Here’s one I prepared earlier. Our youngest son is moving out tomorrow and it’s been busy!
I've mentioned before that I write 11 prayer letters a year. I've been writing them since October 1998, so it's gotten to be a habit. The way that I manage to churn out so many is by using a template, and by making it in a newspaper-type format. Here's an example from five years ago. There are "regular" sections that I just fill in each time, like a calendar; a prayer list; a "on the home front" with personal news; and CAJ corner, which David writes about the school and his work.
But when we're in Australia we change up the "CAJ corner" to something else. This time it's become "Question corner" where we answer good questions people ask us (or questions we wish people would ask us!). Here are some we've featured:
Japanese BBQ we use while camping |
• What’s something funny that happened to you in Japan?
• Tell me something you love about Japan.
• How is the Japanese church doing post-COVID?
• What’s a small thing that brings you joy in Japan?
• What’s the climate like in Tokyo?
• Tell me about a regular day for you in your work in Japan.
• Are Japanese people worried about the political situation in the region?
• What do you do to relax in Japan?
• We’ve heard you love to camp there, tell us about camping in Japan.
Fertility rates in wealthy countries around the world are dropping. Japan’s is the fourth lowest in the world. Pair that with proportionately the oldest population in the world (29.2% over 65 years of age) and you’ve got population shrinkage.
There are many cultural factors to this situation, including an education system that demands a lot of parents, especially mothers; low childcare support; and a nation that works hard and sleeps little, so there’s often little time or energy to find partners. A recent survey also revealed that around 50% of unmarried adults under 30 don’t want children. And Japan also accepts few immigrants, though there are pushes to change this, it probably won’t change quickly.
Japanese people are concerned about the future of their country. Pray that they’ll find hope in God.
Why go with a mission organisation?
We’ve been greatly blessed by being members of OMF International. Here are a few reasons why:
- OMF has provided so much on-the-ground support in Japan and in Australia. They’ve helped us when we’ve had medical needs, provided fellowship vital to longevity, guided us in important decisions, provided professional development, admin support, and language training. They also sponsor our visas and have helped us find housing.
- The local knowledge and experience that they’ve got as an organisation helped us get to Japan and settle there in ministry.
- They’ve provided us with a means to get the money people have given towards our support in Japan, in a way that doesn’t look like international money laundering.
- They’ve got a much wider platform in Australia than we have personally, enabling us to develop a wider prayer and financial support team that would otherwise be possible, but also to tell more people about the needs in Japan.
- They’ve supported us through challenges with our sons in recent years and given us much grace to do our best to support our kids, even when that meant taking time off.
- Possibly the most important thing to us is that being members of OMF means we feel part of a greater whole—a body that is working together to reach Japan for Christ. That sense of purpose, and of working together with others is very important to us.
- Read about mission: biographies, social media, etc.
- Connect with a missionary and pray for them regularly
- Find others who are like-minded about cross-cultural mission and spend time with them.
- Find ways to serve others where you are: in your church, and in other ways too, like with AFES.
- Get cross-cultural (where you are, or on short-term trips overseas)
- Study Scripture
- Learn language/s
- Evangelize
- Be uncomfortable
- Live with less
- Pray more
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