Nov 1, 2009

Pro-Vatican II Archbishop leads a "conservative" Catholic Group

Beginning from October 24, the Yomiuri Shimbun is now serializing columns by Archbishop Joseph Pittau, former president of Sophia University. His view on the Second Vatican Council reflects that of many bishops in Japan. The Archbishop praises almost everything introduced by the Council.
 
For example, in a most recent column dated October 31, the Archbishop appraises the idea of inculturation taking the example of kneeling in Japan. He writes the situation before the Council. When a woman in kimono knelt, her legs would be exposed but it was also done in Japan. He explains kneeling is a custom in ancient Rome, and it was introduced to Christianity.

His stay in Japan spans more than 40 years, but he still cannot understand the customs in Japan as well as other Japanese bishops who also explain that kneeling is not a Japanese custom. In fact, kneeling has been also a Japanese custom. But due to their misunderstanding, kneeling is replaced by bowing in liturgy.

On the contrary, the late Maryknoll priest, Fr. James Hayatt who started Kokoro no tomoshibi (The Light in Heart) movement in Kyoto had a completely different view on kneeling he wrote:

It is said that kneeling is not a Japanese custom. Indeed, it may not be Japanese but it is also neither European nor American. Kneeling before the Holy Eucharist is a Catholic custom. It is a very important Catholic practice beyond all nations. Bowing is a greeting between people. When you cross before the tabernacle, to Our Lord Jesus who exists in the Holy Eucharist, you shall not greet Him just like as man but adore Him as the Almighty God. It is a pity not kneeling before the Holy Eucharist. I think it a great loss for the Catholic Church in Japan.

Unfortunately, Archbishop Joseph Pittau is now an adviser to Catholic Action Fellowship Association, a "conservative" Catholic group in Japan. As long as he leads the association, it is almost impossible to openly attend the Tridentine Mass at any diocesan church in Japan.

Oct 31, 2009

Japanese rightists protested before the Head Office of the Japan Times in Tokyo

In October 29, some member of Japanese rightists protested before the head office of the Japan Times, a Japanese English Newspaper in Tokyo. The reason for their protest was that a letter from a reader who discribed her experience with the rightists at St. Ignatius Church in October 11.

Thursday, Oct. 15, 2009

Standing up to noisy rightists

By R. NANASHIMA
Tokyo

I would like to express my appreciation to the Japanese police force. On Sunday I was walking to Mass at my church in central Tokyo when I heard the unmistakable strains of uyoku (rightist) music. I thought, "Here we go again."

But this time it was no ordinary drive-by nuisance. On the corner outside the church, 30 or 40 protesters stood screeching into loudhailers. Their complaint was that a group called the Japan Catholic Council for Justice and Peace had planned a meeting that day that included an educational tour of Yasukuni Shrine. Attempts by the uyoku to enter the church and disrupt the meeting had led to its cancellation, leaving the rightwingers to stew on the corner. I noted that the protesters seemed to represent a cross section of society: men and women in suits, youths in casual attire, at least one man in kimono and geta.

A short distance away, half a dozen police vans were parked; uniformed officers lined the pavement opposite the rightwingers. As I walked between the two groups, the uyoku screamed at me in Japanese, "Get out of Japan!" Stunned, I looked at them and — I am sorry to say — uttered a common Anglo-Saxon word. They instantly rushed me, striking at me with their fists and loudhailers. The leader got close enough to clip the top of my hair. Then the police surged past me, body-slamming my attackers and wrestling them back to their side of the pavement. "Run!" a middle-aged officer shouted at me.

I obeyed and soon reached the safety of the church. I was uninjured, but if not for the officers' swift response, I would certainly have been mobbed and perhaps badly beaten. I am a slightly built woman. I was targeted for being white, but these rightwingers are versatile in their hatred: Earlier that day they had heckled and insulted Japanese churchgoers. It's a pity that they are unaware that the Catholic Church has deeper and older roots in Japan than does their brand of nationalism.

While Japanese society yawns at the small number of unspeakable fanatics in its midst, the uyoku are free to continue their mischief — even when it veers toward physical violence. I am keenly grateful to the officers who shielded me Sunday. These brave men in uniform of this country stand up to the uyoku on a regular basis. Why can't anyone else?

The opinions expressed in this letter to the editor are the writer's own and do not necessarily reflect the policies of The Japan Times.

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/rc20091015a1.html


I myself witnessed the protest before St. Ignatius Church, I think the description of the uyoku is quite accurate. But some uyoku and some Catholics whose political view was almost the same were quite angry with the letter and decided to protest against the Japan Times on the letter.

Shuken kaifuku o mezasu kai, the Association for Restoration of Sovereignty announced their protest before the head office of the Japan Times at their website. around 11:30AM or so, they begun their protest.

Don't allow the anti-Japanese Japan Times!(1/5)


Regrettably, there was a Catholic woman who participated in this protest. She went so far as to accuse the Japan Times of the content of the articles as anti-Japanese.

