Japan Newsletter, Feb 27, 2011


Hey friends!
It's hard to believe only a month has gone by since I spoke to you last. My first month here has been a very eventful one. My schoolwork load has been a lot larger than I remember college being. It is very rarely that I have had any time to myself. I spoke with those who are coming from the Murrita campus have said that the work load in the states is a lot less, that this is a extremely intensely training oriented campus. This makes me very excited for my two years that I am going to spend here. Intense training is exactly what I am looking for here. I can't wait for what lies ahead of me.
However, don't let my description mislead you. My activities here are not confined to study alone. As I have said previously, there are four different churches connected with the college here. They placed us into teams of four people and will be rotating us to a new church every month to serve in anyway we can. For this month I was placed in Calvary Chapel Okinawa. This church, for the most part, is for the most part consistent of military personnel and their families. Very close to the church, there is a fairly large army base and as such, most believers from that army base come to CCO. Funny how God works, I come all the way to Okinawa and end up ministering to Americans ^_~. But, one thing I have learned here so far is that you have to let God define your ministry. If you go into His work with a bunch of expectations, things you feel are your ministry and close yourself off to other areas, you can miss what God is trying to do. It's kind of like Elijah. He comes on the scene out of no where, right in to the presence of the King, telling him the word of God. But then, God tells him to sit by a river and be fed by birds, and after that he was sent to the house of one widow to work the miracle of the oil and flour... From working with the King, to chilling by a river, to ministering to one widow... The work God wants us to do can change dramatically in a very short time, and we have to keep up with it without letting our own preconceptions get in the way. And this is true, because half way through the month, after not using a word of Japanese at that church, suddenly a whole English class of non-christian Japanese students walk in to practice their english and my ministry changed again. God is awesome in that way.
Actually there are quite a few non christian Japanese people at both the church there and here in Calvary Chapel Ginowan (the church attached to this bible college). But here in Ginowan, they are of a slightly different variety. The unsaved that come here are mostly from TEEN CHALLENGE. It is a christian organization that was started in America, and, unbeknownst to me, is very active in Japan as well that works with rehabilitating alcoholics, drug users, and ex cons. Most of them are from the mainland. And actually, most lived very close to were I lived in Tokyo before they came here to be put into rehabilitation. They are interesting to talk to, and we have had some good conversations so far. Please pray for the work of the organization and my and my fellow students role in ministering to them.
Thank you all for praying for my culture shock as well. It took me a bit of time to get used to the culture here, but God has been helping me quite a bit. One thing that really helped is that most of the Japanese bible college students here are from the mainland. Nobody from Tokyo, but there are people from the Kanagawa prefecture and from Osaka. Being able to talk and be with them along with the Okinawan Japanese at the same time helped me to better understand the difference in language and culture by comparison. It helped me to understand how they differ in there interactions with people. One thing I learned quickly when comparing them is that Okinawan Japanese are so very upfront with there feelings, opinions, and emotional states. In fact, I don't think I have run into a culture more predisposed to wearing their heart on their sleeve. Coming from the mainland Japanese culture were everything is subtext and implied meaning behind what is actually said, I understand completely why I was so dumbfounded when I first got here. I was expecting to be interacting with Japanese people. But this is so different. The more time I spend here the more I realize that this is not really Japan. This is Okinawa. Though this is all considered Japan, these are two different peoples sharing a common language. As different as America and England connected only by words. And the history I have been able to see so far is supportive of this idea. During the war, Japan saw this as a place to control, a good access point for the rest of Asia, but not their own country. They saw the okinawans as less than themselves. And truthfully the okinawans saw the Japanese as much as a invader as a ally by the end of the war and welcomed the liberation the Americans provided for a time. Anyway, I don't want to go all history nerd on you. I am just saying that through the history God gave me insight into the culture I will now be serving in ^_^. Praise Him all the earth.
Anyway, great talking with you guys. Miss you a bunch and am praying for you. I am going to keep trying with the video Blog. I haven't had time to shoot much video so far, but I will try to get into the pace of doing so. Sorry for that.

