Women’s Missionary Society
Did you know that WELCA began as the Women’s Missionary Society? Our original purpose was to support our missionaries overseas. In fact, when my mom, Mary Wood Meynardie, was a young missionary to Japan, this Lutheran group of SC women had a special project where you could become a missionary for a day by contributing $5. It was proposed and headed by two women, Mrs. John Moose, wife of a Lutheran Seminary professor and Mrs. Carl Kinard, wife of the president of our synod. That paid for Mom’s salary. It was a successful project generating enough money to pay for Mom’s salary for a good long time. Several circles in SC churches even named themselves Mary Wood circles. A few still exist today.
This evening at 7:00 PM our current missionaries to Japan will be visiting our church! Pastor Sarah Hinlicky Wilson and Dr. Andrew Wilson will talk with us about their work in Tokyo. Here is an excerpt from an interview with Pastor Sarah.
LF: What, if anything, have you found to be most similar about serving in ministry in Japan compared to the United States? And what makes Japan and the United States most different for pastoral ministry?
SHW: No war is pretty, nor subsequent occupation, but the U.S. occupation of Japan was, historically speaking, one of the least terrible and most constructive (which, frankly, was the least we owed them after two nuclear bombs). The Japanese could hardly believe that their conquerors rebuilt their economy and helped them write a modern democratic constitution. As a result, postwar Japan is strikingly like the U.S. in many ways, though it’s a mixed bag. It’s consumerist and media-saturated, but by world standards incredibly safe… not a bad place to raise a teenage boy.
On the other hand, the one thing that the Japanese really didn’t accept from their American conquerors was their religion. Japan is the only country in Asia whose Christian population (already tiny at 1%) is declining instead of growing. The church is doing better in China, Myanmar, and Bangladesh than in Japan, despite the guaranteed political freedom of religion. It’s really a puzzle. Generations of foreign missionaries and indigenous Japanese Christians alike have tried to crack the resistance to the gospel here, but have arrived at no conclusive explanation or strategy to overcome it.
That sounds bleak, but it has an upside. I’ve never been in a place where people were happier to go to church. No one here is in a Sunday service by accident. They want God in their lives badly and are starving for a good word in their lives. I had a pretty rough first call in an “old Christendom” setting in the U.S. I can’t believe how different my current call is. It’s become, against all my expectation, a source of incredible joy and delight.