Evergreen
Baptist Church
Evergreen Baptist Church in Rosemead, California was Iwas
first long-term church partner. Founded in 1925 by Japanese
immigrants, it became one of the largest and fastest growing
Asian American churches in the U.S., when from the late 70s
through the 80s, its attendance grew from less than
50 to close to 900. Associate Pastor Ken Fong was a member
of Iwas initial Board of Directors, and his wife, Sharon
Uyeda Fong, was a founding Iwa staff member. Other staff at
Iwa worked informally with the Evergreen leadership from 1981.
Evergreen
entered a formal consulting relationship with Iwa in the mid-80s.
Stan Inouye and Arlene Inouye served as consultants. After
five years, Senior Pastor Cory Ishida had this to say: Iwa
has provided invaluable assistance in terms of planning for
our future and assessing our current ministry needs. They
have been instrumental in helping us to organize our church,
enabling us to be more effective in our ministry.
Evergreen
hired Arlene as a full-time pastor in 1992, and thereby acquired
its own in-house Iwa staff. She continues her involvement
with Iwa as an Associate.
In
1997, for the purpose of greater growth and outreach, Evergreen
divided into two separate churches: Evergreen Baptist Church
of Los Angeles, and Evergreen Baptist Church of San Gabriel
Valley. Both are continuing to thrive and grow. Evergreen
of Los Angeles was recently featured in a Los Angeles Times
article on December 8, 2001, which mentioned that the church
rolls have grown from 300 to nearly 700. With an even larger
congregation, Evergreen of San Gabriel Valley is getting ready
to build a new church facility, the plans for which Iwa was
retained to give consultation. It has already planted a new
Asian American Generation-X church in Orange County called
EPIC, and has a vision for planting more churches.
Christian
Layman Church
Christian
Layman Church in the San Francisco Bay Area was Iwas
long-term church partner in its second decade. Established
in 1922 by Japanese immigrants who wanted a church free from
a governing body and run by lay Christians, it became the
leading Asian American Christian church in the Bay Area when
it grew significantly to a congregation of about 400 under
the leadership of Senior Pastor Wayne Ogimachi. When the church
was dealing with issues related to breaking the 200-member
barrier, Iwa was brought in as a consultant to Wayne and his
leadership team in 1992.
According
to Interim Executive Pastor Calvin Yim, Iwa has been
instrumental in helping us through issues like rapid growth
challenges, financial stewardship, and leadership transitions....Using
Iwa-developed tools, we have learned to better identify our
target groups, develop emerging leaders, and prepare for leadership
succession. Our hope is for Iwa to continue to create such
tools.
Called
by God to lead a team to plant a church to reach out to Asian
American communities east of Seattle, Wayne left Christian
Layman in July 2000, and officially opened the doors of Lighthouse
Christian Church in February 2001. In seven months, Lighthouse
attracted 165 attenders. After September 11, the numbers jumped
to 265. Current attendance averages around 500. Since September
11, twenty-one people have received baptism, and eleven others
made commitments to Christ.
Coloring
Beyond the Lines
Coloring
Beyond the Lines: Transforming Ministry and Leadership in
Our Community was Iwas groundbreaking, first-ever
national conference for Japanese- and Asian American Christian
leaders in March 1992. Eighty-four attended, including representation
from all the major denominations and campus ministries. Most
were from California, but others came from Seattle, Chicago,
New York, and Georgia.
The impact of this conference was enormous. At the time, the
senior leadership in the Japanese- and Asian American Christian
community was retiring and passing the baton to younger leaders.
The challenge facing the new generation of leaders was to
determine how they would do ministry differently. So the conference
focused on helping emerging leaders understand the nature
of change and become positive, sensitive agents of change
in each of their situations.
Response
was overwhelmingly positive, as revealed in such comments
as the following:
That was one of the best conferences Id ever been
to. Iwa effectively cast the vision for ministry to the Japanese
and Asian American community and communicated clearly how
important it was to present the gospel of Jesus Christ in
ways that were relevant and easily understood by this group
of unbelievers.
I
learned that I need to be a risk-taker. . .an agent of change.
. . . I see that I am addressing an audience which is moved
by concrete experience, non-verbal and non-confrontational
methods, reflection, and group-oriented approaches. I have
greater confidence to break through the walls of tradition
and endure in the ministry that God has given me to the end.
Im
impressed by how many people appreciated just getting together
with their peers and colleaguesespecially when they
have never met each other before. Its so empowering.
