Episode 89: Knocking On Doors In A Missionary Graveyard: One Missionary's Hope for Japan!
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Japan gets labeled “hard soil” so often that many Christians quietly assume spiritual breakthrough there is rare, slow, and maybe impossible. Sitting down with our friend James, a young missionary serving in Japan, challenges that assumption with both honesty and hope. We talk about his winding story from a childhood of constant moving in a military family to watching God rebuild his parents’ marriage and bring his whole home to faith, shaping the way he trusts God to change what feels unchangeable.
From there, we zoom out to missions strategy and the Bible. Romans 15 becomes our roadmap as we unpack Paul’s ambition to preach where Christ is not known and the idea of “no place left” in a region because the gospel has been fully proclaimed and local churches can carry the work. We connect that to No Place Left training, gospel conversations, disciple making, and the kind of apprenticeship approach that helps ordinary believers move from fear to faithful witness.
Then we get specific about Japan missions and why the barriers are real: Shinto and Buddhism, deep family identity, ancestor veneration, and the weight of honor-shame culture where becoming Christian can feel like betraying your people. And yet, James shares encouraging on-the-ground fruit, including gospel conversation trainings with Japanese churches and 49 baptisms in roughly six months in Okinawa, plus growing boldness to share publicly and even go door to door.
If you care about unreached people groups, Japan missionary work, church planting in Osaka, and gospel saturation that multiplies disciples, you’ll find plenty to pray about and act on here. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves missions, and leave a review, then tell us: what part of Japan’s story surprised you most?
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