Saturday, June 22, 2019

Toyohiko Kagawa


Toyohiko Kagawa

Toyohiko Kagawa was born in 1888, the son of a wealthy businessman and a concubine.  Both parents died when he was four years old and the young boy bounced between relatives who didn’t seem to actually want him.  His childhood was very lonely. 

As a teenager, he took some English classes through some Presbyterian missionaries and was converted to Christianity.  His conversion resulted in his extended Buddhist family disowning him and his having to move in with the missionary families.  As a young man, he enrolled in Tokyo Presbyterian college and later in a local Seminary.  He went to Princeton University for further studies from 1914-1916.  His theological studies, while beneficial, left a bad taste in his mouth.  He was turned off by all the discussion and debate over theological fine points and the relatively minor discussion over how to apply those doctrines, and the Christian faith in general, to a struggling world – pointing often to the parable of the Good Samaritan.

He returned to Japan, in the city of Kobe, and moved into a 6x6-foot shack in order to minister to the poor there.  Japan at the time was going through an internal struggle with its attempt to adopt Capitalism as an economic system, and the poor ended up suffering greatly.  As a result of being immersed in this suffering, Toyohiko advocated a form of Socialism based on Christian principles – an alternative to State-run Socialism, Capitalism, and Communism he called “Brotherhood Economics.”

Toyohiko was a driving force in organizing labor strikes and forming the first labor unions in Japan.  For these activities, he was arrested twice: in 1921 and in 1922.  During his time in prison, he wrote two novels, the second of which detailed his life among the destitute of Kobe.

In 1923, a devastating earthquake hit Tokyo, leveling much of the city.  He moved there, sensing an opportunity to minister to those affected.  From here, he advocated for universal male suffrage in Japan, which he succeeded in achieving, and made great strides in universal female suffrage.

With the rise of militarism in Japan in the 1930s, Toyohiko advocated for Pacifism.  After Japan invaded China, he gave a speech in China where he apologized on behalf of the Japanese people for the invasion.  This led to his arrest in 1940.  He was released in early 1941, and he traveled to the United States to advocate for peace.  He spent the duration of World War 2 in the United States, returning to Japan soon after its defeat, then achieving his long-held goal of universal women’s suffrage.  He continued to write on social issues, receiving a nomination for the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1947 and in 1948 and later a nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1954 and 1955.  All this time, he continued to evangelize the forgotten poor of Japan.  He established hospitals, schools, credit unions and churches.

Though evangelism was the primary impetus for his works, he is better known as a Christian social reformer.  Toyohiko died in 1960, at age 71, of heart failure.  His final words were from his deathbed, “Please do your best for world peace and the church in Japan.”

Quotes:
[to Emperor Hirohito in 1946] “Whosoever will be great among you…shall be the servant of all.  A ruler’s sovereignty, Your Majest, is in the hearts of the people.  Only by service to others can a man, or nation, be godlike.”
“I read that in a book that a man called Christ went about doing good.  It is very disconcerting to me that I am so easily satisfied with just ‘going about’.”





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