Executive
Director Cyril Nishimoto attributes to Coloring,
not only some life-changing personal benefits, but also the
beginnings of discernment of a career-changing call from God.
It led him to leave the social service agency helping Japanese
people in need in New York, which he co-founded and directed
for over 15 years, and to move back to Los Angeles to take
on his current position at Iwa.
The
Kaki Seed
Iwa
made a major contribution to the development of ministry sources
for Japanese- and Asian Americans by producing its own publication
called the kaki seed. With the subtitle, Developments
in evangelism and ministry to Japanese people worldwide, the
kaki seed documented the new insights that Iwa was discovering
in its first few years. Under the experienced direction of
former McGraw-Hill Book Co. editor Arlene Inouye, the staff
took on the monumental task of publishing this 12-page journal
without the help of computers and desktop-publishing capabilities,
and managed to assemble 8 issues: three in 1984, three in
1985, and two in 1987. Amazingly, many of the articles are
still relevant today. Some of them can be found on Iwas
website, www.iwarock.org.
In
the first issue, Stan Inouye explained how the publication
got its name: For those of you who are unfamiliar with
the word kaki it is the Japanese name for persimmon.
The fruit of the kaki tree, long after the leaves have fallen,
tenaciously cling to their branches in the harshest of fall
weather, symbolizing perseverance and long life to the Japanese.
Because of this meaning, we have selected kaki to represent
the kind of fruit we want to produceJapanese people
who become persevering and committed Christians.
Some
kaki contain seeds and others do not. Seeds determine whether
a kaki has the infinite potential to multiply itself. The
content of the kaki seed focuses both on finding ways to bear
fruit and the means to enable fruit to produce yet more fruit.
Jesus said, You did not choose me, but I chose you and
appointed you that you should go and bear fruit and that your
fruit should abide. . .
(John 15:6).
The
kaki seed is a publication that has been regarded as worthy
of preservation for future generations, as attested by this
recent e-mail from the UCLA Asian American Studies Center:
Our Center's special research library maintains a large
vertical file collection on significant and important Asian
American community organizations across the nation. After
reviewing some of the materials I have received in the mail,
I believe that Iwa's work and contribution to Asian Americans
is worthy to note and include in our Organizational collection.
So, in order to establish an "institutional legacy",
I would like to obtain as complete a set of your "Kaki
Seed" newsletter, as well as any other publications that
your organization has published.
Run
for the Rock
On
December 10, 1983, Iwa held the Walk for the Rock 10K/10 miler
around the Rose Bowl to raise funds to produce the first issue
of the kaki seed. The original idea was to have 10
people participate, each of whom would obtain 10 sponsors,
with the goal of raising $1,000. Amazingly, twenty-five people
participated, representing 200 sponsors, raising $3,200. So
an annual event was born.
Thereafter, it evolved into the Run for the Rock 2K/5K/10K
walk-jog-run, and was held every year for 10 more years. It
became Iwas major annual fundraising event and helped
put Iwa on the map in the Japanese- and Asian American Christian
community. People perhaps associated Iwa more with running
than with evangelism at that time.
At
its high point during the running boom in America, it attracted
100 to 150 participants and raised about $8,000 each year.
In 1992, two foundations offered to give grants totalling
$15,000 if Iwa could raise $15,000. With this additional incentive
to raise more than in years past, the Run for the Rock helped
bring in over $13,500 toward the match and enabled Iwa to
exceed the $15,000 goal.
The
Run for the Rock, however, may be remembered by the community
more for the collectible T-shirts participants received as
souvenirs, than for the race itself. Each year, Stan Sakai,
well-known creator of the Usagi Yojimbo comic book
series, came up with a special design which was printed on
the T-shirts for the runners. The design usually was a cartoon
character which had something identifiably Japanese, Christian,
and Iwa about it. The T-shirts were so unique and desirable
that it is likely many participated in the Run just to get
the shirt.
Portland
The
story of Gods work through Iwa in Portland, Oregon started
in 1990, in Manila where Stan was attending a conference on
world evangelization. There he met the owner of a chain of
Christian bookstores who offered to fly him to Portland to
discuss reaching Japanese there. He also met someone he had
met in Kenya who had became the Director of Missions for Western
Seminary in Portland, and who also pastored a church which
had 20 or so Japanese in the congregation.
