The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) (Japanese: 末日聖徒イエス・キリスト教会) was established in Japan in 1901 when the church's first missionaries arrived on August 12. Among them was Heber J. Grant, who was then a member of the Quorum of the Twelve and later became the church's 7th president. Horace S. Ensign, Louis A. Kelsch, and Alma O. Taylor accompanied Grant. The LDS Church's first baptism in Japan was on March 8, 1902, when Grant baptized Hajime Nakazawa, a former Kannushi (Shinto priest). The Book of Mormon was translated three times. The first translation, which took over six years, was completed by Taylor in 1909. It was then recommended that the Book of Mormon be translated into bunshō, a more elegant literary style, which was done by Chōkō Ikuta in 1909, shortly before it was published and distributed. The third translation in 1957 was done by Tatsui Sato. In 1995, the Book of Mormon was translated again into a more colloquial style.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Japan | |
---|---|
Area | Asia North |
Members | 130,251 (2022)[1] |
Stakes | 22 |
Districts | 11 |
Wards | 143 |
Branches | 88 |
Total Congregations[2] | 231 |
Missions | 6 |
Temples |
|
FamilySearch Centers | 63[3] |
Missionary work from the opening of the Japan Mission through 1924 was challenging due to language barriers and cultural differences, as well as the 1923 Tokyo earthquake and the Immigration Act of 1924. Few baptisms were performed during this time period. Due to these difficulties, the Japan Mission was closed from 1924 to 1945, until after the end of World War II. During the twenty years missionary work was halted in Japan, the work was moved to Hawaii to reach Japanese people living there. A small number of Latter-day Saints in Japan met together privately in their homes from 1924 to 1945, under the leadership of Fujiya Nara and later Fujiwara Takeo.
The mission was reopened in 1948 with Edward L. Clissold as president. Missionary work flourished after 1948 with the number of baptisms increasing, requiring new missions to be opened. The LDS Church decided to open the Mormon Pavilion during the Expo '70 in Osaka. After the Expo, baptisms doubled from 1969 to 1970. Two days after the Expo finished, the church's first stake in Japan was established in Tokyo in 1970. The Tokyo Japan Temple, the first temple in Japan and in Asia, was dedicated in 1980.
As of 2022, the LDS Church reported 130,251 members in 231 congregations in Japan,[1] making it the second largest body of LDS Church members in Asia behind the Philippines.
History
editYear | Members |
---|---|
1940 | 60 |
1950 | 211 |
1960 | 2,502 |
1970 | 11,868 |
1980 | 17,947 |
1989* | 91,000 |
1999 | 110,987 |
2009 | 123,225 |
2019 | 130,340 |
*Membership was published as an estimated or rounded number. Source: Windall J. Ashton; Jim M. Wall, Deseret News, various years, Church Almanac Country Information: Japan[1] |
1901–1924: Establishment of the Japan Mission
editMissionary efforts
editWalter M. Gibson, sent by Brigham Young, attempted to send missionaries to the Pacific in 1861, but stopped his mission in Hawaii.[4] He wrote a book of strict instructions for a morally and physically clean life that the Hawaiian people should follow, called the "Sanitary Instructions".[5] He was excommunicated from the church in 1864 for selling church offices to islanders and using the money to buy large amounts of land on Lanai.[6] In 1895, the Japanese Consul in San Francisco asked Abraham H. Cannon if there were plans to open up a mission in Japan. However, he died before the mission could be established. Then in 1901, the church's First Presidency announced the opening of the Japan Mission.[7]
Heber J. Grant, of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles and later the church's seventh president, was assigned to establish the first LDS Church mission in Asia, headquartered in Tokyo.[8] The Panic of 1893 caused him to go into a lot of debt, so at the time, he was in serious financial distress.[9] The First Presidency allowed him one year to get out of debt, which he did in the allotted time.[9]
