Pastor Jackson M. Garrott

Jack
was born in Fukuoka in 1948. One of his grandfathers
was a pastor, the other was a seminary professor, and his parents were
missionaries.
At the age of ten, when he visited the grave of the famous missionary,
Robert
Livingston, he told his parents that he would become a missionary too.
He spent most of his life through the 10th grade in Japan. After that,
he went
to America, where he completed high school and went to a university,
majoring
in drama and poetry. He was also one of the official campus
photographers.
While at this university he met his wife, and they were married the day
after
his university graduation. They have two adult daughters and 3
grandchildren.
A turning point in his life was when his father passed away in the
summer of
1974. At that time he and his family were living in Sasebo City in
Nagasaki
Prefecture, where he was teaching English in a college.
During the Obon season (the Festival of the Dead) Nagasaki has a custom
of taking
Shorobune (spirit boats) through the city streets with exploding
firecrackers
and clanging gongs. The noise from the streets brought him a great
sense of the
hopelessness of the average Japanese.
"I want to tell these people, who know only about idols, about the
truly
living God's love and eternal life."
After that he returned to America, to attend seminary. In May of 1978
he graduated
from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary (Fort Worth, Texas), and
pastored
a church in Virginia before returning to Japan.
He had planned to teach English at a university in Nagasaki
City, and sold his household belongings while waiting for the documents
to
apply for a teaching visa. However, he never received the documents.
When he
contacted the university, they said they had hired another person. He
prayed to
God in despondency.
"At that time, I had two dreams.
One was coming back to Japan, the other was making my living as a
professional
photographer again. When I released the two dreams to God, a door
was
opened."
Two months after that prayer of release, a job of
teaching
English in Omura was given to him. He started preaching in Omura
City (Nagasaki Prefecture) in 1981.
After coming to Omura, one day the Lord gave him
this vision, "Make Omura
again to be the foremost Christian city in Japan." During the Warring
State Period (Japanese history),
Sumitada Omura, Japan's first Christian feudal lord, was reigning in
Hizen. At that time there were 80,000 Christians in Omura Fief.
To see this city once again rise up as the
foremost Christian city in
Japan is his prayer, and this church's vision.