April Opportunities

May 31 is coming up fast, which is our deadline to reach 50% of our promised monthly support. At the begining of March we were at 27%. By the end of March God brought us all the way to 36% leaving us 14% to go in order to make this deadline. As always we are confident that God will work out His will. If it is for us to go to Japan to serve with SEND within the next year, then we trust He will provide that increase. We’re praying to reach 43% by the end of April, and 50% by the end of May. And there are certainly a lot of opportunities for that to happen! Please be praying for the following:

Prayer Requests

  1. There are 12 families that we are hoping to meet with to give updates about Japan or to share for the first time. Almost all of them have expressed an interest in hearing about what we’re going to be doing, please be praying that we would be able to get appointments to meet with as many of them as possible in April, and all of them by the end of May. Pray that as we share, God will give wisdom to those we share with, and that if He desires them to partner with us He will put it into their hearts and encourage them to do so.
  2. There are also two churches, and one conference of churches that are currently considering supporting us. Please pray for these church leaders, that God would give them discernment, and that He would open up doors for effective partnership between us and these churches.
  3. From April 25 – May 2 we’re going to be visiting Texas, Oklahoma and Chicago to speak with familes and churches in those areas. This will be our first out of state trip, and Titus’ first trip ever. Please pray for safety, endurance, good time’s of fellowship with old friends, and that God would raise up new partners and supporters in these areas.
  4. This week I’m back to working full time for two weeks before we leave for Texas. This means that we have a very full schedule this month, which puts a lot of stress on our family as I’ll be out meeting with people after work on a regular basis, and Tomo will have to take care of Titus. Pray for perseverance and strength from God to get us through these next two months.
  5. NEW – On Sunday, April 22 there is a missions fair at a local church that’s supporting us, and we’re hoping to be able to participate in. Please pray that they’ll allow us to come, even though it’s a bit late, and also that we’ll have many opportunities to share with people at the church. UPDATE: We heard back from the church, we’re officially invited to participate!

As always, we are so very grateful to have your prayers, and your partnership. We’re excited to see what God has done, and even more excited to see what He will do. We’ve been amazed at the reports we’ve been getting from pastors and missionaries serving in Tohoku. God is clearly begining to do something, and we can’t wait to be able to get over there and be a part of it, and know that when God brings us there, you will be a part of it as well!

June Prayer Update

We’ve started a new Facebook Page. If any of you are on Facebook, please click here and Like the page to get updates! Dave and Tomo and Japan: on Facebook!

NOTE: We’ve learned that due to a miscommunication we actually need to raise more support than previously thought in order to attend MOP this Summer. We now need to be up to 50% by July 10. Please see the post above this one for an updated explanation of our situration, and please continue to pray that God will provide.

As always, I want to start by thanking you all for your prayers and support. It’s been a long journey so far, and many of you have been partnering with us since the begning. It is our sincere hope and expectation that one day, Lord willing, Tomo and I will be serving the Church in Japan. In light of all that is happening there now, we hope it will be soon, and invite you to pray with us that God will allow us to go to Japan shortly.

Prayer Requests

1. That God will provide an additional 7.5% of monthly support by the end of June. This is crucial. Unless we get to 40% of monthly support, we will be unable to attend SEND’s Member Orientation Program (MOP) in July, a required training that must be attended before departing for the field. If we do not get up to 40% we will have to wait until next Summer to attend MOP, and consequently push back our departure date till after that. Pray for David as he makes phone calls, and tries to find one person each day to invite to support us. We need one new commitment of $40 a month each day till the end of June to meet this goal.

2.  Pray for Tomo’s pregnancy and health. Tomo has been having a lot of morning sickness throughout most of the pregnancy, and on top of it has just come down with a pretty bad cough. Pray for healing, and that the morning sickness will ease up, and also that she will be able to gain weight, as its been difficult to do so with the nausea she’s been experiencing. Her due date is December 1st, and we’re not sure yet if its going to be a boy or a girl (we both want a boy!).

3. Pray for the outreach that Japanese churches are participating in the disaster areas in northern Japan. We’ve heard a lot of really encouraging stories coming out of there, and it seems as though God is begning to open hearts that were previously closed and unresponsive to the gospel. Pray for people to come to find salvation and hope through Christ Jesus, and that new churches will be planted in those areas.

A Word About Our Departure Date

Many have asked about when we will be going to Japan; we’re considering and praying about three dates. The earliest one would be September 1st. If we are not at 100% by then, we will wait here in America until after our baby is born, and then try to leave sometime in the Spring of 2012, again, if God provides the support. The latest we hope to leave would be late next Summer, 2012. Despite the slow going on the support raising, we still feel God’s calling just as strongly to go to Japan. And if God keeps us here, there seem to be many opportunities to be involved in ministry here that will only give us more experience, which, Lord willing will further prepare us to be effective missionaries in Japan. This entire experience has been very difficult, and yet at the same time we have seen God work in so many ways, and teach us so many things that we have little room to question why He hasn’t hurried things along, or sent us sooner. We’ll go exactly when He wants us to. But we’re praying that if He wills, it be soon!