Much love,
Alex

japan Newsletter, Jan 2011 part 2

Hey guys, I am back.

Now, where was I? Oh, yes! Okinawan culture. Anyway, during my time in Tokyo, there was always a certain pace I had when I was speaking with people in Japanese. I guess I could equate it to the sound of a machine gun. Always very quick, few breaks in speaking, and all with very similar intonation. RATATATTTTATTTATATA. But here it is totally different. It is ironic that Okinawa is a small island surrounded by water, because Okinawan Japanese sounds a lot like waves to me. Slow, broken pace, with intonation going up and down. UP UP UP... UP DOWN DOWN ... DOWN UP UP... It really throws me off. And along with the pace of speech, the pace of life seems to follow a similar pattern. I very used to the go go go of Tokyo. My ministry, my time with friends, everything seemed very fast, always a ton of things to do and get done. At first it was a little challenging but at some point I came to like it. But here, things are ssssoooooooo sssslllloooooooowwwwwwwwww. It's kinda frustrating some times. I wanna be doing and running but we often are waiting and strolling. But, then again, the reason I came here was to grow. And patience is a quality that will be forced to grow here.

Oh, and please don't miss understand my description of Okinawa. I have thoroughly enjoyed my time here so far. The students and teachers here seem like really great people. The presence of the holy spirit is very strong here and very moving. I am very much looking forward to my schooling and ministry here. I have been begun to study and learn about 1,2,3 Peter lately. In 2 Peter 1, he speaks a lot about the knowledge of God and growth. "Grace and peace be yours through the knowledge of God and Jesus our Lord." (1:2) "His divine power has given us everything we need for life and godliness through our knowledge of Him who called us by His own glory and goodness." (1:3) "... make every effort to add to your faith, goodness; and to goodness, knowledge; and to knowledge, self control; and to self control, perseverance; and to perseverance, godliness; and to godliness, brotherly kindness; and to brotherly kindness, love. For if you posses these qualities in increasing measure, they will keep you from being ineffective and unproductive in your knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ." (1: 5-8)

It was very convicting for me. I realized how desperately I need to grow in my knowledge of God. That my grace and peace, everything I need for life and godliness comes through this knowledge. That I desire to serve Him in this country as effectively and productively as I possibly can. So I need to run after knowing more of him and growing to be like Jesus by grace.
I truly believe that this will occur in my time here and I am so excited to see how He will change me in this time. It is so exciting!!!

Anyway, I love you all and pray that you would be blessed and that you would grow in your knowledge of Him and through it grace and peace would be yours in abundance.


Much love through Him,
Alex ><>

Japan Newsletter, Jan 2011

Dear Friends,
It is good to be writing you all again. I have good news to report. My time in Toyko was wonderful. I was able to reconnect with many people during my time there, both christian friends and people I have ministered to in the past. I was able to see all of the shine kids from Setagaya again. I put on a little christmas program, during which I was able to share about Jesus and His love for them. Actually it was really cool. I remember asking why we celebrate christmas, and my youngest student, little Ayu, stood up and said "イエスのうまれたときです." (it's when Jesus was born). It is so beautiful the way God works and how he grows the seeds He has us plant. When I met the Shine kids, none had even heard of Jesus. I felt like crying. Please pray for the hearts of those children, that God would continue to grow the seeds planted and continue to draw them to himself. It doesn't matter if I am there or not. He is always faithful, and His love for them is sovereign. Praise Him.

Also, I was able to teach again at the church in Machida and Setagaya before I left. Jeremiah was away in kagoshima, scouting out the land for the church plant he has been lead to do there (Please pray for him in this. He is leaving later this year), and asked me to lead the bible study and give the message while he was gone. It was a powerful experience for me and I praise God for allowing me to do so. Hopefully, the message will be posted online pretty soon on the church's homepage. I will tell you when it is up.

