From
rural New Holland to Sapporo, Japan
Teaching
English can open doors
[APRIL
4, 2000] Six
years ago she was the April Student of the Month at Lincoln
Community High School. This April, her plans are to return to
teaching English in Japan after a spring break at home. Barbara
Worthington, a daughter of Bruce and Beverly Worthington of rural
New Holland, is more than halfway through a 30-month Volunteer Youth
Ministry commitment. At a presentation Thursday evening, March 30,
at Zion Lutheran Church in New Holland, she talked about her work in
Japan and the culture there.
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About
30 people attended¾from
kindergarten to retirees¾and
had an opportunity to ask questions after she spoke to the group.
Sharon Tibbs presented her with a bouquet from the Concordia
Society, which has kept in touch with her and sent gifts. The women’s
group also served snacks after the presentation, as people lingered
for an hour or so to visit with Barbara and her parents and to look
at her photographs from Japan.
Barbara
also spoke with an interviewer by phone a few days before her
presentation and again in a follow-up conversation, providing
background information.
In
opening remarks, Zion Pastor Mike Kettner reminded the group that
people serve God in their everyday roles and vocations, not just in
missionary work. He noted that people may talk of what a missionary
gives up, but the focus is on Christ, who came to earth to give his
life for people everywhere.
After
graduating from high school in Lincoln, Barbara began studying
nursing at Illinois State University but decided to change her
career plans. She wanted to be able to spend more time loving and
caring for people and speaking of her Christian faith. She moved on
to Concordia University in River Forest, where she earned a degree
in theology. It was at Concordia that she decided she wanted to work
as a missionary in Japan. "I met a sweet Japanese girl who told
me about Japanese culture, and I became very interested in other
cultures, particularly Japan," she explains.
About
a year later, with graduation approaching, she met a recruiter for
the Volunteer Youth Ministry program and decided to join. She
interviewed for the program in April of 1998, and had two weeks of
training in the summer. She then completed two additional weeks of
training in Portland, Ore., in the fall before leaving for Japan with six
other volunteers in October.
[Yamanote Lutheran Church in Sapporo]
She
studied Japanese for six months in Tokyo. Then she began her work in
Sapporo on the northern island of Hokkaido. She is associated with
Yamanote Church there and is the only person from VYM on that
island, though there are about 14 other teaching sites in Japan.
VYM
is a Board of Missions program of the Lutheran Church-Missouri
Synod. A typical VYM candidate is a recent graduate of a college
bachelor’s degree program, no older than 30, and a Christian. The
admission process for the program includes an evaluation of the
candidate’s personality and their Biblical beliefs. The volunteers
serve 2½-year commitments in Japan or Taiwan. According to Barbara,
eight people are leaving Japan this year as they finish their
commitment, and four people came in as new volunteers.
"My
main purpose is teaching English," Barbara says. "I teach
one day at a Christian Center downtown, another day at a junior
college and three other days at the church." She teaches all
ages¾7-
to 77-years-old¾and
also leads English worship once a month and Bible study once a
month. She explains that with some of her adult classes, "We
have five minutes of Bible study at the end of class…and, of
course, I like to talk to my students anytime about God, and about
Jesus." Her students’ payments for the English classes are
channeled through her church and VYM to provide her with a stipend
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[Barbara with students]
Her
adult classes are usually a little more than an hour, and the
children have one-hour classes. With her adult students, she may ask,
"How are you? How was your weekend?" Then she listens and
corrects their grammar. They also use a textbook. With the children,
"We go ‘A-B-C-D-E-F-G,’" she says, laughing. The
children also practice words for time, days of the week, months and
easy conversation. "I have everything from very slow, ‘Hello.
How are you?’ to a class where the students have a bigger English
vocabulary than I do because they’re professional business
people."
She
continues to study Japanese, attending a Japanese conversation class
every Tuesday. "As a missionary, I hope to use it to help
people and my students who don’t use English. I heard it takes
seven years to become fluent in Japanese," she explains.