Due to the rapidly approaching June 30th deadline, and the large impact it will have on our departure plans, I would invite you to please comit to praying each day till the end of June for God to bring us up to 40% of our comitted monthly support. Also, please pray that God would bring to mind someone that you feel would be willing and able to meet with us to hear about our ministry. If He does, please try to connect us. I would be greatly encouraged if you would let me know if you will be praying for us during the next two weeks.

Thank you all, and God Bless!

Dave and Tomo
www.gloryspeaking.com

Key to the Relief Work

This is a disaster relief update from Pastor Yoshiya Kondo in Morioka City, Iwate, in northern Japan.

There are doors that open as we continue our relief work in disaster area.

We have been visiting an elementary school which is one of the evacuation centers twice a week to play with children there. At first, it seemed like they were wondering in suspicion what kind of group we were. But as we kept visiting, they seemed to have gotten familiar with our faces and trusted us, and the person who checks us in now treats us completely differently.

At first: “Sooo, what kind of organization are you guys? …Please make sure you call us before you come.” Last week: “It would be a big help if you can come on this day.” Yesterday: “Please come anytime!”

We promise to the children “We will come again on this day!” when we leave the shelter.

Yesterday, two members joined us from Hokumin (Hokkaido Christian Mission Network) team. (Those coming on a short-term trip, please join.) Those who have been participating from Morioka repeatedly are starting to remember children’s names and their prayers deepening, even though they feel a little frustrated by the distance of 4-hour round trip. This ministry will expand to areas with temporary houses that will be built in the near future. In working in the disaster area, one of the key things has been to continue the relief work patiently as we build trust.

A Childcare Center in Disaster Area

This is a disaster relief update from Pastor Yoshiya Kondo in Morioka city, Iwate, in northern Japan.

A sign in Taro district showing where the time capsule is buried.

A building in the coastal area of Taro district that’s left only with its framework was a “childcare center”. It’s horrifying even to imagine what happened here on March 11, around 3pm… This afternoon, I gathered my courage to ask at the Taro District General Office, “What happened to the children at that childcare center…?”  “The children who were left at the center were all safe” …..! I visited a place where the childcare workers and children are with Pastor Otsuka from Morioka Minami Church and the EMS team from America.

When the siren sounded, the workers took the children, some just woke up from their nap, others still sleeping, to a designated evacuation location. They didn’t go into the building because they were afraid of aftershocks. And as they looked back, they saw a wall of water almost reaching where they stood. The thirteen workers picked up the children frantically and ran and ran… and they saved 37 children. But some of the children who had already been picked up and gone home are gone… They shared with us in tears.

They told us their need was story books and toys that got swept away along with the building. It is such a wonder that the IBF team, which arrived late at night, happened to have brought storybooks. We will deliver these books tomorrow, hoping that there will be smiles on the faces of children and childcare workers as they open up the books even in the midst of such grief.

God’s puzzle

This is an update from Pastor Yoshiya Kondo in Iwate prefecture, Japan, who has been serving and ministering in the disaster area since the tsunami.

The inn we helped cleaning out last week turns out to be a different house than the “house that needed help” that a pastor told us about! So we made a mistake. We then wondered, what was that “Hey!” about then??

Today, I wanted to see the inn keeper again and visited the inn. ME: “How’ve you been?”  INN KEEPER: “Oh!! Thank you! Thank you!” ME: “By the way, we have a little problem. As we keep helping the people in disaster area, it’s hard to drive from Morioka to Miyako every time because it’s so far. So we’re looking for a place where 5 or 10 people can spend some nights, just rolling on the floor is fine.” INN KEEPER: “Oh, yeah, sure, use my inn.” He offered happily on the spot.

Although the lifeline of water and electricity is still cut off, we ensured a shelter from wind and rain. That “Hey!”… The jigsaw puzzle of God’s plan is being put together. (by Pastor Yoshiya Kondo in Morioka city, Iwate)

A Walled Town that was Swept Away

This is a disaster relief update from Pastor Yoshiya Kondo in Morioka city, Iwate, in northern Japan.

In 2005, Taro district was merged into Miyako city. The district was protected by a 10m (32.8ft) high storm surge barrier that ran 2.4km (1.5 mile) along the coast line. It took over 40 years to build it. But what happened to this protected district on that day was….

