Month: January 2012

japan’s long financial slide, tsunami cleanup

I’ve lived in Japan on-and-off for the last 23 years, and can still remember the dynamism of the whole culture when i first came. Osaka’s skyline was like a huge erector-set, with tall cranes furiously putting up new buildings everywhere. The people walked quickly and while the natural Japanese mood of “melancholy” was abundant, there was a looking-forward to the future, where anyone could do just about anything they set their minds to. One of my English students was a normal guy – jazz drummer, and told me how his friend spent around 700,000usd on a new condo, and wasn’t even planning to live in it! He was a speculator, planning to sell it higher later. This student himself borrowed over 300,000usd to start up his tiny jazz studio/cafe in the nightclub area of Osaka. Wonder what happened with that?

I can still remember the day around 6 months after i arrived when the stock market crashed. The standard response was “It will come up again.” There were magazine articles explaining how Japan was “unique”, and different from other countries, so the economy would dip a bit, and then come back stronger than ever, and be number one in the world. Of course a few years before that there was a man in America who wrote a book something along the lines of “The Japanese Century”, referring to how the 21st century would see Japan become the dominant power in the world. Funny thing happened tho, that same man is now studying Chinese – ha!

Anyway, very few industries in Japan are really efficient, but the export-driven companies are usually tops in their fields. Especially in electronics and automobiles have they been world-beaters. So they have amassed a huge foreign reserves, second only to China’s. Japan’s reserves

It is a good thing, as that is about the only bright spot in Japan’s financial picture. The demographic problem is the biggest, with the population aging rapidly, and the young choosing not to get married, or married much later, many unborn killed, and a fear of allowing many foreigners in. The 1990s is called even in Japan a “wasted decade”, as the government continued to throw good money after bad on public works projects to somehow “ignite” the economy. Of course that didn’t do much good, as current stories of a huge govt. recreation centers etc. being sold for as little as $1 in some cases, because really no one wants them! So Japanese govt. debt ballooned to where it is now way higher than any other major country’s. Public debt per GDP is twice as bad as America’s, yet there is little angst about it, as most of the holders of the debt are not foreigners, but domestic. list of countries by public debt

Today Japan announced the first red ink in international trade in 31 years. 2011 Japan’s red ink. The stated reasons are the cleanup from the tsunami, tsunami cleanup pics and even bigger – the shutdown of many nuclear plants after the Fukushima problems, with the slack in electricity production being taken up by importing more oil and coal. This is ominous, as the export sector has been propping up the economy, and if Japan loses its reserves, there is basically nothing left financial wise.

Which leads to a big question – what will happen to the yen? The yen has been on a tear over the last few years, rising against all the other major currencies. When i left Japan in 2005, it was around 110jpy/1usd, but now that is 76/1. That is great for earning in yen, and sending to other countries to help people, but what will happen if Japan self-implodes?

Three years ago a pastor at a Seventh-day Adventist church here in Japan prayed for a better economy, but i told some of the members afterwards that it might be better for the economy to collapse totally, so that the people would be forced to consider eternal realities. As long as things go along somehow, people will not consider what is important in life, and will continue to reject God’s gift of salvation in Jesus Christ.

test for image addition to search engines

I’ve had lots of pics up, and yet very few of them get indexed by the search engines. Recently i saw where “Agatha Thrash”, which used to display my pic in the top 5 results, now doesn’t show at all, except for 2, totally unrelated pics.

So i’m going to try something different, please bear with me 😉

1858 great controversy book work update

What’s going on with the 1858 Great Controversy book work?

One of the biggest reasons i came back to Japan last year was not only to recharge my own life by being in comfortable surroundings, but to also work to earn money to support further expansion of the 1858 Great Controversy book work. Here is what has occurred within the past year:

Japanese: The Kobe church promoted this book, and gave away around 50 copies to members one Sabbath. There was lots of talk about letting me give studies of the book, but so far, only talk. One man of Brazilian origin ordered a box of 100 of these books, so now there are around 300 left of the 5,000 printed 10 years ago.

Romanian: The Romanian translator diligently promoted this book this year, and towards the end of the year sent me a email saying that all 4,000 copies printed in 2009 have been distributed 🙂 I have offered to support him to print more and travel to promote it. May God’s will be done, and many people there read this book.

Portuguese: A man emailed out of the blue saying that he has just completed translating this book. Being very happy, but with caution learned from many such experiences, i sent a reply to which i’m still awaiting a response.

Spanish: The Romanian translator has been working on a re-translation of this book, as the first translator did not translate faithfully. I believe he is about done, so hopefully we can print soon. There are many Romanians in Spain, so perhaps this Brother can work at distributing books in both languages in Spain?