I got some video from my time in Tokyo, but it is not much and it is kinda random. I will probably be able to put it up soon, but it is not very good. I am still in the learning process about when to film and when not to.

Anyway, on the 27th, I flew out to Okinawa! I am now settled into the dorm and orientation is on monday. Please pray for me. I know it is weird to say, however I am experiencing a pretty good amount of culture shock. The culture and atmosphere of this island is very different from what I have become used to in tokyo. The way people talk and relate to one another is something that will require a fair amount of adaptation. Luckily, the okinawan accent has not caused me too much trouble, but the way they think is alot different and the pace is strange to me as well. I'll have to explain later. We are going to be eating lunch soon and have to go.

Anway, I'll do a part 2 soon.

Much love,
Alex

Back In Japan

Hey everyone!

I am very happy to report to you all that I am back in Japan and have arrived safely in Tokyo even though the airline gave me a little misinformation and I arrived not at 10:3o am but instead at 10:30 pm causing me to sprint with my suitcases to the bus stop to catch the last bus to Machida which arrived at that location at 1 am. But that is beside the point ^_^. The point is that I am now here. And as such, the time has come to figure out all that is going to be happening while I am here. I am very much looking forward to my time here in tokyo. As soon as I arrived I sat down with the staff here and have a lot of great stuff for me to do while I am here. The christmas season is a great time to outreach to friends and family for the Japanese people and as such there are a ton of events that I have been asked to be a part of during my stay. Already, I got to help out at the ladies elegant christmas women's outreach which was a great time with a great turn out. A good portion of the people there had never even been to a church before. So we praise God for the seeds He allowed us to plant and continue to pray for the growth of them.

Anyway, there will be a lot of these type of events and I will report on them as they come. On a side note though... all this fun without time for recovery from jetlag has left me with a bad cold, so if you could please pray for me to recover quickly as I am going to be baking countless cookies for our christmas children's outreach in Machida and Setagaya on Friday and this being wednesday and I still feel really bad... I am a bit worried. So your prayers would be appreciated.

Lastly, I am going to be changing up the format of my communication with you all back in America a bit. I really do like the monthly blogs that I put up on this web page as a way of giving you a linear picture of all that is happening here. However, words, no matter how much I love them, have the tendency of being a little impersonal. I mean, if communication is 70% how you look when you say something, 20% how you sound, I am only communicating within the limited remaining 10%. And that is a problem. I found it a problem with my prayer team as well and as such I create a vlog (a video blog) for them. So, starting from now I am going to create a vlog for you all. Whereas the written blog will be a linear condensed version of the month, the vlog will be a none linear compilation of fragments and portions of my time here, (ministries, activities, everyday life, etc...). I have not set up the vlog yet, so please be patient with me, but hopefully it will be up by the end of the month with this month's video and at that time, I will get the name of the site to you guys.

Anyway, that is all for now. I love you guys and want to thank you guys for being a part of my refreshment and encouragement while I was back in America. The time there was amazing. When I first got to America, I started into the book of Ezekiel which was pretty evident if you heard me when I spoke at CC Sonora. My journey though the book was a very powerful one for me, dealing with the sovereignty of God over all things, including me and all that happens to me. And at the end, God encouraged me with His vision for Japan. There have been many times in Japan that I have felt so very dry. Though there are about million people in Japan that know Jesus, the vast majority of the country doesn't and as such it tends to feel sometimes like you are walking through and endless desert wilderness filled with the dead. As such, because of my lack of faith or possibly my forgetfulness of all the God has done, I would lose hope from time to time. But then I get towards the end of the book and I read this,

