います。
サポーターは洗礼を受けてないけど、教会に気軽に 出入りしたり、教会の外側でも活動します。
聖書をもっと活用する
聖書は、誰が読んでも意味がわかりやすい、とい う利点があります。退職後、
もう一つの教会の利点は国際組織で、聖書は英語 もフランス語も中国語も何でもあることです。
こういった新手の作戦をいっぱい考えてみたらど うだろう、というのが私の提案です。『ふしぎなキリスト教』
(「信徒の友」2012年4月 号より要約・ KNL編集委員・西東京教区杉並教会員 西尾 操)
{編集者の註}全国社寺教会等信者数:神道系は52%(106,
文化庁2009年12月31日の統計より。*