Grant handpicked the first three missionaries to serve with him in Japan: Horace S. Ensign, Louis A. Kelsch, and Alma O. Taylor. They became known as the "Japanese Quartet".[10] They arrived in Japan on August 12, 1901. Despite their arrival, the missionaries did not yet have permission from the government to proselyte, so they spent their time learning the language. After lobbying with the chief of police, the missionaries received permission to preach in early October.[11] The missionaries, particularly Grant, had great difficulties learning the language.[12] The missionaries met Takahashi Gorō, who had previously published a defense of the Mormons in the periodical The Sun. Takahashi spoke good English and had a knowledge of other languages. He decided to help Grant by writing a book that would introduce the mission of the Latter-day Saints to the Japanese people.[13] Nakazawa Hajime became the first baptized member in Japan.[14] Nakazawa soon began asking Grant for money to start a new business, and because the LDS Church is prohibited from loaning members money to start businesses, Grant refused. Nakazawa was caught robbing the mission house and was excommunicated from the church and arrested. After the arrest of Nakazawa, Takahashi no longer supported the missionaries, describing Grant as cruel and "cold-blooded" for refusing to pay Nakazawa.[15]
From 1902 to 1924, eighty-eight missionaries proselyted in twenty-nine locations, laboring largely in Tokyo, Sapporo, and Osaka, performing 166 baptisms.[16] However, on August 7, 1924, Grant, then president of the church, closed the mission to await a more favorable time, due to the low number of baptisms.[17]
Several issues contributed to the low number of baptisms. Ongoing problems in the mission included the difficulty of the language, as well as cultural differences. Also, the small number of missionaries and their extended service caused fatigue among them and hardships for their loved ones. There were also external problems: the earthquake in Tokyo in 1923 stalled proselytizing, the United States' Immigration Act of 1924 caused racial tensions between Japan and the United States. Finally, the general sense of defeatism of the missionaries in Japan and Church leaders in Salt Lake City influenced the decision to close the mission in Japan.[18] Even though they did not baptize many members, they translated the Book of Mormon into Japanese. They also wrote a Japanese hymnbook, a history of the Church, a biography of Joseph Smith, and other literature. Missionaries, as well as the Church in general, gained experience that would make the reestablishment of the mission in 1948 more successful.[19]
First Japanese church members
editThe first baptized Japanese member was Hajime Nakazawa, a former Shinto priest. He was baptized on March 8, 1902, on the shore of Omori in Tokyo Bay.[20] Although he was the first baptized member, he was not the first active member of the LDS Church. After he was baptized, he and his wife asked the missionaries for a significant amount of money. The missionaries refused and he was later caught attempting to rob the missionaries' home. He was then excommunicated and subsequently arrested.[21]
One of the most prominent first Japanese church members was Tomizo Katsunuma, a veterinarian and immigration inspector in Honolulu, honored as the "Father of Immigrants". He is notable as one of the first members of LDS Church with Japanese ancestry.[22] He moved to the United States during the emigration fever.[22] He had many contacts with LDS Church members in Logan, Utah, which influenced his decision to get baptized on August 8, 1895. After his death, the headline of the obituary read "Dr. Katsunuma, first Japanese Mormon, dies".[23]
Tokujiro Sato was another one of the church's first Japanese converts. Tokujiro immigrated to Hawaii from Japan. Tukujiro supposedly joined the church in 1892, though because of the lack of records, it is unclear when he was baptized or whether he was baptized at all. He was listed in membership records in the Waipio Branch, but there is no baptism record. However, the baptisms of his children were recorded and, despite the lack of records, Taokujiro attended the LDS Church throughout his life.[24]
Portrayal of the church in Japan
editOther Christian churches often preached against the LDS Church, criticizing its doctrines, yet admitting the strange propensity it seemed to have in attracting followers. The doctrine of the church, and polygamy in particular, was seen as a threat to Japanese culture and the Meiji society's ideals of civilization. Even though the Japanese people heard about the church through the Iwakura Mission to the United States in 1872, the earliest official printed introduction of the Japanese people to the LDS Church was likely the 1879 Japanese translation of Jules Verne's Around the World in 80 Days. Jean Passepartout, a character in the book, heard a lecture on Mormonism and polygamy which disturbed him. Magazine articles helped to spread the knowledge of the church in Japan, however, the articles focused on polygamy and its dangers to women and society in an increasingly Westernizing country.[25] Some Japanese saw the polygamous practices of Latter-day Saints as a direct offense to the attempts to eliminate laws and traditions surrounding concubines.[26] When the church missionaries taught about church's doctrine to the Japanese, it was often necessary to counter the assumptions the Japanese people had about the church and polygamy. The Japanese translation of the book A Brief History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints included an extra chapter on polygamy in order to provide some clarification that the LDS Church no longer practiced it.[27]
