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.