Don't allow the anti-Japanese Japan Times!(2/5)

Don't allow the anti-Japanese Japan Times!(3/5)


Don't allow the anti-Japanese Japan Times!(4/5)


Don't allow the anti-Japanese Japan Times!(5/5)


What will be the future of the Catholic Church in Japan? Nobody knows. Both leftists and rightists within Church are forgetting their duty as Catholics. They have made their religion as political instrument for themselves.

The Immaculate Heart of Mary Pray for us.


Oct 26, 2009

"Conservative" Catholic writer appointed to Japan Post board member

Writer Sono 'to be Japan Post board member'

The government is set to appoint writer Ayako Sono as an external board member of Japan Post Holdings Co., according to an informed source.

Sono, 78, will assume the post as early as Wednesday following an official decision by Japan Post's appointment committee--comprising external board members led by Toyota Motor Corp. Senior Adviser Hiroshi Okuda--and approval at the company's extraordinary shareholders meeting.

According to the source, Sono was strongly recommended by Shizuka Kamei, state minister in charge of financial services and postal reform, and Jiro Saito, president of Tokyo Financial Exchange Inc., who has informally been named as the next president of Japan Post.

The board's decision to plump for Sono, who reportedly has accepted the invitation, is being seen as an attempt to garner opinions on postal reforms from people outside business circles.

Sono reportedly favors the government's basic policy to review postal service privatization.

Born in Tokyo, Sono is known for producing work in a wide range of fields as well as her deep insight into religion, war and social issues. Her novels include "Kami no Yogoreta Te" (The Soiled Hands of God). She received the Imperial Award of the Japan Art Academy in 1993 and was designated a Person of Cultural Merit in 2003. In 1997, an entity over which Sono once presided won the Yomiuri International Cooperation Prize.

She served as chairman of the Nippon Foundation between 1995 and 2005 and has also held other prominent positions, including serving on government committees for judicial system reform and educational reform.

Regarding the appointment of Japan Post's top management, Kamei suggested he would not insist solely on appointing managers from private companies, saying, "I want to include creditable people from a wide range of sectors."

Although Kamei initially planned to renew the entire management section, he recently has been more flexible about allowing some members to stay on, with the caveat that they cooperate with the new president.

(Oct. 27, 2009)

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/20091027TDY01302.htm

Ayako Sono, a well known "conservative" Catholic writer in Japan is very respected by many conservative Catholics because of her patriotic statements on politics and other temporal issues. However, her belief as Catholic is not always in accordance with the teaching of the Catholic Church.

Sono supports the worship at Yasukuni Shrine by prime minister where the spirits of the soldiers, politicians and patriots who dedicated their lives for the Japanese Empire until the end of the Pacific War are enshrined as gods. In the shrine, people who died after the War has never been hallowed there. In newspapers and magazines, she often wrote articles defending the worship.

While she follows the Catholic teaching which prohibits abortion she actively opposes to abortion in Japan, on the other hands, she contributed to so-called "Program of Reproductive Health" including sterilization launched by Peruvian ex-president Alberto Fujimori during 1990s.

Peru Plans a Hot Line to battle Forced Sterilizations
http://www.zenit.org/article-2233?l=english

Fujimori contines to justify his "Program of Reproductive Health" which caused about 300,000 of victims in forcible sterilizations even after his exile to Japan claiming there was no forcible sterilizations and people profited from the program.

THERE WERE NO FORCED STERILIZATIONS (Part I)
http://albertofujimori.org/en/index.php?selection=health&articleId=374

THERE WERE NO FORCED STERILIZATIONS (Part II)

http://albertofujimori.org/en/index.php?selection=health&articleId=375

At that time, Sono was chairman of the Nippon Foundation which Ryoichi Sasagawa, famous right-wing activist and philanthoropist found by profits gained form boat races. She detailed her involvement with "Program of reproductive Health" and her offering of housing to Fujimori in an article of the Mainichi Shimbun dated December 3, 2000.

Fujimori shi e no yado teikyo? Watashi wa unmei ni shitagatta dake (Did I offer housing to Mr. Fujimori? I just followed my destiny)
(Japanese Article)
http://nippon.zaidan.info/kinenkan/moyo/0000266/moyo_item.html

I this article, she wirtes "the family program targeted Indios in the mountains. It offers sterilization operations to either husbund or wife only if they already had a lot of children and they consented completely." This is apparently a violation of the teaching of Catholic Church. After writing this article, Sono has never mention her involvement with "Program of Reproductive Health". She may have realized how sinful it was but as long as I know, she has never done anything to compensate for the victims of forced sterilizations.

Strange enough, both liberals and conservatives in Catholic Church have never accused her. Liberal Catholics are usually very sensitive to the violation of human rights just like left -groups and conservative ones are strict to the teaching of the Catholic Church which prohibits any artificial method for contraception. I wonder why they cannot do anything to her.

But it is not only her fault that she supported sterilization in Peru. Recently some bishops and priests in Catholic Church have been very chilly to the encyclical "Humanae Vitae" by Pope Paul VI which prohibit any artificial contraception as well as abortion. Fr. Momose Fumiaki S. J. who studied in Germany and deeply influenced with the progressive theologians like Karl Rahner. He later became professor of theology at Sophia University. Fr. Momose claimed in a book written for catechumen that the Church should reconsider her policy on contraception although he maintains to prohibit abortion.