Translation of the Book of Mormon
editThe translation of the Book of Mormon began in 1904 and went through 1909, taking almost six years. The elders had no working knowledge of Japanese and the reputation of the LDS Church made it difficult for them to find native speakers who were willing to help them with the language. Mission president Horace S. Ensign requested that each missionary use his spare time translating the Book of Mormon into Japanese. Seven months later, the compiled translation was assigned to Alma O. Taylor who worked full-time to complete it. Taylor finished the translation in 1906, after working 21 months. The next 18 months were used to edit, re-read, and correct the Book of Mormon.[28]
Noguchi Zenshirō, a delegate to the World's Parliament of Religions, and Susuzki Genta recommended to Taylor that the style of the Book of Mormon should be changed from the colloquial genbun'itchi style to bunshō, a more elegant written style historically used in literature, records, and official documents.[29] Chōkō Ikuta changed the style of the translation to bunshō and finished in May 1909. Final corrections were made July 24, 1909.[30] The first five thousand copies were released October 11, 1909, with special editions made for monarchs and government leaders.[31] The task of translating the Book of Mormon into Japanese was taken with great care. Taylor read his translations about fourteen times, while critics read the translation seven times. They recruited help from some of the best Japanese authors of the time such as Tsubouchi Shōyō and Hōmei Iwano.[32]
A second translation of the Book of Mormon was published in 1957. The translation was made by Tatsui Sato, who belonged to the first baptized Japanese family after the closure of the mission in 1924.[33] The most recent translation of the Book of Mormon was published in 1995 in a colloquial style. This style became more widely used after World War II.[34]
1924–1945: Closed Japan Mission
editFrom 1924 to 1945, the LDS Church withdrew its missionaries, leadership, and organizational structure, leaving the Japanese Latter-day Saints on their own. Losing contact with the main body of the church created a challenge for the remaining members, with no one to lead their congregation.[35] Because of the lack of church leadership in Japan, the LDS Church in Japan was maintained by a man named Fujiya Nara. Born May 10, 1898, in Japan, he started attending Sunday School in the Sapporo Branch at age thirteen. He was baptized four years later on July 6, 1915, in the Tama River in Tokyo by Joseph H. Stimpson, the Japan Mission president at the time. In 1923, he became the first native Japanese to be ordained an elder. On April 6, 1924, his own wedding to Motoko Yoshimizu was to be the first and last LDS marriage performed in Japan for some time, as the Japan Mission closed down a few months later.[36] In 1927, Fujiya Nara was appointed presiding elder, similar to a branch president who leads a small group of church members, by the First Presidency over the small group of Japanese members (137) that remained and restored some priesthood activities. Nara published a newsletter, "Shuro" (Palm) and held meetings with the remaining members. After the release of Nara, Fujiwara Takeo was set apart as presiding elder.[37] Fujiwara was born in 1905 and was baptized on May 10, 1924, right before the close of the Japan Mission. He was invited to study at Brigham Young University (BYU), where he earned a Master's degree in history. He spent seven years in Utah, where LDS Church leaders prepared him to become presiding elder.[38]
Fujiwara focused his work in the church in Japan on reactivation of baptized members.[39] In the mid-1930s, with World War II imminent, Heber J. Grant decided to pursue efforts to work among the Japanese in Hawaii.[40] On February 24, 1937, the Japanese-Central Pacific Mission, a mission primarily aimed at teaching Japanese people in Hawaii, was opened and headquartered in Honolulu, Hawaii, with Hilton A. Robertson as president.[41] Following World War II, the period from 1945 to 1951, or the Occupation of Japan by the Allied Forces has been called the "Christian boom". With newly declared religious freedom and tough post-war conditions, the Japanese people were more interested in Christianity than they had been for a long time.[42]