Armenian: It is frustrating to know that the translation has been completed for quite a while, but it is languishing for lack of proofreaders. I’ve been told that the 1911 edition has recently been translated, and the proofreaders are busy on that, and there is no word when, if ever, they will get to this translation. Finally i asked the translator to find someone, and he said his pastor father would work on it. I’m currently in the process of making the cover art for this book, and hope to see it printed this year.

Tonga: A Brother in Zimbabwe who has emailed me on and off for almost 10 years finally got my attention this year, so i sent him some funds to purchase a computer. He has been a Global Mission Pioneer before, and has recently been elected elder for a wide area in his country, so i hope and pray he is trustworthy.

Kannada: The translation was finished in the early part of 2011, and there were some emails with the translator’s son, and we agreed that it needed to be proofread. Since then, there has been almost no contact.

Gujarati and Marathi: Still in the same condition as when i was in Pune in 2009 – translation completed, but no electronic input done. Praise God that the Brother there sent a email just this week saying that starting next month he will work full time spreading this book in the various languages in India!

Tibetan: Money was sent to the pastor in Northern India at the end of the year to reprint this book which was poorly printed around 7 years ago, and all copies had to be destroyed.

Hmong and Laotian: Just today a email was received saying that a young man in college is working on translating into these two languages.

Indonesian: A young man met in Indonesia in 2010 said the translator i met who promised me he would translate it, is now going around to churches severely denouncing this book! So my friend found someone else to translate it, and told me the translation was completed, but even after many months, there has been no new information.

Filipino languages: My contact in the Philippines wants to work to earn money in Malaysia until his son graduates from college, at which point he will be willing for me to support him while he travels around spreading this book. In the meantime, his wife is handling the few requests for books, and he sent a very interesting email explaining how a former Catholic priest found this book and is captivated by it. Hopefully by this summer, or end of the year at the latest, distribution will start up again in the Philippines for this book.

English: There are still requests for boxes of the books once in a while.

Misc: Just last week a email came from someone in the U.S. saying that this lady’s son would like to devote some time spreading this book in the Philippines and Thailand.
Around 55,000 of these books were downloaded from the internet last year, for which i’m very thankful, and praise God for working on people’s hearts, and leading them to this book. May many souls be in the kingdom because of this is my prayer.

great controversy books downloaded 2011

It is amazing how God has led people to my web site, and impressed them to download books. http://www.earlysda.com/books/other/great-controversy-books-downloaded-2011.pdf

Last year, (extrapolating), over 55,000 1858 Great Controversy books by Ellen White were downloaded. 46,000 Testimonies to the Church and over 8,300 William Miller books were downloaded also.

I remember when i first put the English one up on the web in 1998, i prayed to God that he would help get up to the great total of 100 people a month to download it! Now it is what, around 150 copies per day!! Hope these seeds spring up some day and bear fruit.

Of course i understand that many of these downloads, (maybe 10%?) are just spiders and bots etc., but i really hope that the people who downloaded them will be led by the Holy Spirit to prepare now for the soon coming end times.

japan pics 2011

Daniel Winters’ life for 2011 is available for all to see. Click on Lovin’ it in Japan 2011 or in the pics column on the left.

The pics are mostly in chronological order, with one pic taken in 2005 stuck in the middle, and several taken by someone else at the Kobe Seventh-day Adventist church (where i volunteer teach English on Tuesdays) stuck at the end. There are few from Korea and Hong Kong in the mix too.

In going back over the year in pics, i see that trees and people seem to be important to me 🙂 I sure do thank God for the healthful, relaxing year where i felt like 2 years rolled off my age 🙂

new year starts with first new moon after equinox, new month with conjunction

As mentioned in the post last Sep regarding my biggest study project last year – God’s calendar, the 2 biggest assumptions that i wasn’t sure about, but that the evidence seemed to lean toward, was:
1. The new year starts after the spring (vernal) equinox
2. The new month starts at the conjunction (dark phase) of the moon

Well today i found good evidence for both of these positions 🙂

Genesis 1:14-19

And God said, Let there be lights in the firmament of the heaven to divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs, and for seasons, and for days, and years: 15 And let them be for lights in the firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth: and it was so. 16 And God made two great lights; the greater light to rule the day, and the lesser light to rule the night: [he made] the stars also. 17 And God set them in the firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth, 18 And to rule over the day and over the night, and to divide the light from the darkness: and God saw that [it was] good. 19 And the evening and the morning were the fourth day.

