Posts Tagged With: Christ

Understanding the Size of South Africa: An Overlay and Overview

Whether chatting with friends or discussing our ministry in South Africa, people often ask us, “How big is South Africa?”

While we lived in South Africa, we spent a weekend visiting Cape Agulhas, Africa’s southernmost tip and the boundary between the two oceans.

South Africa is the 24th-largest country in the world and the ninth-largest country in the continent of Africa. Its 471,445 square miles make it about one-eighth the size of the United States. It borders the Atlantic Ocean on the west and southwest and the Indian Ocean on the southeast and east.

A good way to visualize it is to imagine it overlaid with the southeastern United States.

The shapes of the two countries’ coastlines are relatively similar (minus the Florida peninsula), so if you align Cape Town approximately with New Orleans, then South Africa would follow the US coast to Virginia Beach, with the city of Durban roughly equal to Wilmington, North Carolina. The neighboring cities of Pretoria and Johannesburg would be roughly west of Roanoke, Virginia, and the northeastern tip of the country would extend into New York state’s Southern Tier region. South Africa’s western tip would be in Arkansas, and its curving northern border would include Columbus, Ohio, and St. Louis, Missouri.

The website TheTrueSize.com (https://www.thetruesize.com/) enabled me to make this overlay of South Africa and the eastern USA (map link below the screenshot).

https://www.thetruesize.com/#?borders=1~!MTM1Nzk0MjI.MTEzNDk4MzY*MTE1NzQ2Mzg(Nzk5NTI5Mg~!CONTIGUOUS_US*MTM2MjM1MDA.MjgxODUyODI(MTc1)MA~!ZA*MTM1MDM4NjE.MTA2NzYxMjQ)MA

Some other details:

  • South Africa has over 62 million people, and its largest city is Johannesburg, with 4.8 million people in the city itself and nearly 7.9 million in the overall metro area. The country distributes its government into three capitals: the executive branch in Pretoria, the legislative in Cape Town, and the judicial in Bloemfontein.
  • Driving between far-flung cities is more difficult and expensive than here in the US, so air travel is often preferred.
  • It has 12 official languages—Zulu, Xhosa, Afrikaans, English, Pedi, Tswana, Southern Sotho, Tsonga, Swazi, Venda, and Southern Ndebele (from most spoken to least as a first language), as well as South African Sign Language. English is used as the lingua franca.
  • While most South Africans are Christian, many secularize it or syncretize that faith with other belief systems, and there are large populations of Muslims, Hindus, traditional African religions, Jewish people, and people who are non-religious.
  • Many non-Christians come to South Africa as refugees or migrant workers from other countries where it can be harder for Christian workers to go, allowing them to learn about Christ in South Africa and sometimes to take that introduction to their own families and friends in their home countries.
  • Rates of unemployment and crime are high, with many factors and challenges contributing.
  • There are always ministry needs and opportunities among South Africa’s many peoples and communities. We are grateful to be part of the work of meeting those needs and loving people in Christ’s name.

Please join us in praying for South Africa: the country; its leaders, government, and economy; and its people—that every one would find peace, safety, prosperity, and joy in their daily needs and their eternal ones. Thank you.

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Praying, speaking, & acting against xenophobia and gender violence

This is a piece I wrote for our mission’s South Africa office following some high-profile crimes there against women and immigrants. You can read it below or at their web site, www.sim.org.za.


 

The first sin committed was putting selfish ambition before loving God. The second was putting selfish anger before loving another human being. They have plagued us ever since.

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Sharing the gospel at our digital doorstep

“No offense, Chuck, but I’m not sure you’re you. Remind me where we met.”

“Lol
“What do you mean by that ?
“This real me.”

The Lord is good, and faithful to meet our every need. He demonstrated that again last week by bringing me a cross-cultural ministry opportunity.

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A funeral, a wedding, and a battle — one day’s three studies on love

Karla was truly a fixture in our town. She was born and raised there, got married and raised her own family there, helped all those she could, and served faithfully on the Sauerkraut Festival committee for decades.

One of her boys, Chad, was a classmate and friend of mine. He was always one of the most gracious and loving members of our class, and I remember often thinking how that was an extension of her overflowing love. She welcomed everyone to her home and table, even letting many stay a while as they needed, including many of her kids’ friends for a few days or weeks, and even some folks she’d not known much before giving them room. When I was a reporter and would visit her every year about that Sauerkraut Festival, she would pour out love and hospitality on me like I was one of her own kids.

She had so much love for all those around her that it was the overwhelming theme of her funeral Saturday morning. Cars were parked far down the street, and the church was packed, and love just filled that room and the many whose eyes welled with it.


Becky was long a coworker of Tracy’s at one medical practice and is again at another. Her daughter was a friend of ours at daycare, and although I have never known Becky well, I have always admired the love and dedication she demonstrated as a single mom. She always had joy, a friendly greeting, and a glowing smile whenever I saw her, and her daughter was always clearly well-cared for and surrounded by her mother’s love.

She and Selly married Saturday afternoon, and it was touching to see them show and others speak of how much they love each other and how that began. He seems a very good man, and we pray that their love continue to grow and deepen for many years.


Private First Class Desmond Doss was a man whose love of God made him promise to never touch a gun but whose love of his country caused him to enlist as a medic for World War II. His true story was told in the gritty 2016 film Hacksaw Ridge, which I watched tonight.

Harassed by his fellow recruits and the officers above them for his beliefs, he was nearly forced out but persevered.

“It isn’t right that other men should fight and die, that I would just be sitting at home safe. I need to serve. I got the energy and the passion to serve as a medic, right in the middle with the other guys. No less danger, just, while everybody else is taking life, I’m going to be saving it. With the world so set on tearing itself apart, it doesn’t seem like such a bad thing to me to wanna put a little bit of it back together,” Doss said at his court martial for refusing an order to use a rifle at training camp.

Viewed by others as a coward, at Iwo Jima, he stayed on a battlefield to help the wounded who hadn’t been able to retreat. Working alone but for God’s help, he saved 75 men while Japanese troops continued to patrol the area, shooting everyone they found alive. “Please Lord, help me get one more,” he kept praying. True to his beliefs and his promise to God, he never harmed anyone and even treated three Japanese soldiers he encountered.

For his actions on Hacksaw Ridge, Doss was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. He was the first conscientious objector to receive it.


“As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Now remain in my love. If you keep my commands, you will remain in my love, just as I have kept my Father’s commands and remain in his love. I have told you this so that my joy may be in you and that your joy may be complete. My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one’s life for one’s friends. You are my friends if you do what I command. I no longer call you servants, because a servant does not know his master’s business. Instead, I have called you friends, for everything that I learned from my Father I have made known to you. You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you so that you might go and bear fruit—fruit that will last—and so that whatever you ask in my name the Father will give you. This is my command: Love each other.”—John 15:9-17 (NIV)

 

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