1948–1965: Reestablishment of the Japan Mission
editIt was not until March 6, 1948, that Edward L. Clissold was given permission to return to Japan, leading the missionary work as the mission president. Clissold had been part of the United States military occupation forces in Japan after World War II. His new task was to find what remained of the Latter-day Saints from twenty-four years before. He put a small advertisement in Japanese (with a translation error) in the newspaper, "URGENT NOTICE—I would like any member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Near-Day [sic] Saints (Mormon Church) to contact me as soon as possible. Daiichi Hotel, Room 548. Lt. Col. Edward Clissold." Nara Fujiya noticed the advertisement, responded, and some Japanese Saints were located and started to take part in Clissold and other servicemen's church activities.[43] From 1943 to 1944, Clissold had been acting president of the Central Pacific Mission, a mission in Hawaii that was primarily aimed at teaching Japanese people. His next task was to establish a mission headquarters. He obtained a partially burned mansion which had belonged to the Japanese Minister of Welfare during the war. After renovation of the mission home, the first five missionaries arrived in Japan on June 26, 1948. Harrison Theodore "Ted" Price, became the first missionary in 1947. Other missionaries included a Japanese born abroad, Kooji Okauchi (nisei) and two American soldiers who had fought the Japanese in the Pacific Theater just years prior.[44]
After Clissold's eighteen-month long presidency, Vinal G. Mauss succeeded him and served from 1949 to 1953. Membership in the church in Japan increased from 211 to more than 800, with the number of districts increasing from one to five, the number of branches grew to twenty-five, and the number of missionaries increased to eighty-four.[45] 184 people were baptized in 1950, more than had joined the church in the twenty years that it had been open in the early 1900s. Hilton A. Robertson replaced Mauss as mission president. Robertson was one of the missionaries in the early Japan mission, and had presided over the Japanese-Central Pacific Mission from 1937 to 1940. When Robertson was set apart as president of the Japan Mission, he was told he would also be in charge of presiding over the Chinese Mission.[46] He supported Tatsui Sato in re-translating the Book of Mormon as well as translating the Mormon works Doctrine and Covenants and the Pearl of Great Price. He bought more land for the church to use as chapels and living quarters for missionaries. He strengthened auxiliary organizations such as the Young Men and Young Women programs (collectively known as the Mutual Improvement Association), Sunday School, and Relief Society.[47] On July 28, 1955, the Japan Mission was split into the Northern and the Southern Far East Mission.[48] This split created the largest transfer within a mission boundary in the world from Naha, Okinawa, to Asahigawa, Hokkaidō.[49]
Paul C. Andrus became the next mission president, serving from 1955 to 1962.[50] Membership grew from 1,000 to more than 6,600. The church grew rapidly in Korea, so a separate Korean mission was made, as it had previously been included in the Japan Mission. The number of missionaries grew from 82 to 179. After inventing a new proselytizing plan based on teaching the Bible, bearing testimony, and inviting the investigator to be baptized, baptisms grew from 129 in 1956 to 616 in 1957. Andrus was also instrumental in preparing Japan and Korea for stakes by advancing the priesthood of the members.[51] He also worked to make other church material like auxiliary manuals and handbooks available in Japanese. The number of branches grew from 26 to 37. One of the most profitable purchases of the church at the time was the purchase of a Yoyogi Street property in Omote Sando, Tokyo, serving as the Central Branch meetinghouse. Eventually, the church sold the building in 1973 for $24,150,943, having originally spent less than $150,000 for it.[52]
