In Japan, the average Protestant church has fewer than 50 people. Missionaries quietly refer to Japan as a “graveyard.” No wonder one famous Japanese author wrote, “Japan is a swamp… whenever you plant the sapling of Christianity, the roots begin to rot.” And yet—God has not given up on Japan.
Consider Pastor Lam Wai Chan, a reluctant missionary from Singapore. He arrived in Tokyo assuming he would “fix” a struggling congregation. Instead, he discovered a few elderly believers who had weathered decades of disappointment and still showed up, still prayed, still loved Christ. Lam felt God confronting him gently: “They have faithfulness. What about you?”
So Lam offered the whole sinking church back to God. No flashy programs. No clever marketing. Just prayer. Slowly—beautifully—the church doubled. Children returned. New families wandered in without invitation. Lam tells anyone who listens: “God promised to preserve this church, and He has never failed me once.”
Or consider Pastor Mizuno, who has served the same rural congregation for nearly 50 years. When she returned to simply helping each person meet God daily in Scripture, the congregation revived, growing from a handful to more than a hundred. Her testimony is simple: “I made mistakes. But I was faithful. God sustained us.”
Japan remains less than 1% Christian. The soil still seems hard. Revival may come slowly. But faithfulness is its own miracle.