(Ezekiel 37:1-10) "The hand of the LORD was upon me, and carried me out in the spirit of the LORD, and set me down in the midst of the valley which [was] full of bones. And caused me to pass by them round about: and, behold, [there were] very many in the open valley; and, lo, [they were] very dry. And he said unto me, Son of man, can these bones live? And I answered, O Lord GOD, thou knowest. Again he said unto me, Prophesy upon these bones, and say unto them, O ye dry bones, hear the word of the LORD.Thus saith the Lord GOD unto these bones; Behold, I will cause breath to enter into you, and ye shall live: And I will lay sinews upon you, and will bring up flesh upon you, and cover you with skin, and put breath in you, and ye shall live; and ye shall know that I [am] the LORD. So I prophesied as I was commanded: and as I prophesied, there was a noise, and behold a shaking, and the bones came together, bone to his bone. And when I beheld, lo, the sinews and the flesh came up upon them, and the skin covered them above: but [there was] no breath in them. Then said he unto me, Prophesy unto the wind, prophesy, son of man, and say to the wind, Thus saith the Lord GOD; Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live. o I prophesied as he commanded me, and the breath came into them, and they lived, and stood up upon their feet, an exceeding great army."


Now I fully understand that the Lord was speaking of the house of Israel in this passage. However. I know that what God can do for one people, he ca do for another. That he loves Japan as much as much as America as much as Israel as much as ... etc... And I know that the description given by God in Romans 4:7 is just as true today as when it was written that He is the "God who gives life to the dead and calls things that are not as though they were." I truly believe this is the will of God for this country. The dead will live in Japan and those that are not ( like me - a sinner) as though they were (a holy priesthood) in this country. I can't wait ^_^!

Alex


Coming Home!!


Dear friends,
This is Alex again writing you at the very end of what was a whirlwind of a summer. Alot of great things happened. God was as always at working in so many different ways. Whether it was in the Wednesday Night Bible study I was allowed to lead during the summer, or the shine kids special event in Setagaya, or when I was asked to give messages at the various services, or the new music outreach that was started, or the growth of the other ministries here, it all was blessed by God.

I would like to tell you all about it in more detail in this letter, but I am not going to. Because I would rather tell you all in person. That's right, I am going to be coming home!! I was preparing for my journey to my new location in Okinawa. However, I recieved a call from my family two weeks ago that they are going to be selling my family home and require my help in the process. Not the best of excuses to come back to America, but hey, I have been missing you all so very much and look forward to the opportunity that this will give me to spend time with you all ^_^!

So here are my plans. I am going to be returning to America on the 2nd of September. I will be spending roughly four months with my family and with you all. Then I will be flying back to Tokyo for the month of December to finish all the paperwork I need to change locations. And finally will be heading out to the Bible college and the location of my new ministry on December 31. I would relish your prayers in all these endevours and am grateful for your prayers thus far. They got me through quite a full summer.

So, my friends. I will see you two Sundays from now. I love you all so much and can't wait to be able to fellowship with my brothers and sisters from Sonora again.

Yours in our Lord with all sincerity,
Alex J. Robinson ><>

Photos


Dear Friends,
Up to this point I have been loading all the photo's from my time here onto my facebook account. However several of my friends who do not use facebook have asked me to start a gallery in another location that they could have access. Therefore, I have started a flickr account for just this reason. I have uploaded alot of recent photos there with prayer requests in the desriptions beneath the photos. Sort of a photo prayer journal if you will. Anyway please check out the site. It's http://www.flickr.com/photos/holdingoutlove/. Because flickr allows only a limited amount of photos to be uploaded every month, I will continue to post new pictures monthly as I work my way through my photo library.

Thanks,
Alex

Japan Newsletter - May 31, 2010


Dear friends,

I am sorry for this time of silence from me. It was a difficult time for me for a while. I was really struggling with God about something and alot of work had to be done in my heart before I could finally be brought to a place of submission before Him about it. And now that I am on the other side of all this, I really want to share what has been happening with you all.

