Posts Tagged With: God

A faithful friend: celebrating 10 years with a favorite camera—and all it represents

Today is the tenth anniversary of buying the “dream camera” I’d picked out years earlier.

I happened to notice this was coming just two days ago, and that has reminded me of God’s faithfulness and providence, of the patience He often asks us to practice, and of the joy He takes in blessing His children.

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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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Being a Faithful Steward: Caring for God’s Word

As followers of Christ, we are called to be good stewards of everything we have, not owning it ourselves but taking care of it out of love, respect and appreciation for God entrusting it to us. We should make the most of what we have and also be willing to share it with others.

This applies doubly so with God’s word, the Bible.

“Fix these words of mine in your hearts and minds; tie them as symbols on your hands and bind them on your foreheads. Teach them to your children, talking about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when you lie down and when you get up. Write them on the doorframes of your houses and on your gates, so that your days and the days of your children may be many in the land the Lord swore to give your ancestors, as many as the days that the heavens are above the earth.” — Deuteronomy 11:18-21 (NIV)

I have had a well-loved NIV Student Bible by Zondervan since early in our marriage. I remember Tracy and I going together to a local Christian book store and examining the different options. We compared such physical things as typesetting, margin width, and likely durability in addition to the readability of translations, the quality and extent of explanatory notes and study guides, and even our personal tastes about visual style. We each picked one that suited our preferences and goals, and we each still have them.

They have accompanied us to church services, Bible studies and theology classes, and across the ocean. Mine sits at my desk and (although often replaced by the quicker efficiency of an online search) remains my favorite for deeper, lingering study of God’s word. I love that it is filled with my thoughts, questions and notes from years of study, and that those windows into my faith are there for our son and daughter now and will be even after we pass on.

My friend helping me with morning devotions in Cape Town, South Africa, in 2016.

“All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, so that the servant of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work.” — 2 Timothy 3:16-17 (NIV)

Sadly, though, my old friend sat for many months on a back corner of my study desk. Having traveled with me to a great many places over the years, its binding started cracking, and I couldn’t bear the thought of it breaking entirely and accelerating its decline. “I’ll look up how to fix it properly” wound up taking far longer than I’d anticipated. Even after the materials arrived, finding time to make the repair, getting (and keeping) a clear enough work surface, and working up the courage to risk making the damage worse all delayed me further.

I wanted to be a good steward and make the repair and get back to using it well, but I also wanted to be a good steward and not accidentally damage it further. Having access to a pocket Bible for travel and to dozens of electronic Bibles through my computer and phone made it less urgent.

I think that The Living Bible‘s paraphrase of Ecclesiastes 11:4 best expresses the kick-in-the-pants that I have needed: “If you wait for perfect conditions, you will never get anything done.”

Today, I finally cleared off my study desk and set about being a faithful steward. I used a special glue for book binding (non-acidic, remains flexible after drying, etc.), some book binding cloth, and a sheet of tabloid printer paper to reinforce the remaining cloth binding and cover it with a seamless layer of paper. The repair isn’t perfect or particularly pretty, but it seems sufficient and sturdy, and it seems like it will enable this Bible to continue helping me grow in faith, in knowing God and in making Him known.

Like many tasks, this repair took less time than I’d thought it might, and it would’ve been better stewardship to just get this done months ago. But even that is like so much of faith: the actions or failures of our past should not inhibit or delay us in using well today what the Lord is entrusting to us, be that a Bible to study, His word to share, or the conversations and relationships in which we might share His love for all of us.

“Then Jesus came to them and said, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. 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.” — Matthew 28:18-20 (NIV)

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Read about what God is doing through missionaries in and from South Africa! (SIMnow #157)

The online editions of SIM South Africa’s SIMnow Autumn (March) 2024 magazine are available.

This is the seventh issue I have compiled and edited, and we continue to get good feedback about it from readers.

A challenge, though, is that getting the magazine to the readers is increasingly difficult. South Africa’s postal system faces many challenges itself, and those sometimes delay or prevent delivery for our readers.

We have long posted the PDFs of our magazine online to help alleviate this, but we recognize that PDFs of two-page magazine spreads aren’t easy to read on a phone, which is where most reading happens nowadays. While we are working to develop a more suitable long-term solution, we have created a one-page-wide adaptation of the magazine for distribution by WhatsApp, which is a very popular app in and around South Africa.

“Many have undertaken to draw up an account of the things that have been fulfilled among us, just as they were handed down to us by those who from the first were eyewitnesses and servants of the word. With this in mind, since I myself have carefully investigated everything from the beginning, I too decided to write an orderly account for you, most excellent Theophilus, so that you may know the certainty of the things you have been taught.”

Luke 1:1-4 (NIV)

Articles this time included:

  • a brief story about the founding of Young Legends, a youth soccer program in three cities of South Africa.
  • a story about two of our workers developing a farm into a community and youth ministry center.
  • a farewell message from SIM’s former international director and an article introducing our new one.
  • an article and photos from a conference helping African churches send missionaries
  • a “Why I Wrote” books feature by the founder of Sports Friends, a worldwide youth soccer program.

You can read it online or download a copy at SIM South Africa’s website (https://sim.org.za/simnow/).

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