When
Stan happened to be in Portland in 1991 for a leadership conference,
he contacted the two he met in Manila. Through them, and on
four subsequent trips, he met many others who had ministries
to the Japanese in Portland.
In
1992, while Stan was in Seattle, he was encouraged to go to
a housewarming party which many Japanese American Christian
leaders were expected to attend. There he met a Sansei woman
from Portland who had moved to Seattle for her own spiritual
survival. Burdened in her heart for the Sansei Christian
friends she left behind, she urged Stan to visit them.
The
next time he was in Portland, he got together with her friends3
couples. On a Sunday with limited time, Stan worshipped with
them in his hotel room, had brunch with them at a seafood
restaurant, and talked about church planting.
In
1993, Iwa brought together over 40 local and international
Christian leaders for a special dinner at Warner Pacific College.
They talked about the needs of, ministry to, and vision for
the Japanese in Portland. At the end, they were invited to
participate in a two-day prayer and visioning retreat. About
half responded.
Iwas
retreat resulted in the formation of a network of international
leaders to share information and resources, and meet regularly
to support each other in their efforts to reach the Japanese
in Portland. Now known as Nichibei Christian Fellowship, it
is still active today.
Although
they didnt attend the retreat, the local leadersfour
couplespursued a vision for planting a new Japanese
American church. Stan advised and encouraged them as they
formed Morning Star Bible Church. It is now a growing church
reaching Japanese- and Asian Americans.
Prayer
Prayer
has always been at the center of Iwas ministry. Through
prayer we find expression of our dependence on God for accomplishing
His vision for reaching the 97% of Japanese Americans and
other Asian Americans who dont yet know him. For two
years, from 1996 to 1998, under the leadership of staff member
Jo Ann Akada, Iwa held a series of 8 interchurch prayer gatherings
in various churches in Southern Cal, and one in Seattle, to
encourage our church community to pray for the unreached,
to bring together and network those from various churches
who have the same desire to pray, and to seek the Lord for
spiritual renewal that will inspire our community to reach
out to the 97% as never before.
The
first three prayer gatherings helped to initiate and build
a movement of prayer. They had the follow themes: Pray
for the Wave (Evergreen Baptist, 7/96), Ignite
the Fire (Anaheim Japanese Free Methodist, 11/96), and
Fan the Flame (Cerritos Baptist, 4/97).
Each
of the ones that followed had a special feature. Soften
the Soil (Union Church, 8/97) included a prayer walk
around Little Tokyo during the Nisei Week Festival. Seeking
Gods Face (First Presbyterian, Altadena, 1/98)
put a spotlight on the different generationsBuilder,
Boomer, and Busterwith a group praying for each one.
Unlocking Hearts for the Kingdom (Evergreen Baptist
of L.A., 5/98) drew over 100 people and featured extended
worship led by an interchurch worship team, two testimonies,
prayer in groups of three and six, and Life Signsa report
compiled by Iwa of what God was doing in 13 churches and ministries.
Seeing
with His Eyes, Praying with His Heart (Gardena Valley
Baptist, 8/98) sent people on a prayer walk around the Gardena
neighborhood. Sowing in Tears, Reaping with Songs of
Joy (San Gabriel Japanese Christian Church, 11/98) featured
testimonies by a Nisei woman and a Sansei man about the impact
of the World War II internment of Japanese Americans on their
lives and faith, and prayer for healing in our community.
In
Seattle, the Soften the Soil concert of prayer
(Chinese Baptist Church, 11/97) attracted about 50 participants
mainly from six churches. It was the first ever Asian American
interchurch prayer gathering in that area.
Internet
Iwa
went high-tech and put up a website on the Internet in 1996,
before websites were as popular as they are today. How- ever,
the sitewww.iwarock.orgremained largely undeveloped
and greatly underutilized because of the lack of personnel
to work on updating, expanding, and publicizing it. Now, with
the addition on staff of a graphic designer, in 2002, we put
up a newly designed, visually appealing, user-friendly website
which we have great hopes for being an important means of
disseminating Iwas insights and resources.
One
problem peculiar to the Japanese- and Asian American Christian
community is that the small audience size of the community
makes the publishing of Iwas materials very difficult
because publishers cant make small quantities cheaply.
But with the widespread use of the Internet, Iwa now has the
opportunity to make its resources widely available in a relatively
inexpensive way as people can be anywhere in the world, go
to one site from wherever they are, including their own homes,
and pay their own costs for printing off of the Internet.