For the last few months, I have been searching for God's will about my ministry in this country. Up to this point, I have been serving in the ministries that others have been called to. It has been an amazing experience for me to help with those ministries, and God has done alot of work through it. But I still have been thirsty for God's specific purpose for me here, the reason He brought me to Japan. So I went to the bible in search of God's answer for me. In my searching of the scriptures, God lead me to Luke 2: 41-52. There we read about Jesus' visit to the temple as a young man. We aren't really given alot of information about Jesus before the beginning of His ministry. We know about His birth, his infant blessing at the temple, and this second time He went to the temple when He was about twelve of thirteen. The time in Jewish culture when the boy became a man. And we find Him in this time doing what? Asking questions and listening the the answers, studying the scriptures. And then verse 52 sums up the next eighteen years of His Life by saying "Jesus increased in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and Men". For eighteen years. And then I started to understand. He was preparing for His ministry. Increasing in Wisdom, growing in favor with God and His relationship to the Father. For a ministry that lasted three years Jesus prepared and equipped Himself for eighteen. In that time, God spoke to me. He made me to understand that He had a ministry for me in the future and that this was not a time for me to wait for it but a time for me to be equipped for it. And that I could not be prepared for it in this place. In that time He told me that I needed to go to bible college. More specifically to the Calvary Chapel Bible College in Okinawa, Japan. There I could study the bible, study Japanese, be discipled, and be given the opportunity maintain the ministry towards the Japanese people to whom I feel called.

But at the time I rebeled against the idea. I was angry with God. He had brought me out of my home and away from my family and placed me here. And now that this place had become my home and this church body my family, He wanted me to leave. So I ignored Him and tried not to think about it. But everyday, God was working in my heart and finally brought me to a place of submission to Him again. I said to Him that I would listen. But I asked Him for a sign. Then, about a week ago, Pastor Hirano here at the church told me that if I was looking for my life's ministry here in Japan, I needed to build up my foundations, and he said that I couldn't find what I needed here at this church. Then the same day, without knowing what Hirano had said. Jeremiah had coffee with me and told me that three months ago, He had been thinking about me and what I would do when He leaves here and heads to Kagoshima and praying, and God brought Okinawa to his mind.

I feel like I understand God's heart for me now. I have dedicated myself to being His tool in this country for the rest of my life. But I am still a dull and crude tool. I want to be sharpened. I want to be refined. I want be of the most use that I can be to Him in this place. I want to be equipped for my ministry. And I feel as though the bible college there is the best for me and what God wants for me. So, God willing, I wish to start there this September. I have already contacted the director of the school, Pastor Tommy Ruiz, (who I have served with previously for a short time) and he said that they will be pleased to have me and sent me the application.

Also I have spoken to the missions board there, and they are supportive as well about this new direction of my ministry. It is deffinately going to be a different place to minister in. The culture of Tokyo and Okinawa is very different. Almost like comparing New York to Hawaii. But I hear the people are kind and like to talk alot so it feels like it is going to be an interesting place to minister, outreach, and learn. Please be praying for me about the langauge situation though. I have, through the grace of God, become fairly good at speaking Japanese here in Tokyo. But, even though what I am learning is the national dialect that everyone all over Japan understands, it is not the dialect that is spoken all over Japan. Don't get me wrong, it is not like China or India in which every region has practically a different language. But every prefecture is just a little different in how they express themselves, and for someone to whom Japanese is a second langauge it can be difficult. Like someone learning english in California and then going to Texas. So please be praying for me. But I am not too worried. God provided for my language abilities here and I know He will continue to bless me where He is leading.

So anyway, I will be heading down to Okinawa at the end of August this year. I thank you all for your support and prayers during this amazing chapter of my ministry here in Tokyo. I look forward to continuing in service along with you all in this new and exciting chapter that is to come on the island of Okinawa. Please continue to pray for the country of Japan. That the seeds being planted by the believers here would yield a bountiful harvest through the work of the Holy Spirit here.

Yours in our Lord with all sincerity,
Alex J. Robinson ><>