This text is key for determining both the new year, new month, and new day. I think all Seventh-day Adventists understand that the day starts at sundown, as that is when the 7th day Sabbath begins. Each 7th day goes from sundown Friday to sundown Saturday.

The month is much trickier to determine. But keeping the above text in mind, and the principle of how the day starts, we can get very good instruction in determining when the new month starts. Since the new day starts when the darkness starts, and the rule of the sun is gone, it naturally follows that the new month would start when the darkness starts – i.e.: at the conjunction. Now i know it was determined for a long time in Israel by a physical sighting, but don’t see any place in the Bible where that is referred to at all. Psalms 81:3 says:

Blow up the trumpet in the new moon, in the time appointed, on our solemn feast day.

The Hebrew word for “time appointed” is kece which means “full”, but has the meaning of “plump”, and “filled up” with the implication of “cover” and “conceal”. Now this verse is used for a strange theory i just came across today on the wild-n-wooly internet, where some guy says the new month should really start from the full moon, not the new moon – ha! Anyway, to say that this word means full moon, when there is an implication of concealment is not good. Aha! but wait a minute. It’s true that the moon is “full” TWICE a month. Once when it is bright as we always consider it “full”, and once when it is completely black, at its conjunction! So this riddle can be easily solved when letting it refer to the full dark moon.

It is also interesting to note that God concealed himself in a thick cloud at Sinai from the multitude of people so that they would not make a graven image of him. In a similar vein, it looks possible that the dark phase of the moon would be what God would choose as the important marker, rather than when it can be seen. All thru history people have been worshipping the moon, and a very large religious group even today has crescent moon symbols all over their religious paraphernalia.

reflect 2011, forward 2012

2011 is history. It marked the 50th year of my life, making me suddenly realize that the length of my life would actually show up on a time line of the history of the world — almost 1/2 that of Joseph’s! What to show for all that time? ummmm, welllll, uhhhh,,,,

Main events in my life last year were coming back to Japan to the same house i lived in from 1998-2005. It feels so good to be in comfortable surroundings, waking up at nite knowing how to get to the bathroom, and not having to wonder if you were going to step on a creepy-crawly, knowing how to communicate with people around you, cooking food you like, earning money again after a 5-year absence (except for a 8-month stint in Thailand), not having to wonder if the people you’re staying with really want you to leave or not, etc. etc. If the 5 years of travel added 10 years to my age, this 1 year rolled off 1 or 2 years of that 🙂

It was very difficult tho getting back into earning mode. Having only a 90-day tourist “pass”, it was impossible to promise people i could teach English long-term. Fortunately some people took a chance on me, for which i’m extremely thankful, and then in September a former customer of Country Life Restaurant (an American guy) sponsored my one-year working visa – thank you! Strangely, only 1 of the 60+ kids i used to teach in 2005 wanted to restart lessons, so it has taken a while to get back up to speed, but things are definitely going well and looking up now. It feels really good to not just be able to support myself, but to have enough income to help others too!

The Kobe Seventh-day Adventist church provided quite a roller-coaster experience for me. I first went to the church on January 19, after the lady elder at the Yao branch-church affirmed that she still believes that it is OK for new converts to have idols in their home. I won’t agree to that, so went to the Kobe church, taking nearly 2 hours each direction. What a pleasant surprise to see them very interested in the Japanese 1858 Great Controversy book i translated, and warm and friendly in sabbath school, and even the pastor preaching about this book, then giving away 50 copies to all the congregation one sabbath! wow! They kept trying to sponsor my visa, but too late and too little, as the Union nixed the idea, but we went ahead and started a little free English school for neighborhood kids on Tuesdays. It has been great to see some of the kids coming to Vacation Bible School and the Christmas program, probably the first time many of them have ever been inside a church. There was lots of talk at the beginning of my holding studies on the 1858gc book, but as week after week passed, i slowly began to realize that while the intentions were good, there was no real desire to study the words of God. There were the usual anti-biblical things being done in church which i raised my voice against, and basically i was told that this is the way it is, and i have to follow it. Well, i’ve pretty much decided to opt out. How can i join in communion when the pastor is encouraging a hindu family to take part with us?! etc.

My studies in the inspired words of God this year were mostly into how the calendar of God is set up. This subject is very important for knowing what happened in 1844, which was my focus, but on the way to there, i found out that ALL the statutes of the Lord look to still be in force today, which seems to include the feasts. hmmmm.

My resolutions for the New Year are to:
1. Study out deeply whether or not we are supposed to keep all the statutes of the Lord, including the feasts, today
2. Pray more
3. Keep my eyes and mind from impure things