| Tim and Juji Boyle
5-29-301 Yasui-cho
Nishinomiya-Shi
Hyogo-Ken
Japan 662-0045
Email: Tim and Yuko Boyle

Tim and Juji Boyle were first appointed to serve in Japan in 1982 by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) in a joint appointment with the United Methodist Church. Since October, 2007, they have been in the Osaka-Kobe area, where Tim is assigned to the Buraku Liberation Center in Osaka and Juji to the Shin’ai Home in Kobe.
The ministry of the Buraku Liberation Center involves human rights and discrimination issues, focusing on a kind of caste-like discrimination within Japanese society that has marginalized and victimized a group of people based entirely on their lineage from those who were considered outcasts in feudal Japan. Tim’s ministry is to communicate the plight of these people to the international community and facilitate cooperation with ministries in other countries dealing with similar issues.
First on the agenda was the revival of the newsletter, Crowned With Thorns , which hasn’t been published since the death of the previous missionary in 1999. Tim hopes to build a Web site in English for the BLC in the near future.
On first arriving in Japan in 1982, Tim served as the pastor of a small rural church on the northern island of Hokkaido. In 1986, the Boyles moved to their next assignment in Tsukuba Science City, just north of Tokyo.
They worked in Tsukuba for 21 years through the Tsukuba Christian Center, a community center run by the United Church of Christ in Japan with which both PC(USA) and the UMC (and several others) cooperate.
Writing and publishing has been a big part of Tim’s work over the years. In 1994, Tim wrote a book in Japanese "on the origins of many Chinese characters and how their makeup fits in so beautifully with basic biblical truths" that was in bookstores all over Japan. The English version was released in 2001 under the title, Bible Stories Hidden In Chinese Characters. The Japanese version was republished in an updated version last year and is selling well.
Another important part of Tim’s work has been to bring together the worlds of Christian faith and modern science. Tim works closely with a ministry in the United States founded by the Christian astronomer, Dr. Hugh Ross, which tries to advance the gospel by presenting the overwhelming evidence of divine design in the universe. Ross’s ministry, which is called "Reasons To Believe," is headquartered in Pasadena, California. It is dedicated to answering the doubts of skeptics while strengthening the faith of believers through the world of science. Tim is heading up an effort to put these materials in Japanese and reach those with a scientific background through this particular tool. The Reason to Believe Web site includes a chapter page on Japan, and the Japanese Web site of the organization includes an English site, with numerous articles. While his writings will now focus on human rights issues, he will continue “science apologetics” as time allows.
Another project Tim has helped get off the ground is the Japanese branch of the Make-A-Wish Foundation, an organization dedicated to giving children with life-threatening diseases and their families a ray of hope and happiness by granting them a wish. Tim serves on the board of directors and handles communications with the international organization.
Tim also serves as the official representative for the “Southern Presbyterian Mission in Japan," the legal entity under which the Yodogawa Christian Hospital in Osaka operates. He thus serves on the board of directors of this important ministry as well.
The Boyles feel called to work with Japanese Christians to help them share their witness Christ with their own people. They do this in a variety of ways, including giving sermons and occasional seminars in local churches. As Juji has had to spend so much time in the hospital with her own health problems, she has also developed an important hospital ministry, often counseling other patients and giving them the kind of understanding and support that only a fellow patient can. Her new work at the Shin’ai Home in Kobe will focus on counseling patients and their families, and she expects to develop similar ministries in other hospital settings as well. |