The
colorful images on Iwas website depict scenes of moving
water (rivers, streams, creeks, brooks) and fishing, to give
a pictorial sense of Iwas ministryflowing with
the movement of Gods Spirit in inspiring and equipping
fishers of men to reach or catch Japanese-
and Asian Americans who dont yet know Him. Currently,
the site offers basic information about Iwa, as well as a
recent newsletter and some resourcesarticles explaining
Iwas insights on evangelism and ministry.
Iwa
has a vision for using the site to support the interchurch
networks that need to be developed so that our community can
be reachedemerging leaders, writers, artists, media
experts, church planters, youth ministers, childrens
ministers, worship leaders. An Internet conference room could
be set up so that people from different localities could discuss
issues of common concern. Also, workshops and seminars could
be conducted online for people all around the country or world.
A bulletin board might be set up on which a ministry idea
or new Iwa insight could be posted and feedback could be solicited.
The new technology poses some exciting opportunities that
Iwa can take advantage of to help reach the 97%.
Workshops
When
Iwas new National Board began convening in 1993, it
identified a major problemthat few people knew of and
understood Iwas ministry. One contributing factor was
that due to Iwas many years of serving the leadership
of churches behind the scenes, Iwa had become the communitys
best kept secret. To put Iwa more in public view,
the Board proposed that the best of Iwas insights
be pulled out of the drawers and shared with churches and
individuals. So, after testing the material at a young adults
retreat in New York, Stan created a series of six workshops
presenting the dynamics of Christian living from an Asian
American perspective which could reach the person-in-the-pew.
The
first two were foundational: From Stumbling Blocks to Stepping
Stones (how God can turn sin, shame, and suffering into
means for new or renewed faith in Christ, with a focus on
the parable of the lost sons), and In the Potters Hands:
Christ the Creator and Us (how Christ as our Creator redeems
and reshapes us and provides a very Asian solution to our
shame).
The
next four formed The Lords Way Series: Fishing with
a Bamboo Pole: What to Be, Do and Say the Lords Way
(how to do effective evangelism among Asian Americans); Out
of the Fast Lane: Experiencing the Lords Day the Lords
Way (how the Lord of the Sabbath observes and enjoys Sabbath,
invites us to enjoy it with him, and moves us to invite others,
including those who dont know him, to experience it
with us); Hearing His Heart: Learning to Pray the Lords
Way (how the Lord wants us to relate with him in prayer
rather than pray to him, using the Lords Prayer as a
guide); Home Grown: Living Life the Lords Way
(how to mature like the well- balanced tree depicted in Psalm
One).
The
first two were taken on the road to Seattle, Portland, the
Bay Area, as well as the L.A. area. The Fishing with a
Bamboo Pole workshop has been presented widely in different
forms in the past five years. Last year it was offered as
an 8-week class taught in such churches as Gardena Valley
Baptist, Cerritos Baptist, Wintersburg Presbyterian, and Sierra
Madre Congregational.
Currently
Out of the Fast Lane is being developed as a study
called Sabbath Evangelism. Hearing His Heart
has been offered as a seminar on the Lords Prayer and
may take the form of a six-week class on prayer to be conducted
in a church this spring. Home Grown will be offered
in the future.
Current
Projects
In
October, 2001, the National Board met and determined that
the development of evangelism resources and training tools
continue to be a high priority for Iwa. The following are
current projects:
Sabbath
Evangelisma biblical exposition of the transforming
principle of Sabbath. For busy, work-oriented Asian Americans
who cant find time to spend with the people to whom
they would want to introduce to Christ, Sabbath observance
can enable Christian families and groups to carve out time
to rest and enjoy the Lord and to invite people who dont
know Him into their Sabbath experience.
The
Family Fishing Guidea handbook presenting suggestions
of what families, groups, and churches can do together to
help Japanese- and Asian American family and friends come
to know Christ.
New
Sharing Toolstwo different presentations of the
gospel message which are designed to enable the gospel to
sink deep into the hearts of relational, shame-oriented Asian
Americans. One is entitled, Finding Father and Becoming
Family. The other is entitled, The Love Booklet.
Testimony
Projectcreation of an archive of personal stories
of Japanese- and Asian American Christians about their relationships
with Jesus Christ from which booklets, videos, CD ROMs, and
cassette tapes can be made and used as sharing tools for personal
evangelism. A video of how the Lord saved a marriage and family
is in the works.
<
Back to Home
Click
here to email Iwa
|