When the Vatican questioned him because he indirectly denies the resurrection of Our Lord, some high rank clergies like Late Cardinal Stephen Hamao Fumiro who was bishop of Yokohama Diocese at that time defended him very much. Because of his radical theological views, he once left for the Philippines.

It seems almost impossible that any Catholics either in Japan or Peru remind her of the is and urge to compensate for the victims of sterilization in Peru.

Oct 24, 2009

Vatican's Plan for Anglican's conversion to Catholicism may have negative effects

The Vatican is now preparing for the mass conversion of the Anglican clergies to Catholicism but it seems somewhat dangerous to preserve the Catholic tradition.

Pope announces plans for Anglicans to convert en masse

The Vatican has announced that Pope Benedict is setting up special provision for Anglicans, including married clergy, who want to convert to Rome together, preserving aspects of Anglican liturgy. They will be given their own pastoral supervision, according to this press release from the Vatican:

“In this Apostolic Constitution the Holy Father has introduced a canonical structure that provides for such corporate reunion by establishing Personal Ordinariates which will allow former Anglicans to enter full communion with the Catholic Church while preserving elements of the distinctive Anglican spiritual and liturgical patrimony.”

More on this very important story later. But this is clearly a historic gesture by Pope Benedict which will encourage thousands of disaffected Anglicans to become Roman Catholics.

http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/damianthompson/100014171/pope-announces-plans-for-anglicans-to-convert-en-masse/

In Japan, to establish any personal ordinariate for the Anglican clergies who want to convert to Catholicism is almost impossible. Both Catholics and Anglicans are very active each other, so it is very common that Catholic bishop or priest train Anglican clergies to meditate.

But in my opinion, it is not bad that Catholic bishops will not follow the guidance from the Vatican on the conversion of Anglican clergies. Acceptance of anything special to the Anglican Church may affect the liturgy and celibacy in the Catholic Church and result in a false form of ecumenism.


Oct 22, 2009

First Practicing Catholic Prime Minister failed to defend the Lives of the Unborn


Ex-prime minister, Aso Taro making a speech for the election campaign in August.

In Japan, it is very difficult to spread a movement to defend the life of the unborn. The notion that it is woman who decide to give birth or not has taken root deeply since the legislation of the Eugenic Protection Act in 1948.  

When Aso Taro, who became the church-going Catholic prime minister, so some Catholics and I, at first, expected him to act according to the teachings of the Catholic Church in this field. Moreover, there was also a Catholic politician, Yosano Kaoru who was appointed to finance minister and state minister for financial services state minister in charge of economic and fiscal policy in the cabinet. Mr. Yosano's grandmother is Yosano Akiko, a very famous poet who became a Catholic around the end of her life.

However, this expectation was soon proved to be vain when Mr. Aso appointed Obuchi Yuko, the daughter of the deceased former prime minister, Obuchi Keizo to state minister in charge of population and gender equality.

Unlike her predecessors, Ms. Obuchi herself was not a feminist and in favor of a baby hatch started with the efforts of some prol-ife activists and a doctor at Jikei hospital, run by Catholics in Kumamoto Prefecture in May of 2007.

First 'baby hatch ' to start operations this month
http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20070502a5.html

She was not a best person to take this position all the same. In LDP, there was a suitable person. Yamatani Eriko, a conservative Catholic politician, worked for pro-life cause and also helped to get a permission for a baby hatch from the ministry of welfare and labor. Thus it was not a good decision that Mr. Aso did not chose her.

There are some conservative politicians against feminism in Liberal Democratic Party, any prime minister have never chosen a person who would take some effective measures for declining birth rate in Japan. I have to say that even these conservative politicians are as selfish as liberal ones in regard to this problem. If they are really worried about the future of their country, they should have taken any pro-life policy.

I myself wrote a letter to Mr. Aso urging to take actions against abortion with some booklets published by a pro-life group, but I had no response from him and he did not take any action for this cause. My friend also sent a similar letter to him but with the same result.

LDP lost in a general election in this summer and became a party out of power because Some policies on labor issues and social welfare that LDP taken gave people very bad impressions. Democratic Party of Japan took the power and its leader, Hatoyama Yukio became a prime minister.

Unfortunately, this is no good in respect of pro-life movement in Japan. DPJ has a draft to relax regulations on abortion. although not all of the DPJ member are feminists, but iso far it seems to be not easy for the party to abandon this draft.

Immaculate Heart of Mary, pray for us. Have mercy on us.

Oct 18, 2009

Flu and Communion

In Many dioceses in Japan, It is more and more difficult to receive the Eucharist on tongue. Some bishops have issues decrees as an excuse to prevent infection with flu while receiving the Eucharist.

Judging from my experience at St. Ignatius Church in Tokyo, however, the true purpose is to discourage Catholics to receive the Eucharist in hands, the method introduced more than thirty years ago. Although it was this May that St. Ignatius Church announced that the Eucharist would be given only to hands, a priest rejected to give the Eucharist on tongue even before one week of the announcement.