I parked my car on the highway that penetrates the town from north to south, and looked to the ocean with the mountains on my back. What I saw was the pride of the town, the storm surge barrier. But, nothing else. Not even rubbles of destroyed houses. According to yesterday’s news, on March 11th, the tsunami that hit this town supposedly reached 39m (128ft). The wave that easily overwhelmed the storm surge barrier that people took pride in swallowed up, destroyed, and swept away the buildings, cars, and people. And what is left is a flat wasteland.

The people at the Taro district general office wore an anguished expression. The small town is isolated among the mountains and still has no life line. Even though they know that people are not getting enough relief goods including food and are worried for them, there’s not enough manpower to visit them all. I shared in their concerns and burdens, and will start working in this district starting tomorrow, with a help of Hokumin (Hokkaido Christian Mission Network) team that came to Iwate today.

Soldiers in disaster area

This is an update from Pastor Yoshiya Kondo in Iwate prefecture, Japan, who has been serving and ministering in the disaster area since the tsunami.

Self-Defence Force soldiers cutting food on cutting boards on a school yard we visited today. At this shelter, every meal is prepared by these soldiers. I asked a child as we watched them, “So those are the people who work so hard to make the meals, huh?”  “Yeah, but it’s not very good.”   Oh well, it’s men cooking after all. Go Self-Defense Force! (by Pastor Yoshiya Kondo in Morioka city, Iwate)

Colors in the Grey

This is a disaster relief update from Pastor Yoshiya Kondo in Morioka city, Iwate.

A little earlier, a relief team left the church to go to Miyako city. They will be splitting up into “Clean-Out-the-Houses troop” and “Play-with-Children-in-the-shelter troop” again. I’m going to stay in Morioka today and pray for the teams, prepare for Sunday service tomorrow, and play with my son, which I hadn’t done much of at all in the past 3 weeks. May the Lord’s will be done on earth as it is in heaven.

When I saw the flowers beautifully arranged in the sanctuary on Sunday, it made me realize that my sense of things had not been “normal” since I started visiting the disaster area. I couldn’t move for a while at the sight of bright colored flowers, for I felt like I had seen colors and living things for the first time in a long time. In the last 2 weeks, what occupied my mind was the grey and reddish brown of the rubbles, and the shadows of death towns from which I cannot imagine its previous state.

Now I’m just running around doing the specific works needed right now, but when I stop and think about rebuilding the disaster area, I find it difficult to picture a specific blue print. Where will they build the town? Who’s going to live in it? Who’s going to do the rebuilding? What will happen to the economy of this area now that they lost their main industry, fishery? Is the population going to shrink even more, and economic gap widen as the people have lost their industry and jobs?

In my mind, I dream and pray for the day when flowers will bloom in the town of rubbles like a flower in the grey and make it colorful again. May the Lord who makes way in the desert have mercy on this land.

Things that get washed ashore

This is a disaster update from Pastor Yoshiya Kondo in Morioka city, Iwate, whose coastal towns were hit by tsunami.

Train Yamada line whose rail fell into the water along with the bridge it was on.

When I walk the coastline, I see fishing boats stranded in the city. Every once in a while I see fish as well. Salmon, brevoort, and tuna were carried into the city with tsunami (Although I’m not sure if they’re from a fish market or the ocean.) We were rewarded for our work with canned food from Sanriku yesterday. They said that tons of canned food were washed into the house probably from a factory. Also yesterday, when one of the people who were working in the house got a stomachache, he looked at his feet and found a handwarmer that was washed away with the mud. He stuck it on his belly and got back to work. There’s provision on top of a mount of mud.

The Sanriku area of Iwate, which is called “the countryside of the countryside”, has been sending out people and things. I hope that not just things like these that get washed into this area, but our prayer, God’s workers, and believers will also be washed into this area, and not just now but stay there, and start new churches.

Children in disaster area

This is an update from Pastor Yoshiya Kondo in Iwate prefecture, Japan, who has been serving and ministering in the disaster area since the tsunami.

Like last Saturday, we formed a ‘Play-with-the-Kids-in-Shelter’ troop and visited Miyako city again. (‘Clean-Out-Houses-Hit-by-Tsunami’ troop has also been formed.) Many of us were students because it was a weekday, and I also joined the ‘Kids’ troop this time, not the ‘Mud’ troop.

I heard them talking as we played. “Downstairs were hit” “My house was swept away” “I thought I wouldn’t see my parents again, but they came looking for me the next day.” … These are some of the things they were saying. It isn’t easy to find the words to say to them.

It had been four days since the last time we were there. Four days ago is such a ‘long time ago’ in a disaster area where they are forced to live an abnormal life. A little girl expressed her joy with her whole body when she saw my wife who went visit again, as she jumped up to her with a big smile on her face. Such an indescribable anxiety and loneliness is hidden behind the smile, which she shouldn’t have to have. When I come home, take a little rest and close my eyes, I see the children waving to us until they couldn’t see us anymore. (by Pastor Yoshiya Kondo in Morioka city, Iwate)