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・ Uchijuku Station
・ Uchikawa Dam
・ Uchiki na Aitsu
・ Uchiko
・ Uchiko Line
・ Uchiko Station
・ Uchiko, Ehime
・ Uchil
・ Uchila
・ Uchila, Dakshina Kannada
・ Uchila, Udupi
・ Uchili
・ Uchimedu
・ Uchimizu
・ Uchimura Dam
Uchimura Kanzō
・ Uchimura Produce
・ Uchina Station
・ Uchinada, Ishikawa
・ Uchino
・ Uchino Station
・ Uchino-Nishigaoka Station
・ Uchinoda Station
・ Uchinokura Dam
・ Uchinomaki Station
・ Uchinomi, Kagawa
・ Uchinoura
・ Uchinoura Space Center
・ Uchinoura, Kagoshima
・ Uchipuli


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Uchimura Kanzō : ウィキペディア英語版
Uchimura Kanzō

was a Japanese author, Christian evangelist, and the founder of the Nonchurch Movement (Mukyōkai) of Christianity in the Meiji and Taishō period Japan. He is often considered to be the most well-known Japanese pre-World War II pacifist.
==Early life==
Uchimura was born in Edo, and exhibited a talent for languages from a very early age; he started to study the English language at the age of 11. In 1877, he gained admission to the Sapporo Agricultural College (present-day Hokkaido University), where English was the main language of instruction.
Prior to Uchimura's arrival, William S. Clark, a graduate of Amherst College, had spent the year assisting the Japanese government in establishing the college. While his primary role was to teach agricultural technology, Clark was a committed lay Christian missionary who introduced his students to the Christian faith through Bible classes. All of his students converted and signed the "Covenant of Believers in Jesus", committing themselves to continue studying the Bible and to do their best to live moral lives. Clark returned to the United States after one year, but Uchimura felt his influence through the small Covenant group that was left behind. Under considerable pressure from his ''senpai'' (先輩, a term for senior peers), Uchimura signed the Covenant during his first year at the College at the age of 16 and went on to receive baptism from a Methodist missionary in 1878.
Dissatisfaction with the mission church, however, led Uchimura and his Japanese supporters to establish an independent church in Sapporo. This experiment turned out to be a precursor to what is now called the Nonchurch Movement. Through Clark's teaching and example, this small group believed that they could practice and live an authentic life of faith without depending on an institution or clergy.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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