Uncategorized

Is Christianity Doomed to Fail in Japan? – Radical.net

today1 week ago 2

share close

/article
/podcast
Radical trains and equips churches and followers of Christ to spread gospel hope on the front lines of urgent need among the nations.
GIVE TO RADICAL →
Urgent comes alongside indigenous believers in some of the hardest to reach places on earth. There, we seek to make disciples, multiply churches and provide humanitarian relief in ways that are biblically faithful and practically effective.
GIVE TO URGENT →
Stratus synthesizes reliable data from different sources to clearly display the world’s most urgent spiritual and physical needs in an intuitive tool.
GIVE TO STRATUS →
 
LEARN MORE →
 
Why are there so few Christians in Japan? In an island nation where the gospel reached its shores centuries ago, Christianity has just seemingly never been able to grow. In this new three-episode series from Radical, Steven Morales explores the religious history of Japan and its tenuous relationship with Christianity.

Steven Morales is the Content Director at Radical and hosts Neighborhood & Nations. He is based out of Guatemala City, Guatemala.
/video
/video
/video
/video
That means that the people with the most urgent spiritual and physical needs on the planet are receiving the least amount of support. Together we can change that!
Radical exists to equip Christians to be on mission.
Grow
Go
Give
© Radical 2024

source

Written by: Christianity Today

Rate it

Similar posts

Uncategorized

Hold Your Clapbacks – ChristianityToday.com

I’d just finished reading one of C. S. Lewis’s lesser-known books, Studies in Words, when I happened upon a recent New York Times report on evangelical support for Donald Trump. The former president’s summer of legal woes is off to an early start, and many have asked whether the present […]

today3 hours ago

Uncategorized

Christianity and the Crab Mentality – The Cougar Chronicle

“If we aspire to be different from the broader Christian community, we must break free from this destructive pattern. Allowing groups whose principles do not align with the university’s to influence its operations is akin to pulling BYU back into the crab bucket.”In discussions within Christian communities online, I’ve observed […]

today15 hours ago

Post comments (0)

Leave a reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


0%