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A
Brief History
Kagoshima
Christian Mission (KCM) is a non-denominational Church of Christ
mission established in 1971 by Walter and Mary Maxey for the
purpose of sharing the Gospel with the lost in southern Japan.
After a year of intensive language study in Tokyo, they began this
work in the city of Kagoshima (population 550,000), located at the
southern tip of Kyushu, the most southern of the four main islands
of Japan.
After first working with the Kagoshima Church of Christ until a
Japanese minister was able to be called, the Lord led and enabled
them to establish a new church in a suburb of the city called
Yoshino, open a preaching point in the town of Kokubu, begin weekly
English Bible classes, and hold biannual weekend EBC camps to reach
young people.
Present work centers around the Yoshino Church of Christ, located
in a northern suburb of Kagoshima City.
Present
Work in Kagoshima
Yoshino
Church of Christ Ministry
The Yoshino
church began as a home Bible study in 1973. In March of 1975, a
house was rented and Sunday worship services, Sunday School, and
weekly Bible studies were begun. During their second term
(1977-1981), Walter led the Yoshino church in a building program.
The congregation began meeting in the new building added to the
mission home in November of 1979.
Walter serves as the full-time minister of the Yoshino church. As
minister, he preaches for the Sunday services, teaches Wednesday
Bible studies, and leads the church in regular evangelistic
outreach programs. Mary assists with the monthly ladies’
meetings, the children’s program, and administrative
duties.
In the spring of 2003, the Lord provided property next to the
church building, which the church converted into a parking lot.
This has encouraged attendance, which averages between twenty-five
and thirty. The Maxeys are praying that the Lord will provide a
future full-time Japanese minister. The Yoshino church is
completely self-supporting.
Other
Preaching and Teaching
In addition
to his ministry with the Yoshino church, Walter is involved in
preaching and teaching in the following places:
Kokubu—Every
Sunday the Maxeys also drive to the small town of Kokubu (a
fifty-minute drive from Kagoshima) to preach for the small group of
Christians making up the Kokubu Church of Christ. Services are held
in a rented meeting room at a local hall.
Churches without Ministers—Walter
is assisting other churches which are presently without ministers.
He preaches at the Kushikino church on fifth Sundays and at the
Tarumizu church on the first and fifth Sundays of the
month.
Kagoshima Prison—Walter has
been serving as a chaplain at the Kagoshima prison since June of
1978 and is currently an officer of the Kagoshima Chaplains’
Association. He goes to the prison (70 minutes by car) once a month
to teach a Bible class attended by 10-15 inmates. An annual
Christmas program planned by all of the Christian chaplains is
attended by an average of 150 inmates. It is a challenging
ministry.
Teaching
English Bible Classes
Since English
is a required language for all Japanese students (junior high
through college), and the Japanese are traveling more widely and
eager to improve their English, English Bible classes are an
effective way of sharing the Gospel. English Bible classes are an
opportunity to teach the Bible in English, after which further
explanation is given in Japanese. All students must have an
English-Japanese New Testament and are asked to read it before and
during class. Walter is currently teaching two English Bible
classes at the downtown Kagoshima Church of Christ.
Working
with Japanese Ministers
The Maxeys do
not work alone. They work in close cooperation with five Japanese
ministers of the churches of Christ in Kagoshima Prefecture. Walter
attends the Japanese ministers’ monthly meeting for
fellowship and to work with them on various projects throughout the
year.
The churches of Christ in Kagoshima Prefecture jointly own a
campground at the foot of mountains across the bay from Kagoshima
City. Walter serves as manager of this campground.
Christian
Bookstore Ministry
Walter now
oversees the Christian bookstore ministry begun by his father in
the town of Kanoya (almost 2 hours away).
Osaka
Bible Seminary Support
Since 1996,
Walter has been serving as a trustee of the only Bible college of
the churches of Christ in Japan, located 800 miles north in
Osaka.
Community Involvement
The Maxeys
are involved in the local community in various ways. Walter has
served as the foreign member of the Kagoshima Mayor’s
Citizens’ Panel and has been invited to speak for local
groups such as the Rotary Club and the Council for Human Rights. He
teaches English part-time at Kagoshima University.
Mary is active in the community through music and teaching. She
played the trumpet and French horn in the Kagoshima Wind Ensemble
and Kagoshima Symphony Orchestra for 17 years and still maintains
close contact with those groups. She teaches English part-time at
Kagoshima Prefectural College. She has also been asked to speak at
community events.
The
Maxeys—A Biographical Sketch
Walter Maxey
was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1946. He was raised in Japan as
the eldest son of missionary parents, Mr. & Mrs. Mark G. Maxey.
In 1964, after graduating from Canadian Academy in Kobe, Japan, he
returned to the U.S. to enter Cincinnati Bible Seminary. Graduating
with an A.B. degree in 1968, he entered Cincinnati Christian
Seminary that same year and received the M.A. (1970) and M.Div.
(1971) degrees.
During his undergraduate and graduate studies, Walter served as
youth minister at the First Church of Christ in Fairborn, Ohio, for
two years; as assistant minister at the First Christian Church in
North Vernon, Indiana; and as minister of the Plumville Church of
Christ, Maysville, Kentucky, for two years. He continued his
graduate studies during his first two furloughs, receiving a M.A.
in East Asian Studies from Indiana University (1978) and the Doctor
of Ministry degree (in Missions) from Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky (1985).
Mary Maxey is a native of Murphysboro, Illinois. She entered
Cincinnati Bible Seminary in 1966 and graduated with an A.B. degree
in Christian Education in 1970. In 1971 she received the Master of
Education degree from Xavier University in Cincinnati, Ohio.
The Maxeys have two children. Shelley and her husband, Christian,
have three children and live in Boston, Massachusetts, where
Christian is a software engineer & Shelley home schools their
three children. Trent and his wife, Libby, have two small sons and
live in rural Massachusetts. He is an assistant professor at
Amherst College.