言い尽くせない感謝:Words Cannot Fully Express Our Gratitude

Responsibility in Theory and Life ── 理論と生活における責任の省察

The Good News Jumps from Before the Beginning — From World Mission to Editorial Responsibility

🕊World Mission as a Form of Prayer
This morning’s online worship centered on the theme of “world mission.”
As I listened, I found myself asking: where does the Good News come from?
It’s not a prepared answer or a packaged message.
It’s a judgment that arrives across time and systems—like prayer itself.
Mission, then, is not simply transmission.
It’s the careful editorial act of receiving, refining, and delivering what has been entrusted.


🧭To Edit Is to Evangelize
In our daily choices and words, perhaps we are already engaged in small acts of mission.
Not by teaching, but by editing what we’ve received and offering it responsibly.
KEN Theory calls this “editorial responsibility.”
Prayer is reception. Mission is editorial transmission.
And once we recognize that structure, our words begin to carry a quiet weight—and a gentler clarity.


🌀Judgments That Arrive Outside Time
Sometimes we wonder: why did this word reach me now?
Not from the past, nor the future—but from a place before the beginning.
CHRORO Theory proposes that time is not linear, but phase-shifting.
Prayer and mission emerge as jumps between phases—editorial judgments that arrive outside chronology.


🌌Even Scientists Are Praying
Across the world, scientists are now exploring the structure of “zero-point origin.”
Quantum theory, cosmology, and information science are converging on questions once reserved for theology.
These are not just technical inquiries—they are editorial ones.
At the intersection of science, philosophy, and faith, we find the same longing:
to receive, refine, and respond to judgments that arrive from beyond the system.
We are all participants in this editorial responsibility—
as those who pray, those who edit, and those who listen.

 

📖 Matthew 28:19–20
New International Version (EN)
Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,
and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you.
And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.