Pope Benedict XVI has encouraged to give the Eucharist on tongue everywhere and even after the spread of flu this year. But in Japan, as many other good examples in Rome, this is generally ignored by bishops and priests.

May the Lord grant us to receive the Eucharist in the right way in the near future.

Oct 17, 2009

"Traditional" Mass at St. Mary Cathedral in October 10, 2009



Last Saturday, I went to St. Mary Catholic Cathedral to attend so-called "the Solemn Pontifical Mass" sponsored by Catholic Action Fellowship Association. This was the only one official "traditional" Mass in Latin according to the Missal of Paul VI celebrated once a year. This year was the 19th anniversary of this Latin Mass.

I think nearly one-fifteen hundreds or more people attended the Mass. At first, His Eminence, Cardinal Peter Shirayanagi was supposed to celebrate the Mass but due to his health, Archbishop Alberto Bottari de Castello, Apostolic Nuncio to Japan was a principal celebrant instead. Concelebrants were Archbishop Joseph Pittau, former President of Sophia University and former Secretary of Education Ministry in Vatican, and other famous priests in Japan.

Compared with the Mass usually I attend, it was better but not best at all. Some of them who came to this Mass were not Catholic and their purpose was to sing Gregorian chants and hymns on this occasion.

At the time of Holy Communion, people in center easily could receive the Eucharist on tongue and on their kneel because there were two pews in front of the two archbishops. However, on the both side of the corner, there was no pew although People could receive the Eucharist on tongue there also.

To my surprise, there was no announcement that those who were not yet baptized should not to receive the Eucharist although there was a case in a booklet which described the event in last year; a person not yet baptized received the Eucharist and saw it interestingly.

There was other thing which would became a problem in the next year onward. No young Japanese priest took part in this Mass. Most of them who concelebrated were already over seventies and some of them nearly nineties. I wondered how long they can continue to celebrate the Mass.

I also very worried about the faith of Catholics who came to this Mass. When the Mass was over, I went outside and met a man who was one of the leaders who prepared this solemn Mass. I greeted him and showed a picture of the Anglican clergies taken in front of the Cathedral a few weeks ago, but he paid little attention.

I am very skeptical of the leaders who prepared this Mass because they seem to have no intention to ask local bishops for help to celebrate the Tridentine Mass. They only will continue the same form of the Mass which many of them think very "traditional". It is no good because according to a booklet, a priest celebrated the Tridentine Mass for the members of Catholic Action Fellowship Association in last year. I think any member of this group should make efforts so that all Catholic can attend the Tridentine Mass in their parish on a regular basis.

It has been already more than two years since the issue of "SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM" by Pope Benedict XVI which liberated the Tridentine Mass to all priest throughout the world. However, I have never found any church where priests celebrate the Tridentine Mass. There is a rumor that a priest says the Tridentine Mass at small chapel of St.Mary Cathedral in the very early morning (around 4 o'clock or so). I think it it very suspicious.

Unfortunately, Japan is not the only one country in East Asia where people have no chance to attend the Tridentine Mass. Even after the issue of "SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM", Both Korea and Taiwan had no church nor group for this purpose. Only Hong Kong has a group since 2001.

Tridentine Latin Mass Association Of Hong Kong Diocese
http://tridentine.catholic.org.hk/

Let us pray to Our Lady so that the Lord speed the day that people can attend the true traditional Mass.

Movies of the Anglican Commemorative Service at St. Mary Catholic Cathedral in Tokyo

Some scenes of the commemorative service for 150th anniversary are available on YouTube.


The scene was taken in front of the tabernacle which locates on the left side of the alter. Thanks to its location, it escaped the direct sacrilege from the Anglican bishops.


Introduction of the Primate of the American Episcopal Church, Rev. Katherine Jefferts Schori and Archbishop of Canterbury, Rev. Rowan Williams.



The scene of "Holy" Communion.



This scene is also taken during "Holy" Communion. Compare the sound of a hymn like a Okinawan folk song with the noise of people.


Immaculate Heart of Mary, pray for us.

Oct 16, 2009

Eucharistic Prayer of Akita

Most sacred Heart of Jesus, TRULY present in the Holy Eucharist, I consecrate my body and soul to be entirely one with Your Heart, being sacrificed at every instant on all the alters of the world and giving praise to the father, pleading for the coming of His Kingdom.
Please receive this humble offering of myself. Use me as You will for the glory of the Father and the salvation of souls.
Most Holy Mother of God, never let me be separated Son. Please defend and protect me as Your special child. Amen.

Oct 14, 2009

Movies of Protest before St. Ignatius Church in Tokyo

Some scenes of the protest before St.Ignatius Church in Tokyo is available on YouTube.












Immmaculate Heart of Mary, pray for us!

Japanese Right-wing groups protested before St. Ignatius Catholic Church in Tokyo

I myself witnessed a very disgusting scene on last Sunday when I came to St.Ignatius Church to attend the Mass. On arrival in Yotsuya, it was very different from the usual scene.