Having served as a missionary under Mauss, Dwayne N. Andersen became the new mission president in 1962. At the time, there was 7,000 church members in Japan, with the number of missionaries exceeding 180.[53] Andersen made large strides in constructing new church buildings and remodeling older ones.[54] The number of priesthood holders increased significantly. Fundraising was done for members to travel to the Hawaii Temple to receive temple ordinances. On April 26, 1964, the first meetinghouse in Asia, the Tokyo North Branch, was dedicated by Gordon B. Hinckley, then a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles.[55] In July 1965, 164 Japanese Latter-day Saints traveled to Hawaii to attend the temple. Trips such as these occurred almost yearly until the Tokyo Temple was built in 1980. In 1965, Andersen was succeeded by Adney Y. Komatsu.[56]
Relief Society
editFor much of the early history of the LDS Church in Japan, few church meetings were held. The charity organization called Relief Society began in the early 1950s. In a normal Latter-day Saint church meeting, the Relief Society meetings serves as one hour of the three hour block, where women meet together and are taught lessons about various topics concerning Jesus Christ by another member of the Relief Society who is assigned to teach. Unable to organize an official Relief Society, women would often meet together in sister missionaries' apartments and learn to cook. The women would deliver welfare supplies from the Relief Society in the United States to families with children in Sunday School. In Japan, the members of the Relief Society held bazaars selling cheap goods for low prices to raise money in postwar Japan. The Relief Society worked to help repair missionary clothing and wash missionaries' bedding.[57] Eventually, branches formed small, official groups of the Relief Society; however, auxiliary manuals had not yet been translated into Japanese, so Relief Society materials came from sister missionaries. From 1965 to 1966, materials for Christian instruction came in Seito-No-Michi (a worldwide church magazine), but sometimes no lessons were featured, as only issues October through May contained lesson plans. During the months when the Relief Society didn't have lessons, they had "work meetings", creating their own manual to be approved by the Relief Society General Board.[58]
1968–1980: Church expansion
editOn September 1, 1968, Walter Bills was named the new mission president of the Northern Far-East Mission, renamed the Japan Mission. The Southern Far-East Mission was named the Japan-Okinawa Mission and was presided over by Edward Okazaki. Due to the Japan Mission being headquartered in Tokyo, it grew much more quickly than the Japan-Okinawa Mission. Bills opened three new branches and nine cities for proselytizing and instituted the Book of Mormon placement program, stating that the Book of Mormon would lead to conversion. In 1969, Japanese missionaries carried more copies of the Book of Mormon, distributing over 208,000 books. Bills attributed at least 60% of the baptisms during his presidency to the program. Bills also focused on training people to run stakes, the administrative units of the LDS Church. In this way, he was preparing for a stake in Tokyo. All auxiliaries were established in Japan at this time, including the Primary, the children's organization. Okazaki was the second mission president of Japanese ancestry. At the end of Bill's service in 1971, baptisms were up to one baptism per missionary per month, which was about 200 baptisms total.[59]
In 1969, a language-training center for Japanese and other Asian and African languages was established at BYU-Hawaii. Future missionaries assigned to Japan were sent to Hawaii for two months where they learned the language, as well as working to learn about the Japanese people, food and culture.[60] Within the same week, the church opened a display at Expo '70 in Osaka, featuring a new version of the LDS film Man's Search for Happiness created specially for this event.[61] BYU's Young Ambassadors also performed at the Expo.[62] The church received a lot of attention due to the World Fair. The LDS Church was the only Christian denomination to have its own pavilion at the fair.[63] Ten percent (6,658,532) of the guests who attended the Expo visited the Mormon Pavilion, which was a temporary display that introduced the people of Japan to the LDS Church.[64] Fifty thousand copies of the Book of Mormon were distributed and there were 779 baptisms in Japan in 1970, double that of 1969.[64] The Tokyo Stake was the church's first in Asia. It was organized on March 15, 1970, two days after the Expo.[65] Tanaka Kenji became the first president of the Tokyo Stake.[16]
