
| 3 Waves 3 Walls: Reflections following Japan's Triple Disaster |
|
|
|
| Blogs - From the President | |||
| Written by Joe Handley | |||
| Tuesday, 22 November 2011 22:17 | |||
|
And the walls came a tumblin' down! The last few months I've been listening carefully to pastors from Japan share their reflections post 3/11/11. Their learning is profound because their reflections are deep. As you know, Japan was hit by a triple disaster on March 11, 2011 with three distinct waves:
As many have reflected on the spiritual condition of the country following the disaster, the following themes are surfacing. There are three distinct walls that have fallen:
Finally, the point of greatest reflection: the cross of Christ. As one looks at the pain Jesus bore on Calvary, in human terms one cannot imagine something good resulting. Everything we know of the cross is bad: pain, torture, agony and ultimately death. The same can be said of the tragedy that hit Japan. However, there is an unseen story behind both the cross and the triple disaster in Japan. Hope rises from the ashes as Jesus brought life from his death on the cross. Today millions of people have been helped and influenced by the model of Jesus and countless souls will live for eternity because of His great love for us. So too, Japan's triple disaster is now showing signs of hope and life following the horrible affects of the devastation. As seen in the stories above, churches across Japan and across the world have rallied to be the church and bring new life from mounds of destruction.
Joseph W. Handley, Jr. p.s. - The first photo was taken in Miyagi about 2 weeks after the tsunami hit. The second photo is of Pastor Minegishi and his wife, who left their church in Kesennuma for higher ground just 18 minutes before the wave destroyed their church and home. But the wave didn't destroy the church's cross or their hope.
|
|||
| Last Updated on Saturday, 10 December 2011 04:22 |
go2japan | Asian Access
PO Box 200
San Dimas, CA 91773 USA
tel. (626) 914-8990
web: http://go2japan.org