On the street next to the Church, there were some decorated cars running, people on the cars screamed in a very rude manner. For example, Matsura (the name of a bishop well known his left-wing activities) come out! You asshole! [sic] etc.

The main group which screamed before the church was Syukenkaifuku wo mezasu kai, The Association for the Restoration of Sovereignty. Their extremity in verbal expression is well known. Mr. Nishimura was the leader.

They supposed to came to St. Ignatius Church to protest the pastor for offering a waiting place to the study group on Yasukuni Shrine. In fact, It was canceled a few days ago. Nevertheless, they came to the church and begin their protest.

Some placards and banners were for this purpose, however, others apparently prepared to attack the Catholic Church Herself. I saw a placard which read "Catholic Church lead the Slave Trade, Shame on you! " It seemed that their true purpose is to demonstrate their hatred toward all Catholic not part of them which they at first targeted. The leader also yelled "No aggression to Japan by Christians!" and "No aggression to Japan by Chinese and Koreans!" He also said "let's protect Christians and Japanese!" While allowing anti-Catholic and anti-Christian slogans to be shown to us, what a contradiction of his words!

The other man mentioned that the Pope Pius XII once supported the war in China by Japan as a just battle and Fr. Bruno Bitter protected Yasukuni Shrine after the Pacific War. I wondered if they knew them, why they did not learn Catechism.

Regrettably, there were some Catholics who actively contacted with people involved with this protest. I watched a few of them stood by the leader of the protest. they just watched and not to try to stop them. Because of their political and religious tendency, they wanted to let the right -wing group to protest so that the left-wing groups in the Catholic Church would not be so active anymore. They also venerate Yasukuni Shrine to the point of their second religion.

During the Mass, the yell of the demonstrators even reached to inside the church which disturbed us very much. I tried to concentrate on prayer but most of the time, my heart was filled with the demonstration. At that time, I noticed there were only a few people waiting for confession, so I went to confession and finally could concentrate on prayer.

When the Mass is over, I went to the leader to tell him that the yell reached to inside chapel and it was very disturbing. Seemingly he did not expected my action, but soon he and other man who said he was Catholic retarded. Both side did not use violence anyway. Then, a plane-clothe policeman who looked like a businessman suddenly took me to the other side of the street. apparently he, in advance, tried to prevent any violence would happen.

I just went around the Yotsuya station and returned to the church about 5 minutes or so. They were no more. But police vehicles were still there. I prayed before the statue of Mary for the reparation of this event.

Even after this demonstration, some "conservative Catholics" dose not recognize their fault in supporting the right-wing group and continuing to defend them claiming they are polite and right and so on. Rather, they criticize those even nothing to do with any left-wing activities. It is very dismaying to see their arrogance.

I wonder if they are really our brothers and sisters in Christ. It is true that the left-wing groups and even communist has infiltrate to the Catholic Church after Vatican II and very problematic now, but we shall not ask any right-wing group for help. They claims to protect Yasukuni Shrine from left-wing groups but they are too unconscious of the sacrilege before a Catholic Church. The place of the protest was also very close to the statue of Mary and the entrance to the columbarium.

Religious dialogue and false ecumenism after Vatican II has made these "conservative Catholics" to act against the true teaching of the Catholic Church. They think people with other religions also will be saved without the faith in the Lord.

The only true weapons against errors in the Catholic Church are prayer and sacrifice. No matter how any other methods look easy and effective, we shall not rely on them.

Immaculate Heart of Mary, pray for us. Have mercy on us.


Oct 13, 2009

Persecution on Our Lady of Akita

Although today was the day of a miracle by Our Lady of Fatima, but it was also very special for Our Lady of Akita because Sr. Sasagawa recived the message from her on the coming punishments from Heaven if people would not repent their sins.

The Our Lady of Akita is now well known in the Catholic countries around the world but many of those who know Her would not imagine that there is a series of suppression on Her and people around.

I myself have visited Akita three times in my life. I visited there for the first time in 1987 or so when I was still an elementary school pupil. At that time, the chapel was somewhat a ordinary house around everywhere in countryside. Although I was not yet baptized, we prayed rosary before the statue of Our Lady there for hours. Honestly speaking, I was tired when we finished our prayer.

Second time, I visited to the convent for the first time in 16 years with my parents and younger sister to join in a group of pilgrimage in May, 2007. The chapel was beautifully built in the Japanese traditional style. We prayed rosaries together before the statue of Our Lady inside the chapel and went around the Japanese style garden.

It seems that there is no problem at all however, there was a great changes. when I tried to bought a book on Our Lady of Akita, there was absolutely no book written by Fr. Thomas Yasuda, S.V.D. but the one that tells the whole story of the convent; Our Lady of Akita is only a part of the contents.

The other thing very strange for me was that there was no name of the nun who witnessed the miracles by Our Lady of Akita i.e. Sr. Sasagawa. In the book, her name was only mentioned as Sr. S. What was the reason for this?

