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SIM

SIM is a century old catalyst for global mission with more than 4,000 workers serving across six continents. Dedicated to prayer and care, we bring good news to hard places because there are people living and dying without the gospel.

A3

A3 (formerly Asian Access) began in Japan by coming alongside visionary pastors and leaders to partner in new ways to grow the church. Now with a network across Japan and a strong history of partnership, together we work toward a movement of Christ-like leaders and disciple-making churches.

MISSIONAL PARTNERSHIP FOR JAPAN

SIM and A3 have embarked on a new award-winning strategic partnership. Recognized for its innovation, this partnership is truly a new way of doing mission together, each bringing their own strengths and committing to a common kingdom vision. All A3.Missional Partners workers serving in Japan come through an SIM sending office and are members of both organizations.

Together, SIM and A3 send global workers to Japan to partner with local churches in holistic outreach to make disciples and develop leaders and churches, catalyzing innovation for reaching Japan for Christ. Each Missional Partner benefits from the strength of their SIM sending office and the strategic work of A3 in Japan.


Catch Vision...

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Vision Trip
— Up to 1 month —

Join an EnVision Experience to see what your future missionary service might look like.

Serve & Grow...

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Ministry Internship
— Up to 3 months —

Start your journey in ministry. Get hands-on experience through this cross-cultural internship.

Bring a Team...

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Short-Term Team
— 2-3 weeks —

Form a j-Team to help a local Japanese congregation to make bridges into its community.

Partner Together...

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Serving a Japanese Church
— 2+ years —

Minister alongside a Japanese pastor, be mentored, and serve a congregation to help it grow.

Leaders in Japan have characterized their own nation as "a super power without a moral compass." This is a relatively new phenomena in a country that was guided, for centuries, by a moral and religious ethic that came out of Shintoism, Confucianism, and the discipline of a samurai warrior. All of this ended following World War II, when the emperor disavowed any claim to deity. This shattered the notion, widely held among Japanese, that they were a sacred people by virtue of being a part of the Japanese family headed by the emperor.

As a result of the military defeat in World War II, followed by the disillusionment created by the emperor's statement, a fifty year period has passed in which there has been a moral vacuum. For most of this time, the Japanese have busied themselves with materialism. They replaced the gods of their ancestors and the god of the emperor with the god of money. This god seemed to please them and to bless them for forty years of growing prosperity, in what was widely known as the "Japanese miracle."

However, in 1990, when Japan's economic bubble burst, the Japanese were once again disillusioned, realizing that the god that they had served was indeed no god at all.

This has created a climate in which the spiritual and emotional needs of the people of the nation have become more apparent than ever before. Japan is indeed a nation in search of its soul. The spiritual needs are felt on a nation-wide basis. They are also felt within the church itself.

Growth of Buddhist Offshoots

There are many new schools of Buddhism, which often manifest themselves in rather strange cults. The most bizarre of which was the Aum Shin Rikyo cult, which created such chaos and fear throughout Japan in the spring of 1995, when they unleashed poison gas on a crowded subway train.

Rise of New Cults

Interestingly, that incident simultaneously created disdain for organized religion, which had negative repercussions for Christian churches. At the same time, it created an awareness of and a fascination in cults on the part of many Japanese young people. It was astonishing to many leaders in the society that young people, who had been raised in good homes and had been educated at outstanding universities would abandon their careers to join cults that demanded extreme loyalty to the leader at the expense of all other relationships with family and company.

Uniqueness of Jesus

One of the greatest challenges that Christians face is that of seeking to proclaim Jesus Christ as the one true and living God. Many Japanese would be happy to embrace Him as another great teacher. However, they consider our claims concerning Christ to be arrogant and offensive.

Pressure to Conform

Similarly, pressures on Christians to conform within Japan's homogeneous culture are sometimes overwhelming. As the proverb goes: "The nail that sticks up gets whacked down." Nationally, Christians number only 1/2 of 1% of the population. For example, only 2.1 people of every 1,000 attend Christian worship services. And this pressure to conform causes many baptized Christians to fall away within the first 5 years. Japanese Christians need encouragement in their faith; family and societal pressures inhibit their consistent involvement in church. See how Asian Access' Summer Teams help Japanese to overcome their fear of visiting a church.

Aging Pastors

Within the church, one of the biggest challenges that we face is that of pastors who reflect the aging trends in society at large. Currently, the average age of a pastor in Japan is approaching 60 years of age. Seventy-five percent (75%) of the pastors are over 55. There are more pastors active in the church in Japan who are past 80, than there are those under 30. Asian Access' Church Multiplication Teams are helping to change this, as we encourage senior pastors to deploy young pastors to multiply new congregations.

Spiritual Vacuum

Japan is suffering from a spiritual void. One young man on Asian Access' video says, "I don't know what is Truth, so please tell me!" From political scandals to bank failures, from the inability to deal with earthquakes to school violence – the Japanese are searching for answers. Teens especially seek satisfaction in material goods (e.g., stylish clothes, cell phones), that cannot fill this spiritual vacuum. They need someone to point the Way.

Authentic Friendship

The greatest need in Japan, as is true in many parts of the world, is for expressions of authentic friendship and genuine witness among those in the church. Despite the needs in the church and the culture at large, the greatest need is for people who faithfully live and represent the reality of Christ and the power of the Gospel. The Japanese need the Life and hope that Christians can bring. See how two Asian Access summer missionaries befriended a young Buddhist woman who would later influence 19,000 Christians at Urbana.

 

Pray for Japan | Trends & IssuesSociological Needs | Spiritual Needs

Prayercast: Prayer for Japan

Video used by permission from Prayercast [https://prayercast.com/] a service of OneWay Ministries

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