Barbara
finds that Japanese culture is religious, though a Japanese person
might not think so. "They’re very into church, but it’s
more culture and ritual than feeling and faith. Everyone says they
are Buddhists, but it’s more superstition and obligation. They don’t
understand Buddhism. They go to the temple and buy charms in order
to protect themselves. They don’t believe in these charms, but ‘it
is better to do these things than to maybe have an accident,’"
she says. The charms are decorative wooden pieces¾
"rather pretty"; sometimes with streamers and bells¾to
match the year, such as the current year of the dragon.
She
says there are challenges faced by Japanese people who are
interested in becoming Christians. They may become outcasts from
their family because, according to Buddhist beliefs, a person would
have to remain Buddhist in order to join the relatives at death. A
Christian would be separated from the Buddhist world, disrupting the
harmony with ancestors. "The cultural norm of harmony and unity
is broken by being Christian in the family and society, because
Christianity is not the norm," she explains.
[Barbara poses with students participating in
an
English/Japanese Christmas play]
Barbara
feels that her work in Japan has had many pluses. "I met so
many wonderful, loving, supportive people. I'm learning a different
culture and a different language. I’m serving God. I’m learning
independence also. I guess the negative would be that in my
independence I feel lonely sometimes. The language is a challenge
also. The culture makes witnessing difficult with the Japanese
people. The culture affects their view of God and understanding of
the Gospel."
When
Barbara left Japan this time, there was still snow on the ground¾"about
two feet," she said. The warm spring weather in Illinois was a
big change, but certainly not the first for someone who grew up on a
New Holland farm, attended high school in Lincoln, studied nursing
at ISU, moved on to earn a degree in theology in River Forest, and
now works as an English teacher and missionary in Sapporo, Japan.
[Mary
Krallmann]
[Acknowledgements
to Illinois Relay Center agents 9778 and 6315 for their real-time
typed transcriptions of Barbara’s responses in telephone
interviews, which formed the basis for much of this article.] |
|
Holy
Resurrection Church
Believing
in hard work, holiness and helping others—the Orthodox way
[MARCH
31, 2000] Physically,
it takes only a few seconds and a few steps to move from the
sidewalk at 207 Pekin St. in Lincoln into the sanctuary of Holy
Resurrection Church. But on another level, those few steps take you
out of this world into an encounter with spiritual images and values
that span the centuries. According to the worshippers at Holy
Resurrection, to enter this place is to enter into the presence of
the Divine. |
There
is a conscious effort to involve all the senses in worship—there
is the pungent aroma of air fragrant with incense; shimmering
crosses and icons (pictures of the saints and of Christ); and sounds
of music, of the chanted liturgy, and of the tiny bells on the
incensor. There is the physical movement of worshippers crossing
themselves and reverently bowing before the Scriptures and altar and
a procession of the Gospels around the sanctuary with venerating the
cross by gently kissing it to complete the worship service. All of
these experiences transport the worshipper away from the profane to
the profound.
The
worship and community of Holy Resurrection Church are rooted in
historic Orthodox traditions. According to Bishop Bill Blythe, one
of the founding leaders of the congregation, Holy Resurrection seeks
to live out what has been believed and practiced "everywhere,
always and by all" Christians. The spiritual purpose of Holy
Resurrection is very clear. When asked about the role of the church
Lisa Woods stated firmly and succinctly, "The church is for
worship." She noted that entire families worship together on
Sunday mornings and at vesper services weekday afternoons at 5:30
p.m. There are no Sunday school classes or junior worship services
for young people. Several members noted that in some churches these
classes and activities often move far afield from the true worship
of God.
[Holy Resurrection Church located at 207 Pekin Street
in Lincoln]
Indeed,
it was striking to observe during services I attended on March 26
that the entire worship time was directed toward God and Christ. The
Divine Liturgy, which provides the framework for the service, is a
classic synthesis of prayer and praise interwoven with credal
statements reaffirming orthodox doctrines. Special praise and honor
are offered to the Virgin Mary and to the saints. Father Keith
Wilkerson, assisted by Father Dave Klug, chanted the liturgy with
responses by the congregation. It was clear that the heart of the
worship service was the celebration the Eucharist.