It was not only the chapel but the people there that changed very much. Although Our Lady of Akita is officially recognized by the local bishop now, but there was a series of suppressions on her. the former bishop Francis Sato of Nigata Diocese at first supported the miracles by Our Lady of Akita, but he changed his attitude toward them and even tried to dispose the cottons which wiped the tears and bloods flew from the Statue. In the convent, a group of liberal sisters took the power there and Sr. Sasagawa and Fr. Thomas Yasuda had to leave there. They lives far away from Akita now.

On the third time of my visit in May, 2008, when I prayed before the statue set left side of the chapel, I heard folk songs by DARC, a group for rehabilitation of drug addicts. It was very difficult to pray rosaries there.

Now I have no chance to visit there, but I hope the miracles and messages by Our Lady of Akita will be recognized everywhere and the convent again become a suitable place for prayers.




Sep 29, 2009

Sermon at the 150th Anniversary of the Anglican Communion in Japan

Here is an article from the official website of Archbishop of Canterbury.

150th Anniversary Sermon for the Anglican Church in Japan

Wed. September 23, 2009

The Archbishop preached at the Holy Eucharist to celebrate 150 years of Nippon Sei Ko Kai, the Anglican Church in Japan. The service took place in the Roman Catholic Cathedral of St Mary, Tokyo.

The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, preached at a service attended by over 2000 people.

Presiding at the Eucharist was the Most Revd Nathaniel Makoto Uematsu, Primate of NSKK and Bishop of Hokkaido, along with other bishops from NSKK.

The Archbishop's Sermon

The Anglican mission to Japan had it beginnings in the ministry of several giant figures. Foremost among these was Bishop Channing Williams, whose arrival here 150 years ago we celebrate today. But I want to pay tribute also to another of those great servants of God who shaped the character and direction – another bishop, from a famous clerical family in England, Edward Bickersteth. His dedication, his prayerfulness and his pastoral gentleness come through very clearly in the book that his brother wrote in his memory. And among the many vivid recollections contained in this book, one that stands out is a picture recorded by a visiting English clergyman, who describes Bishop Bickersteth taking a confirmation in a room in a large private house in Nagoya. What struck the visitor was simply that the bishop took off his shoes to confirm – a mark of his ready sensitivity to the customs of the country.

But this little picture is, I think, more than just a record of good social manners. We could say that in many contexts the Christian mission arrived not only wearing heavy shoes but quite ready to tread on as many feet as possible. Perhaps mission is truly effective only when it comes with bare feet. Bare feet are often in Christian history a mark of poverty: we might think of the reforms of the Franciscan and Carmelite orders where the sign of a renewed commitment to simplicity of life has been a rule of going barefoot, or at least wearing only sandals. They are a mark also of being ready for discomfort or injury; and, as in the Bible, walking barefoot on your journey means that you will need someone to wash your feet for you at the journey's end. But most of all in the Biblical world, to take off your shoes indicates that you are on holy ground: when Moses meets the Lord at the Burning Bush, he is told to take off his shoes, because the soil on which he stands is holy.

What does all this suggest about the marks of mission? Mission is effective when it is simple; when it comes without a heavy protective wrapping of someone else's culture, someone else's politics and power. European mission to Japan always had a complicated relationship to politics and power, to trade and money. The terrible seventeenth century persecutions that nearly destroyed Christian witness in Japan for generations arose partly from fears related to foreign ambitions; and the rivalries between different colonial powers, Dutch and Portuguese, did a great deal to put the authenticity of Christian mission in danger. The opening up of the country to Christian mission again in the nineteenth century was bound up with the opening of Japan to foreign trade and foreign cultural influence. And sometimes Japanese Christians were so eager to throw away the heavy shoes of foreign culture that they were ready for a while to put their feet into the new shoes of national ambition and patriotic aggression – just like the European Christians themselves.

Simplicity means walking lightly on the soil – not imposing foreign expression of faith, and not imagining either that faith must be tied inseparably to whatever the nation finds useful or acceptable at any one moment. The courage in recent decades of the Anglican Church in Japan in its readiness to express public grief and penitence over past errors and to seek reconciliation with victims has been an inspiration to so many; I recall with great emotion the liturgy at the 1998 Lambeth Conference at which the representatives of this church shared this spirit of repentance and generosity – and did so on the 6th of August, a day when others might well feel they needed to approach the Japanese people with repentance, in search of reconciliation.

Reconciliation comes when we learn to walk lightly, to let go of both the pride that cannot admit sins and errors and of the bitterness that cannot let go of past injury. This church has shown great grace in its ability to walk lightly in this way; and such freedom is a central aspect of the mission that it can exercise in this society and more widely. To walk lightly is also to understand that we do not have to depend for our value and meaning on achievement, past or present, but are welcome guests on the earth, held in the hands of a loving creator and redeemer. We do not have to struggle without ceasing, so as to keep ourselves safe and successful, since God supports us and promises his unfailing mercy, whatever befalls.

And this means that mission involves the readiness to be hurt by the stones in the soil, by all the ways in which reality fails to turn out as we might like it to; and to let our own skin and flesh be marked by the earth we walk on. Christ himself walks lightly on the earth, yet his feet are stained and bruised by the obstacles along the human journey – and at last they are wounded by the nails of rejection. When he is raised from the dead, his bare feet still show the marks of this journey into danger and suffering. If we walk with him, we shall seek to share his freedom, his light step on the earth, but we cannot expect to escape the bruises and the wounds.