The Japanese missions were changed again and split into four missions. The Japan Mission became the Japan East Mission and the Japan-Okinawa Mission. The Japan-Okinawa Mission became the Japan Central Mission and the Japan West Mission. Two new mission presidents were introduced, while Bills and Okazaki retained their positions over their respective missions. Russell Horiuchi, a professor at BYU, became president of the Japan East Mission. Watanabe Kan became president of the Japan West Mission and became the first native Japanese mission president.[66] In 1965, Adney Y. Komatsu became mission president, the first of Japanese ancestry, and in 1975, during the first area conference in Japan, he became the first general authority of Japanese ancestry.[67] Yoshihiko Kikuchi became the first native Japanese general authority in 1977.[48] In 1979, the Japanese Missionary Training Center (JMTC) was created. The JMTC closed in 2009.[68] The first LDS temple in Asia was the Tokyo Temple, which was dedicated on October 27, 1980, by Spencer W. Kimball.[48]
1980–present: recent developments
editThe Mormon Tabernacle Choir traveled to Japan for its second tour in 1985. Tsuneo Ishikawa, president of the Chukyo Television Broadcasting Company, hosted an extravagant reception for the choir in Nagoya. The LDS Church provided extensive humanitarian services and resources to Japan after the Kobe or Osaka earthquake in 1995 and the record-breaking earthquake and tsunami that destroyed northern Japan in March 2011. Gordon B. Hinckley, then serving as the church's president, traveled to Japan in May 1996. On September 1, 2001, the 100th anniversary of the church's missionary work in Japan was celebrated with two new bronze monuments in Yokohama. The Fukuoka Japan Temple was dedicated in 2000, with the Sapporo Japan Temple, the third in Japan, dedicated in 2016.[69] In 2017, the Tokyo Japan Temple was closed for renovations and rededicated in July 2022. The fourth, the Okinawa Japan Temple, was dedicated in November 2023. In October 2023, church president Russell M. Nelson announced the intent to construct the Osaka Japan Temple.[citation needed]
Recent problems
editTwo events that created challenges to Latter-day Saint missionary work in Japan were the death of Emperor Hirohito in 1989 and the Tokyo subway attack in 1995 by the religious group Aum Shinrikyō.[70] The death of the emperor made Japanese citizens reevaluate the role of the emperor in the state and in their lives. Even though the period after WWII had been characterized by a "de-deification" of the emperor,[70] after the death of Emperor Hirohito, his death rituals were widely publicized. This reignited an interest in old Japanese symbols, rites, and rituals.[71] Due to deeply rooted religious and cultural belief systems that have lasted for centuries, converting to another religion was associated with becoming non-Japanese.[72] The second event that created challenges for LDS missionaries in Japan was the Tokyo subway sarin attack by Aum Shinrikyō. This attack, which killed twelve and injured more than five thousand people, greatly affected the Japanese people. It caused fear of and a resentment to Japanese New Religions and the Japanese people had a hard time distinguishing between proselytizing LDS missionaries and New Religions.[73]
Cultural obstacles
editJapan is culturally and historically a non-Christian nation. This poses problems in LDS missionary work, because the Japanese are culturally not familiar with the western notion of God. However, despite the Japanese unfamiliarity with Christian or Western religiosity, the Japanese are a religious people. Many Japanese people state to be a part of one or more religion, mostly Shinto and Buddhism and these religions affect their world view deeply. Thus, the cultural differences in ethics and morality challenge missionary work.[74]
Another cultural difference is the impact of Confucian ethics. Western culture puts emphasis on the individual, while Japanese culture values the group over the individual. The Japanese culture values harmony over individual ambition and aggressiveness. Large decisions are often made together. For example, a Japanese person may be more willing to be baptized if their family joined them in their decision. If not, they will likely not choose to be baptized, in order to avoid isolation from their family. Mormonism emphasizes individual agency and the individual's relationship with Jesus Christ, values which make Mormon baptism in Japan less likely.[75]
Several scholars have pointed out that little study has been made of the internal factors that have limited the success of the LDS missions in Japan. Specifically, the distinctiveness of LDS culture, as well as its specific American characteristics, may have limited to what extent the Japanese have accepted Mormonism.[76][77]
