Friday, August 19, 2011

Takuma Sawabe 沢辺琢磨

Takuma Sawabe, one of the first three Orthodox Christians in Japan, the son of a samurai and son-in-law of a Shinto priest, was a fierce Japanese nationalist. He hated Christianity and all foreign influences in his country.

One day he angrily confronted the Orthodox Christian missionary to Japan, a Russian priest-monk. ‘Why are you angry at me?’ Fr Nicholas asked Sawabe.

‘All you foreigners must die. You have come here to spy on our country and even worse, you are harming Japan with your preaching,’ answered Sawabe.

‘But do you know what I preach?’
‘No, I don’t,’ he answered.

‘Then how can you judge, much less condemn something you know nothing about? Is it just to defame something you do not know? First listen to me, and then judge. If what you hear is bad, then throw us out.’

After listening to Father Nicholas and learning about the Orthodox Christian way of life, the nationalist samurai who had once endorsed Shintoism now believed in Jesus Christ and was baptized, becoming the first person to embrace Orthodox Christianity in Japan. At his baptism, he appropriately received the Christian name Paul, after Saint Paul, one of the Church’s greatest apostles who, before his conversion, had used his authority to violently persecute the Christian Church. Paul Sawabe would eventually be ordained an Orthodox Christian priest.

Father Nicholas, the missionary who taught Paul the Orthodox Christian Faith and baptized him, was later consecrated as bishop and is today known as Saint Nicholas of Japan. Along with language learning, Nicholas studied the culture and history of Japan. He read their mythology and literature, and learned about Confucianism, Shintoism, and Buddhism. He even attended the sermons of popular Buddhist preachers and public storytellers in hopes of understanding the mind of the Japanese. For close to seven years he continued this intense study. Eventually, he became one of the foremost scholars of the Japanese language and went on to translate service and prayer books, catechism books, and the Scripture, as he waited for opportunities of evangelism to open within the country.

Jesus Christ is in Japan. Pray, brethren, for those who follow Him there, to be faithful in gathering as He does, not scattering, and to let Him reveal Himself through them to the whole Japanese people, for the time is close.

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