Going to Japan with the Governor

Serving as long-term mission volunteers at ARI. Friendship. Farming. Inspiration.

ARI Sunday

ARI was established by the United Church of Christ in Japan (UCCJ). While it is now more ecumenical (one of the participants is Muslim) it retains its Christian character. The ARI community frequents several area churches associated with ARI staff members. Because the Japanese population is about 1% Christian, the churches tend to be small.

The church options.

We have attended three churches so far. The Nishinasuno church is the largest. It is a UCCJ church. The service is bilingual. We call it “Masa’s church” because the ARI Farm Director Masa drives the bus.

Nishinasuno church.

Today was ARI Sunday at Nishinasuno, which means an ARI participant gave the sermon and another gave testimony. The ARI community turned out in support.

ARI Sunday notice.

The church community fed us with a curry lunch after the service.

Nishinasuno church.

The most amusing part was during the closing announcements, where an earnest woman gave the entire congregation instructions, button by button, on how to use the new toilets (she projected on a screen a diagram from the user’s manual). It was funny to listen to Masa translate the instructions into English.

This helpful sign is not from the church, but from our local Starbucks. You get the idea.

The other UCCJ church in the area is the Nasushiobara Church. We call it Jonathan’s church because it is where the ARI staff member serves as a missionary. On Sundays when he attends the service is bilingual.

Nasushiobara church.
Nasushiobara church.
Jonathan playing at church.
Lining up for curry.
The fourth Sunday is Curry Day! Curry is served after church.

The third church is the Otawara Christian Church. It is affiliated with Conservative Baptist Alliance of Japan. It has an English service every week. We call it Uncle Timo’s church because ARI’s chicken wrangler is a leader there.

Otawara Christian Church.

Many of the congregants are alternative-language teachers (ALTs), foreigners who teach their native languages in the Japanese schools. We got a ride to church from Kamika, from Jamaica, who teaches English. Her teenage daughter Neveah is a community volunteer at ARI; she helps on the farm one day a week.


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Comments

One response to “ARI Sunday”

  1. joy977abcbbbe89 Avatar
    joy977abcbbbe89

    Interesting but I’ll confess that I can’t stop thinking about the toilet sign discouraging trying to use it standing up on the bowl … in high heels!? I mean I’d be pretty impressed with anyone who could pull that off, wouldn’t you?

    Sending warmth from chilly Ottawa
    Joy

    Like

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