Hamilton Books
Pages: 210
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7618-4949-0 • Paperback • March 2010 • $51.99 • (£40.00)
978-0-7618-4950-6 • eBook • March 2010 • $49.00 • (£38.00)
Samuel Lee is a sociologist specializing in Japanese society and culture. He is president of Foundation University in the Netherlands and a member of the Christian Sociological Society and Japan Sociological Society of the University of Tokyo.
Chapter 1 Foreword
Chapter 2 Acknowledgments
Chapter 3 Endorsements
Chapter 4 Introduction
Chapter 5 Methodology
Chapter 6 List of Figures
Part 7 Part One - The Beginning: The Arrival of the Israelites in Japan, B.C. 250-A.D. 250
Chapter 8 1. The Origin of the Japanese People
Chapter 9 2. The Lost Tribes of Israel
Chapter 10 3. Hebrew-Japanese Cultural Comparisons
Part 11 Part Two - Keikyo: The Church of the East in Japan, A.D. 600
Chapter 12 4. The Church of the East in Asia
Chapter 13 5. The Church of the East in Japan
Part 14 Part Three - Kirishtan: The Catholic Church in Japan: The Age of Persecution, A.D. 1542
Chapter 15 6. The Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century Social, Political, and Economic Conditions in Asia & Japan
Chapter 16 7. The Arrival of The Roman Catholic Church in Japan
Chapter 17 8. The Age of Persecution
Chapter 18 9. The Hidden Church
Part 19 Part Four - Kirisuto Kyokai: The Arrival of Protestantism in Japan: The Age of Revival & Indiginization, A.D. 1853
Chapter 20 10. The Protestant Movement Enters Japan
Chapter 21 11. The Clash of Cultures
Chapter 22 12. Christianity in a Post-War Japan
Part 23 Part Five - Analysis & Conclusions: The Age of a New Beginning, A.D. 2000
Chapter 24 13. A Brief Summary & Conclusions
Chapter 25 14. A Lesson in Missiology & a New Beginning
Chapter 26 Bibliography
Chapter 27 Biographical Information
Lee offers a truly unique point of view and necessary commentary on the subject of Christian mission in today's world…This work is to be highly recommended.
— Brian McLaren, author and fly fisherman
[Lee's] research, which has become an enormous source book in the history of Japanese Christianity, culture and language suggests that it is indeed possible that the Japanese people originated from Israel...
— Hiroko Ayabe, founder of Japan Revival Ministries, Tama Gospel Center
A unique and challenging view of the historic overlap between Japanese Shintoism and Buddhism and Christianity. It is a pleasure to observe the depth of his awareness…
— Prof. Toshifumi Uemura, Japan Lutheran College
One of the most exciting and provocative contributions to discussions of global Christianity that I have read in a long time…A fascinating, in-depth and detailed portrait…His argument is compelling and extremely well-documented...
— Carl Raschke, Professor of Religious Studies, University of Denver, USA