Mission is most truly itself when it walks along the same road as those who are suffering in body or spirit. Only then does it walk the way of Christ. And once again, the Anglican Church here has shown a great readiness to stand with and walk with those who are forgotten or despised, the poor in city and country, women who have suffered violence, children and migrants. Walking in this way will not guarantee success or safety, but it will be a true fellowship with Jesus; without that true fellowship with him, there will be no true reaching out in love to others, and without reaching out to others there is no fellowship with him.

So this leads us into the third set of ideas that are associated with going barefoot – taking off your shoes because the ground is holy. Bishop Bickersteth, taking off his shoes so as to be at home in a traditional Japanese household, was doing something apparently very simple. But as a foreigner adapting to the custom of the country, he was also recognising that the home itself is a holy place, that another person's welcome is a sign of God's presence – and that a missionary needs to know that, wherever he or she goes, God has gone before and made the place holy. It is not that this or that country or culture is in itself holy in a way that no other is. But where God leads us in mission, he leads us into the holy space of human lives that he longs to touch and heal.

It has taken us a long time to learn this, but we do not walk into a new context as if we were taking God there for the first time. He always walks ahead of us; and true mission looks for the signs of where he has been and what he has done to prepare the way. Mission involves listening as well as speaking, listening before we speak, so that we can give proper reverence to the God who has made a path for us. Mission does not simply say a complete 'no' to what is in front of us, so that the ground can be cleared for God to come along behind us. It looks and listens for God and approaches those God wants us to encounter with the deepest respect and gratitude, so that we have a truthful idea of what the questions are that people are asking and what the needs are that they want to express. Mission means reverence for people.

So after one hundred and fifty years of Anglican presence in Japan, we are asked today, as we give joyful thanks for this heritage, to think about how we now approach this nation, this society, with the good news.

Simplicity comes first. We do not proclaim ourselves, says St Paul, we don't offer ourselves as the answer to everyone's questions. We bring the knowledge of the great gifts God has given in his promise of reconciliation and renewal, and we bring our own struggles to live in the atmosphere of reconciliation and renewal – pointing always to God as the one who begins the whole story and brings it to its full realisation. We learn to walk lightly and to travel light, grateful for the gifts of human culture but not making them an absolute.

Risk and solidarity come next. We don't seek to protect ourselves, to do no more than keep the little circle of the Christian family warm and secure. We walk along the roads of human suffering, accompanying the lost and anxious and oppressed in the name of Jesus.

And reverence comes third. We approach our neighbours not with arrogance and impatience but with a readiness to learn and a willingness to rejoice in the rich texture of their human lives, individual and cultural. We look and listen for God in all that lies before us.

If we can continue in this 'barefoot' mission, we shall be opening ourselves up to the simplicity of Jesus himself and so to the transforming grace and beauty of his own mission. God has blessed Christians in Japan, not least Anglican Christians, with great courage, great endurance and great willingness to 'walk lightly'. May God walk with us and speak through us as we seek to present to his beloved children in this country the possibilities of freedom and peace and hope, of meaningful and reconciled life, which the Good News of Jesus Christ offers to all.

http://www.archbishopofcanterbury.org/2531

Prayer to St. Michael



Prayer to St. Michael

Sancte Michael Archangele, defende nos in proelio; contra nequitiam et insidias diaboli esto praesidium. Imperet illi Deus, supplices deprecamur: tuque, Princeps militiae Caelestis,
satanam aliosque spiritus malignos, qui ad perditionem animarum pervagantur in mundo,
divina virtute in infernum detrude. Amen.

Saint Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle; be our protection against the wickedness and snares of the devil. May God rebuke him, we humbly pray: and do thou, O Prince of the heavenly host, by the power of God, thrust into hell Satan and all the evil spirits who prowl about the world seeking the ruin of souls. Amen.

Sep 28, 2009

The History of Ecumenism with the Anglican Church (2)

According to the website of Nippon Sei Ko Kai, the first associated prayer service between Catholics and Anglicans already took place about 5 years before the installation of the Anglican Bishop at St. Mary Catholic Cathedral.

From Newsletters of the dioceses of Nippon Sei Ko Kai
An Associated Prayer service between Anglicans and Catholics
Newsletter of Osaka Diocese, No.348

The first associated prayer service between Anglicans and Catholics was held for the first time at St. Ignatius Catholic Church in May, 1983. This was a reflection of the Pope's historical visit to Canterbury in 1982.

http://www.nskk.org/province/jimusho-dayori/2000/06/04.htm

Sep 27, 2009

A Japanese Catholic Newspaper Reports a Dialogue between Archbishop Okada and Anglican Archbishop Rowan Williams


Katorikku Shinbun, the Catholic Weekly of Japan, reports on the 150th Anniversary of Nippon Sei Ko Kai and an ecumenical talk with Archbishop Okada. here is a translation of the article.

