Few Japanese wish to baptize, the country’s Orthodox leader regrets

Metropolitan Daniel of Tokyo and all Japan

Metropolitan Daniel of Tokyo and all Japan

The Japanese Orthodox Church
8/2/2012

*** He can’t find a successor

Moscow, February 6, Interfax – The Japanese Autonomous Orthodox Church faces problems in its mission: people in the “land of the rising sun” do not hurry to baptize.

“We have newly converted believers, who have been baptized. But the majority of the baptized are children of mixed Japanese-Russian marriages. Totally, there are about 20-30 new Orthodox believers a year in Japan,” Metropolitan Daniel of Tokio and All Japan said in his interviewee with the Izvestia daily.

According to his data, there are about 30 thousand of Orthodox believers in the country (there were about 90 thousand of them in first half of the 20th century), 60 small churches and chapels are open, about 30 priests work in them.

“After the October Revolution, Orthodox Japanese were left to themselves and it did not help spread the Eastern Christianity. And in recent years, Japanese have mostly lived with their immediate needs. They often forget that there is something more important,” the Metropolitan said.

According to him, very few Japanese want to become monks.

“They want to have a family. It is not in Japan tradition – to be alone. When Patriarch Kirill was here, he told me it would be nice to have more monks here. But where can I get them? So we have two administrators for three dioceses and I have to double-job. That’s why I even can’t find a successor,” Metropolitan Daniel said.

If someone from Russia becomes a successor, then the Japanese Church will “lose it autonomy,” so “we need a Japanese,” he believes.

The Japanese Autonomous Church was founded by St. Nikolay (Kasatkin) who came to Japan from Russia on 1861 on the decision of the Holy Synod. He founded and headed the Russian Orthodox mission in Japan in 1870. He translated the Holy Scripture and liturgical books into Japanese and built the Resurrection Cathedral in Tokyo.

The Russian Orthodox Church canonized Archbishop Nikolay in 1970. The Moscow Patriarchate granted autonomy to the Japanese Orthodox Church the same year.

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