Statistics and other information
editAs of year-end 2022, the LDS Church reported 130,251 members, 6 missions, 231 congregations, and 3 temples in Japan with one additional temple under construction.[78] There were also 22 stakes, 11 districts, 143 wards, and 88 branches at that time.[79]
While Japan has 63 family history centers, the website FamilySearch, through which LDS members do genealogical research and perform ordinances, is not generally available in Japan.[80]
Stakes and Districts
editAs of June 2024, Japan had the following stakes and districts:
Stake/District | Organized | Mission | Temple District |
---|---|---|---|
Aomori Japan District | 26 Apr 1987 | Japan Sendai | Sapporo Japan |
Chiba Japan Stake | 25 Mar 1979 | Japan Tokyo North | Tokyo Japan |
Fukuoka Japan Stake | 20 Apr 1979 | Japan Fukuoka | Fukuoka Japan |
Hiroshima Japan Stake | 31 May 1981 | Japan Fukuoka | Fukuoka Japan |
Hokkaido Japan North Stake | 13 Aug 1978 | Japan Sapporo | Sapporo Japan |
Hokkaido Japan South Stake | 29 Jun 1980 | Japan Sapporo | Sapporo Japan |
Kagoshima Japan District | 17 Jun 1973 | Japan Fukuoka | Fukuoka Japan |
Kanagawa Japan Stake | 27 Oct 1974 | Japan Tokyo South | Tokyo Japan |
Kanazawa Japan Stake | 5 Mar 2000 | Japan Nagoya | Tokyo Japan |
Kiryu Japan Stake | 10 Aug 1980 | Japan Tokyo North | Tokyo Japan |
Kobe Japan Stake | 19 Mar 1980 | Japan Kobe | Tokyo Japan |
Koriyama Japan District | 5 Mar 1985 | Japan Sendai | Tokyo Japan |
Kumamoto Japan Stake | 18 May 1997 | Japan Fukuoka | Fukuoka Japan |
Kyoto Japan Stake | 31 May 1992 | Japan Kobe | Tokyo Japan |
Matsudo Japan Stake | 13 Sep 1992 | Japan Tokyo North | Tokyo Japan |
Matsuyama Japan District | 26 May 1991 | Japan Kobe | Fukuoka Japan |
Morioka Japan District | 9 Jul 1978 | Japan Sendai | Sapporo Japan |
Nagano Japan District | 6 Apr 1984 | Japan Nagoya | Tokyo Japan |
Nagasaki Japan District | 14 Sep 1982 | Japan Fukuoka | Fukuoka Japan |
Nagoya Japan Stake | 10 May 1978 | Japan Nagoya | Tokyo Japan |
Nagoya Japan East Stake | 8 Nov 1998 | Japan Nagoya | Tokyo Japan |
Niigata Japan District | 21 Feb 1971 | Japan Tokyo North | Tokyo Japan |
Okayama Japan Stake | 20 Mar 1983 | Japan Kobe | Fukuoka Japan |
Okinawa Japan Stake | 23 Oct 1980 | Japan Fukuoka | Okinawa Japan |
Okinawa Japan Military District | 1 May 1952 | Japan Fukuoka | Okinawa Japan |
Osaka Japan Stake | 12 Sep 1972 | Japan Kobe | Tokyo Japan |
Sendai Japan Stake | 2 Nov 1980 | Japan Sendai | Tokyo Japan |
Shizuoka Japan Stake | 21 Apr 1981 | Japan Nagoya | Tokyo Japan |
Takamatsu Japan District | 1 Sep 1968 | Japan Kobe | Fukuoka Japan |
Tokyo Japan South Stake | 1 Jun 2003 | Japan Tokyo South | Tokyo Japan |
Tokyo Japan Stake | 15 Mar 1970 | Japan Tokyo South | Tokyo Japan |
Tokyo Japan West Stake | 26 Oct 1980 | Japan Tokyo South | Tokyo Japan |
Yamaguchi Japan District | 1 Dec 1970 | Japan Fukuoka | Fukuoka Japan |
Missions
editOver the years, border shifts, mission dissolutions, additions, and consolidations have affected all missions in Japan. From 1984 to 1995 there were ten missions in Japan; as of July 1, 2019, there were six.[81]
Mission | Organized | Notes |
---|---|---|
Japan Fukuoka Mission | 18 March 1970 | |
Japan Kobe Mission | 1 September 1968 | |
Japan Nagoya Mission | 1 August 1973 | |
Japan Sapporo Mission | 16 March 1970 | expanded July 2019 from consolidation of Sapporo Mission with northern portions of Sendai Mission[82] |
Japan Sendai Mission | 1 July 1974 | originally created in 1974, merged with neighboring missions in 2019. Recreated from neighboring missions in 2024 |
Japan Tokyo North Mission | 12 August 1901 | re-created July 2019 from consolidation of northern portions of Tokyo Mission and southern portions of Sendai Missions[82] |
Japan Tokyo South Mission | 1 July 1978 | re-created July 2013[83] |
Temples
editOn October 27, 1980, the Tokyo Japan Temple (formerly the Tokyo Temple) (東京神殿, Tōkyō Shinden) was dedicated. This was the first LDS temple in Asia and the first in a non-Christian country. Church president, Spencer W. Kimball, described it as "the most significant and important event in the history of Asia".[84]
The Tokyo Temple was followed by the Fukuoka Japan Temple (福岡神殿, Fukuoka Shinden), dedicated on June 11, 2000, and the Sapporo Japan Temple (札幌神殿, Sapporo Shinden), dedicated on August 21, 2016. On April 7, 2019, the church announced a temple would be built in Okinawa City, Okinawa Prefecture. A groundbreaking, to signify the beginning of construction of the Okinawa Japan Temple, took place on December 5, 2020.[85] The temple was dedicated in late 2023.
