|  | 
          
            |  |  
            |  |  
            |  |  
            | Comment on this report, or find other reports. |  
            |  |  
            | Our Mystery Worshippers are volunteers who warm church pews for us around the world. If you'd like to become a Mystery Worshipper, start here. |  
            |  |  
            | Find out how to reproduce this report in your church magazine or website. |  |  | 
            
                | 1544: Jesus 
                  Lifehouse, Tokyo, Japan |  
              |  |  
              |  |  
              |  |  
                | Mystery Worshipper: 
                  Banner Lady. The church: 
                  Jesus 
                  Lifehouse, Tokyo, Japan.
 Denomination: 
                  Non-denominational. They are affiliated with Hillsong 
                  Australia.
 The building: 
                  The church is located in the large basement of a bicycle shop. 
                  It is set up with a low stage at one end, and a sound and lighting 
                  booth at the other. There was a myriad of lights and a disco 
                  ball overhead.
 The church: 
                  Adjectives which best describe Jesus Lifehouse would be: modern, 
                  pentecostal, lively, joyous, welcoming and mission oriented. 
                  It is a multi-racial and multi-lingual community about 700 strong. 
                  Each part of every service is spoken in both Japanese and English. 
                  There are three services every Sunday and another service in 
                  West Tokyo. The church has been going six years and in that 
                  time has planted two other churches, one in Osaka and one in 
                  Hong Kong.
 The neighbourhood: 
                  The bicycle shop is in a little back street near the US Embassy. 
                  A small sign on the steps was the only indication there was 
                  a worshiping community there. I assume most people found their 
                  way there through word of mouth or via the Internet.
 The cast: 
                  The Revd Ryuta Kimura, associate pastor, commonly referred to 
                  by everyone during the service as "Roo". The preacher was an 
                  Australian, a young man in jeans and lumber jacket called Luke 
                  (or Rooku, if you are Japanese).
 The date & time: 
                  Sunday, 20 April 2008, 11.30am.
 
 What was the name of the service?
 The 11.30 service.
 
 How full was the building?
 Comfortably full – about 150 to 170, mostly young adults.
 
 Did anyone welcome you personally?
 Yes, a cute girl greeted me at the door with a small piece of 
                  wrapped candy and asked me to proceed to the name tag table. 
                  There someone asked me my name, and wrote it on a tag both in 
                  Japanese script and English. The tag was presented to me with 
                  a bow and I was waved and smiled inside. An usher opened the 
                  door for me, and then another usher helped me find a seat.
 
 Was your pew comfortable?
 No pews, but the blue and silver stackable chairs were padded, clean and comfortable.
 
 How would you describe the pre-service
atmosphere?
 Happy and expectant. People were genuinely glad to be there, like a big family gathering.
 
 What were the exact opening words of the
service?
 "Good morning, church!"
 
 What books did the congregation 
                  use during the service?
 No books, although there was a flyer on each seat advertising 
                  an upcoming conference. The words to the songs in English, Japanese 
                  and Kanji characters were projected onto the wall behind the 
                  musicians. We were encouraged during the sermon to get out our 
                  own Bibles, even though the scriptures used were projected onto 
                  the wall in both Japanese and English. After the service, an 
                  usher offered study notes to take home, with the sermon outline 
                  and scriptures typed onto a double sided A4 page.
 
 What musical instruments 
                  were played?
 Keyboard, four guitars and drums.
 
 Did anything distract 
                  you?
 I was seated behind a speaker box, which meant I couldn't see 
                  the words to the songs clearly. I hummed along instead. The 
                  Japanese are very punctual people. One of the members of the 
                  congregation gave a testimony that was supposed to last five 
                  minutes, and a clock was projected onto the wall, with the last 
                  minute ticking down second by second. Even with each sentence 
                  having to be translated, the speaker finished with 30 seconds 
                  to spare, to the cheers of the congregation.
 
 Was the worship stiff-upper-lip, 
                  happy clappy, or what?
 Definitely happy clappy. The bi-lingual projection made it easy 
                  to understand what was being said in each language. Each verse 
                  of the songs was sung once in English and then in Japanese (or 
                  vice versa). It was a great way to learn the language and worship 
                  at the same time.
 
 
  
 Exactly how long was the sermon?
 30 minutes.
 
 On a scale of 1-10, how good was the preacher?
 8  It was a solid, four point sermon, preached with humour 
                  and, most impressively, without notes, by a young man who certainly 
                  had the gift of preaching. Luke looked to be about 20. There 
                  was an invitation at the end for prayer, commitment and connection 
                  to the life of the church.
 
