In early twentieth-century Japan, Uchimura Kanzō gathered small circles of students and intellectuals for Bible study in a form he called “Nonchurch,” gatherings without clergy or sacraments that asked what Christianity might look like when fully received in Japanese terms. From around him rose the writers of the Shirakaba journal, carrying his influence into a generation of Japanese literary and moral imagination.
“I love two J’s and no third: one is Jesus, and the other is Japan.”
— UCHIMURA KANZŌ