Temples in Japan edit = Operating |
edit | ||||||
Location: Announced: Groundbreaking: Dedicated: Rededicated: Size: Style: |
Tokyo, Japan August 9, 1975 by Spencer W. Kimball April 10, 1978 October 27, 1980 by Spencer W. Kimball July 3, 2022 by Henry B. Eyring 53,997 sq ft (5,016.5 m2) on a 1.22-acre (0.49 ha) site Modern, one spire - designed by Emil B. Fetzer | |||||
edit | ||||||
Location: Announced: Groundbreaking: Dedicated: Size: Style: |
Fukuoka, Japan May 7, 1998 by Gordon B. Hinckley March 20, 1999 by L. Lionel Kendrick June 11, 2000 by Gordon B. Hinckley 10,700 sq ft (990 m2) on a 1.25-acre (0.51 ha) site Classic modern, single-spire design - designed by Kanji Moriya and Church A&E Services | |||||
edit | ||||||
Location: Announced: Groundbreaking: Dedicated: Size: Notes: |
Sapporo, Japan 3 October 2009 by Thomas S. Monson[87][88] 22 October 2011 by Gary E. Stevenson 21 August 2016 by Russell M. Nelson 48,480 sq ft (4,504 m2) on a 9.8-acre (4.0 ha) site Ground was broken on 22 October 2011 by Gary E. Stevenson. Michael T. Ringwood and Koichi Aoyagi of the Seventy were also present.[86] | |||||
edit | ||||||
Location: Announced: Groundbreaking: Dedicated: Size: |
Okinawa, Japan 7 April 2019 by Russell M. Nelson[89] 5 December 2020 by Takashi Wada[90] 12 November 2023 by Gary E. Stevenson 12,437 sq ft (1,155.4 m2) on a 0.55-acre (0.22 ha) site | |||||
|
edit | |||||
Location: Announced: Size: |
Hirakata, Japan 1 October 2023 by Russell M. Nelson[91][92] 29,630 sq ft (2,753 m2) on a 16.74-acre (6.77 ha) site |
See also
editCitations
edit- ^ a b c "Facts and Statistics: statistics by Country: Japan", Newsroom, LDS Church, retrieved 4 June 2023
- ^ Excludes groups meeting separate from wards and branches
- ^ Japan Family History Centers, familysearch.org, retrieved 4 June 2023
- ^ Andrade 1996, p. 11.
- ^ Gibson 1881.
- ^ Adler & Kamins 1984, p. 96.
- ^ Hoffman 2007, p. 24.
- ^ Grant 2002; Hinckley 1964, p. 168
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- ^ a b Takagi 2000, p. 74.
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Bibliography
edit- Adler, Jacob; Kamins, Robert M. (1984), "The Political Debut of Walter Murray Gibson" (PDF), The Hawaiian Journal of History, 18
- Andrade, Ernest (1996), Unconquerable Rebel : Robert W. Wilcox and Hawaiian Politics, 1880–1903, Niwot, Colorado: University Press of Colorado, ISBN 0-87081-417-6
- Britsch, Ralph Lanier (1968), Early Latter-Day Saint Missions to South and East Asia (Thesis), Claremont Graduate School and University Center, OCLC 39674131
- Britsch, Ralph Lanier (1992), "Asia, the Church in", in Ludlow, Daniel H (ed.), Encyclopedia of Mormonism, New York: Macmillan Publishing, pp. 75–81, ISBN 0-02-879602-0, OCLC 24502140
- Britsch, R. Lanier (1975), "The Closing of the Early Japan Mission", BYU Studies Quarterly, 15 (2): 171–190, retrieved 30 March 2018
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- "History of the Church in Japan", Mormon Newsroom, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 30 June 2016, retrieved 22 March 2018
- Hoffman, John P. (2007), Japanese Saints: Mormons in the land of the rising sun, Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, ISBN 978-0-7391-1689-0
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ignored (help) - Neilson, Reid L.; Gessel, Van C., eds. (2006), Taking the Gospel to the Japanese 1901 to 2001, Provo, UT: Brigham Young University, ISBN 0-8425-2595-5
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- Taylor, Scott (March 15, 2011), "LDS Church in Japan: Moving missionaries, making donations", Deseret News, Salt Lake City, Utah, archived from the original on March 18, 2011, retrieved 2014-10-15
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Further reading
edit- Britsch, Ralph Lanier (1998). From the East: The History of the Latter-Day Saints in Asia, 1851–1996. Salt Lake City, Utah: Deseret Book. ISBN 1-57345-268-8. LCCN 97036785. OCLC 37606249. A Latter-day Saint affiliated publication of the history of the LDS church in Asia, includes more information about the history of the LDS church in other Asian countries such as Cambodia and Thailand.
- Clark, Drew (13 July 2014). "Samurai visiting Salt Lake in 1872 launched interactions between Japanese and Mormons". Deseret News. Archived from the original on August 6, 2014. An article containing information about the Iwakura Mission to Utah in 1872.
External links
edit- Official website (in Japanese)
- The official Japanese website of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
- Japan Newsroom (in Japanese)
- Church news publication in Japan