According
to longtime member Bob Woods, unlike many churches, the sermon or
homily is not the main focus of worship, it is the Eucharist.
Everything that is done and said points to the Eucharist, which
according to the liturgy, is an active reminder of what God has done
through the sacrifice of Christ and His resurrection. Holy
Resurrection Church observes member's Eucharist for those who are in
both spiritual and doctrinal agreement with the congregation. In
both worship and lifestyle, members of Holy Resurrection seek to
emulate and learn from such early church Fathers as John Chrysostom
and Saint Athanasius.
Bob
Wood explained the heroic saints of the faith are worthy of honor
and reflection because "they have run the good race," and
"I know they have fought the good fight, " for the Gospel.
Members take very literally the idea of Hebrews 12:1f. which states
that Christians are surrounded and supported by a "great cloud
of witnesses," by the heroic men and women who in ages past
have lived their faith, and in many cases, died for it. Member Darla
Franklin said she believes the saints are "alive but not
visible" and that they "care for the believers and will
pray for them."
One
of the most distinctive practices of Holy Resurrection Church is the
veneration of the Scriptures, of icons and of the cross. Bishop
Blythe and others carefully noted that these physical objects are
not worshipped—they are venerated or honored within one’s
earthly experience. Only the Holy Trinity of God, His Son Jesus, and
His Holy Spirit are given adoration and worship.
|
Regarding the
veneration of icons, Franklin explained that the pictures of the
saints or the Virgin Mary or Christ are not worshipped any more than
a parent would worship the picture of her child. "Is that
picture a real person? No!" she said. "Does that picture
remind you of one you love? Yes!" she stated. "Might you
gently kiss the picture that reminds you of one you love? Yes!"
This, she affirmed, is the response of Orthodox Christians to these
physical reminders of faith.
The
Holy Resurrection congregation originated as a prayer group begun in
1975, according to Bishop Blythe and Father Wilkerson, one of the
original members and one of the four priests in the church. Other
priests include Father Gil Gandenberger, Father Klug, and Father
Todd Brown. The present church is the outgrowth of that original
prayer group, which became a Bible study, then a fellowship and then
organized as a congregation. Most of the original members and
present leadership were students at Lincoln Christian College and
had personal and spiritual roots in the Restoration Movement.
According
to Bishop Blythe, the church is a very "organic," growing
body. Holy Resurrection has evolved and grown as the church has
undertaken its "spiritual trek." The signpost marking the
way for their spiritual pilgrimage is taken from I Thessalonians
4:11-12a, which says, "This should be your ambition: to live a
quiet life, minding your own business and working with your hands,
just as we commanded you before. As a result people who are not
Christians will respect the way you live."
[Holy Resurrection Church leaders, Father Wilkerson,
Bishop Blythe, Father Brown and Father Klug]
Holy
Resurrection does not use loud, flashy programs or materials to
share the Gospel or to tell about their faith said Bishop Blythe.
Instead, they seek to win others to Christ through "quiet
lives" of holiness, hard work and helping others. Several
members noted the extraordinary care and concern shown by their
church family when someone was in need. As Franklin put it, these
are people committed "to the Lord, to the church, and to each
other."
Many
Christians, not familiar with the Orthodox faith tradition, may find
it foreign or somewhat dated but there has been substantial, growing
interest in Orthodoxy by mainstream Evangelicals. Some notable
evangelicals, including Francis Schaeffer's son Franky, have come to
embrace Orthodoxy. According to Harold O.J. Brown, professor of
theology at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, "The Orthodox
have a tremendous sense of the continuity of the people of
God," and "they have a deep respect for Scripture."
Several other notable evangelical scholars note the attraction of
the restorative reverence and mystery of Orthodoxy to Protestants
tired of the rootless fad and fashion of much modern teaching and
worship. To read more about this rediscovery of classic
Christianity, check several Web articles at http://www.christianityonline.com/
christianhistory/54H/54H044.html.
[John
Welter]
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