letter from Japan
The sudden death and funeral of Mrs S.
Last month, I spent an hour watching a body being prepared for its coffin. It was our oldest church member, Mrs S., who had died suddenly the previous week.
Her body was discreetly washed, her face made up, her hair styled and her favourite clothes put on. Her daughter told me she was glad to have someone who had known her mother there with her to watch and help.
letter from Japan
‘Does Jesus really love me?’
Last week, Mr. A asked me, ‘Does Jesus really love me? The voices in my head tell me that he doesn’t.’
He first got in touch with our church a couple of years ago, asking ‘Does the church help suffering people?’ He has schizophrenia and for most of his life has been hearing voices, sometimes telling him to commit murder, sometimes that he is useless, sometimes that there is no hope for him. Readers familiar with mental health issues will know that these voices often feel authoritative and compelling to the sufferer. The medicine he is on wasn’t helping him much and he got in touch with the church because he had been wondering if he is demon-possessed.
letter from Japan
Mystery of the missing resurrection
‘I’ll definitely come. I love Easter!’ said one girl as we were distributing fliers for our evangelistic Easter service outside a primary school.
Easter is barely known here in Japan, though a few years ago Disneyland Tokyo started an Easter celebration, and chocolate eggs have started appearing in shops. Until last year, only one or two non-Christians would come to our Easter service, but last year we had 20, and though the aforementioned girl didn’t come, this year 30 people came and heard about the resurrected Saviour.