 In a nutshell, what was the sermon
about?
 The sermon was about connections, based on Mark 2:2-12 (the 
                  paralytic man who was lowered through the roof to Jesus by his 
                  friends). The four points of the sermon were: (1) Connect with 
                  the power of God, because God can do what seems impossible. 
                  Disconnect from fear and discouragement. (2) Connect with a 
                  life group (the name of the small groups in a network which 
                  is the backbone of the Jesus Lifehouse community), because when 
                  we are weak we need strong and trusted friends around us. Disconnect 
                  from isolation, because good connections help us to grow in 
                  faith and maturity. Hold onto Jesus. (3) Connect with God's 
                  forgiveness, because healing and forgiveness are connected. 
                  Disconnect from pride and unforgiveness, which can rob you of 
                  your destiny. (4) Connect with God's plan for your life, because 
                  he wants us up and walking, not mired in misery. Disconnect 
                  from limitation, but beware of the pitfalls associated with 
                  having a victory mentality.
 
 Which part of the service 
                  was like being in heaven?
 The laughter. The Japanese are smiling, cultured, and deferentially 
                  polite people, but they are also fairly conservative and restrained 
                  at least in public. So it was delightful to see everyone laughing 
                  during one part of the sermon until the tears ran down their 
                  faces. This was partly due to some hilarious mistranslations 
                  which my Japanese friend told me about afterward. Apparently, 
                  when the preacher mentioned that he grew up on a property in 
                  the bush (meaning the Australian outback) where wild cattle 
                  ran in the hills, it was translated that he lived in a shrub 
                  surrounded by wild animals, and the place erupted in laughter. 
                  The story got even funnier after that, and it was great to see 
                  everyone having such a good time. Laughter crosses all language 
                  barriers!
 
 And which part was like 
                  being in... er... the other place?
 The Japanese are punctual and polite, but also efficient to 
                  a fault! While it was lovely to be welcomed and ushered in, 
                  and to see young people taking their deaconing duties seriously, 
                  there were times when it became almost comical. Microphones 
                  were whisked about, water bottles appeared and disappeared as 
                  if by magic, music stands were taken down almost as soon as 
                  they were set up. I thought it all interfered with the flow. 
                  At one point the speaker's stand was rushed out of the way and 
                  the Bible and the speaker's notes went flying everywhere. I 
                  wanted to say, "Just relax, guys!" Most of us want to feel part 
                  of a family in church rather than part of some slick operation. 
                  But hey, it's Japan. They can't help wanting to be efficient.
 
 What happened when you hung around after the service looking lost?
 There was a book table where you could buy Hillsong CDs, Bibles 
                  in English and Japanese and even in the comic-book style that 
                  the Japanese call manga, some home study journals, 
                  and an assortment of well-known books. Several people introduced 
                  themselves to me, mostly to ascertain if I was on holiday or 
                  was a new resident. It felt like a warm and friendly place, 
                  with people who were genuinely interested in making new connections.
 
 How would you describe 
                  the after-service coffee?
 As a newcomer I was given a voucher for the coffee lounge, but 
                  I can't tell you what it was like as I did not go in. However, 
                  I did avail myself of the facilities, where there were both 
                  Japanese style hole-in-the-floor toilets and western style ones. 
                  While in the cubicle, I overheard two young women at the hand 
                  basin who were excitedly discussing a street outreach they had 
                  taken part in. One of them was telling the other that it was 
                  the first time she had prayed for a complete stranger to receive 
                  healing and had actually seen it happen. While there had been 
                  testimonies of salvation and baptisms during the service, it 
                  was this washroom testimony that left me with a smile on my 
                  face after church.
 
 How would you feel about 
                  making this church your regular (where 10 = ecstatic, 0 = terminal)?
 7  I know I would miss the liturgy and weekly communion 
                  of my own faith tradition (they have communion once a month 
                  at Jesus Lifehouse, and fellowship meals at the weekly life 
                  groups); but I think I could accommodate myself! It helps that 
                  this church is made up of people from a wide variety of traditions 
                  and backgrounds.
 
 Did the service make you feel glad to be a
Christian?
 Oh yes.
 
 What one thing will you remember about all this in seven days' time?
 The laughter, plus the joy of a washroom testimony.
 |  |  | 
          
            |  |  
            |  |  
            |  |  
            | We rely on voluntary donations to stay online. If you're a regular visitor to Ship of Fools, please consider supporting us. |  
            |  |  
            |  |  
            |  |  
            | The Mystery Pilgrim |  
            |  |  
            | One of our most seasoned reporters makes the Camino pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela in Spain. Read here. |  
            |  |  
            |  |  
            |  |  
            | London churches |  
            |  |  
            | Read reports from 70 London churches, visited by a small army of Mystery Worshippers on one single Sunday. Read here. |  
            |  |  |  |  |  |