The 150th Anniversary of the Mission by Nippon Sei Ko Kai
The Anglican Archbishop of Canterbury, Rev. Rowan Williams Visited to Japan Conversing with Archbishop Okada 

In commemoration of the 150th Anniversary of Nippon Sei Ko Kai, Rev. Rowan Williams, the Anglican Archbishop of Canterbury visited to Japan. He conversed with Archbishop Okada Takeo, the President of Catholic Bishop's Conference at a hotel in Tokyo on September 21.

Rev. Uematsu Makoto, the Presiding Bishop of Nippon Sei Ko Kai and the persons in charge of ecumenism from both sides also attended. In response to the Anglican Archbishop saying " I am interested in the religious life of Japanese.", Archbishop Okada and the others mentioned to active new religions and Christianity which has never taken root in Japanese Culture. They also got onto the situation that there were many suicides and prayed together so that they could unite and cooperate each other in the mission of Japan hereafter. On September 23, a commemorative service for the 150th Anniversary was held at St. Mary Catholic Cathedral.

http://s02.megalodon.jp/2009-0927-0200-34/www.cwjpn.com/cwjpn/article/index.htm

Note: You have to crick the link twice to access the article.

Sep 26, 2009

The History of Ecumenism with the Anglican Chruch in Japan (1)

The chronology of the retired bishop, Rev. John Takeda in Tokyo Diocese of Nippon Sei Ko Kai well represents the history of ecumenism between the Catholic Church and the Anglican Church in Japan. I tried to translate some descriptions on the events.

Part 1

January 6, 1988

At the installation held at St. Mary Catholic Cathedral of Tokyo Achdiocese, he becomes the seventh Anglican bishop of Tokyo Diocese. The presider was the Presiding Bishop Kikawada and the preacher was Rev. Paul Lee Chun-Whan, the former Bishop of Seoul Diocese in the Korean Anglican Church. It is also the first imposition and installation of a bishop using the revised Book of Prayer with colloquial language in Nippon Sei Ko Kai.

http://www.nskk.org/tokyo/data/0107bishop/nenpyo01.htm

Part 2

June, 1994

The second associated prayer service with the Roman Catholic Church takes place at St. Ignatius Catholic Church in Tokyo Archdiocese.

May, 1998

The general conference of Nippon Sei Ko Kai is held at the hall of St. Andrew Church, Bishop John Takeda is selected to the fifteenth Presiding Bishop. Besides, The proposition on the imposition of woman to priesthood is also passed.

November 27, 1998

The imposition in which Deacon Shigeko Yamano and Taduru Sasamori are invested to priesthood is announced.

December 12, 1998

In Chubu Diocese, Rev. Ryoko Shibukawa becomes the first woman priest of Nippon Sei Ko Kai. Bishop John Takeda is a preacher.

January 6, 1999

As announced, There are the first woman priests in Tokyo Diocese. Bishop John Takeda presides and Priest Tsukada Osamu preaches. Bishop Robert Ihloff of Maryland Diocese, the persons involved with Seoul Diocese and Bishop elect Isoarashi ... about five hundreds of people attend and bless them.

June 8, 2000

The third associated prayer service between Anglicans and Catholics is held at St. Ignatius Catholic Church using a jointly translated prayer "Our Father".

http://www.nskk.org/tokyo/data/0107bishop/nenpyo02.htm

Sep 25, 2009

Anglicans Held a Ceremony at the Catholic Cathedral in Tokyo






The Nippon Sei Ko Kai, the Anglican Communion in Japan celebrated its 150th Anniversary at St. Mary Catholic Cathedral of Tokyo Archdiocese on September 23, 2009.

All bishops of Nippon Sei Ko Kai, Rev. Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury and Rev. Katherine Jefferts Schori, the Primate of the Episcopalian Church in the United States came to this event as well as bishops in the other countries and areas including Australia, Canada, Burma, Hong Kong, and Korea.

It was very disturbing to see these bishops cerebrating the Communion at the Catholic Cathedral. Since the Pope Leo XIII issued the encyclical "Apostolicae Curae et Caritatis", the ordinations in the Anglican Church have been recognized as invalid. Moreover, the Episcopalian Church in the United States now supports abortion and homosexuality and its Primate is a former Catholic, to say more precisely, an apostate.

The trend in Nippon Sei Ko Kai is very similar to those in other liberal Anglican Churches. In some diocese, there are woman priests and the Anglican bishops are generous to homosexuality.

There was no announcement or information at all from Tokyo Archdiocese about this ceremony. I learned this for the first time about a few months ago on the website "CHRISTIAN TODAY" in Japanese. It is very mean to hide Catholics the fact that Anglicans use the Catholic Cathedral for their own purpose.

During the ceremony, there was a time for introduction of guest including two Catholic clergies who is very eager to ecumenical activities with Anglicans. Both the Archbishop and the Auxiliary Bishop of Tokyo Archdiocese did not attend perhaps to avoid criticism.

The Catholic Church in Japan is recently very cooperative with Anglicans in liturgical "reforms". For example, Both Catholics and Anglicans now use the same form of "Our father". Bishops and priests are more and more acting as if there were no difference between them.  

The Immaculate Heart of Mary, pray for us.