Saturday, December 29, 2007

HCJB Global Sub-Saharan Team


The growing team that serves with HCJB Global here in the Sub-Saharan region of Africa arrived in Cape Town for a week of meetings and retreat together. The team arrived in two groups: First, a group of 6 from Accra, Ghana where the regional headquarters is located. This group is primarily involved in radio planting and training. Second, the group of 5 from Lilongwe, Malawi that is working primarily in medical ministries. They joined Susie Pile, and Barb and me as we were already in Cape Town.

The team, pictured above at the Cape of Good Hope, is currently made up of: (from the left) TJ Sonius (son of the director)--Joseph Kebbie (from Liberia, now serving in Accra involved in Radio programming, radio planting and broadcast training)--Barb--Suzanne Slater (assistant to Lee Sonius)--me--at the corner of the sign Mike and Heather Tacheny (medical doctors serving in Malawi) and their children, Sydney and Sam--standing in the right rear, Michelle and Lee Sonius (the director for the region)--Jessica McMillan (nurse serving in Malawi), Susie Pile (serving in Cape Town with Living Hope) and sitting in front, Kyle Sonius.

Missing from this picture are Dee and Bindu Walker (Liberia) and their three kids. Dee is currently serving in Colorado Springs and can be seen and heard in the "YouTube" video piece that can be found in the lower right corner of this page.

This team is charged with radio planting and training, medical ministry and leadership development in the 38 countries of the region working with existing ministries and the national church.

Pray for this excellent, growing team!

Ron and Barb

Thursday, December 27, 2007

Observations


As we come to the end of week number nine here in South Africa, we have made a few observations that we have passed on in previous blogs. Now, understand, we know that we are not experts regarding anything about Africa, South Africa, the Western Cape area, Cape Town or even Fish Hoek, where we have been living and serving since the beginning of November. But, we do see some things that strike us as important to remember.

One...the importance of family. We are house sitting a beautiful home on what they call the "Platinum Mile"...old, beautiful, historic homes along a mile of beach front. It is absolutely beautiful. Right across the narrow road in front of our house is a popular swimming beach called "St. James". Everyday this week it has been crowded to over flowing with large families playing and staying together (See photo above taken from our front window). Fathers and mothers with lot's of kids, spending the day together in the sun (it is summer here). I asked one of the father's who parked in front of our door if this was a tradition. He replied, "It's our family Christmas gift to each other...a week together, doing something everyday, between Christmas and New Year. We set the time aside and just play together. We can't afford to go anywhere or give other kinds of gifts." I told him that I thought it was a terrific idea. He said, "Oh, it's a tradition. My family did the same thing!" I bet those kids will remember this gift long after they leave home. A week of family time, scheduled and planned..great idea and a wonderful tradition.

Two...the value of memories. The other evening Barb and I sat and thought about this past year. When I stepped down from the chair of the board in September, it was the first time I was not involved in the leadership of the mission for the past 25 years. That caused us to look at the before and after of those 25 years, in our lives and in the life of HCJB Global. Man, has the Lord ever been good to us. We just sat and remembered! Good stuff, bad stuff, but here we were rejoicing over the memories.

Then we did they same thing with our family and our lives together. Oh, memories, they will be with us always...and, we can make them good or bad...our call. We made them all good!

Three...gifts from God. Those just naturally popped up as we were reliving our memories. The series I did at the church this Christmas was good for me as I remembered things that came directly from God as a result of Jesus Christ. He has blessed us so much. Each of those gifts is a gift...with my name on it...waiting for me to accept and use it. Wonderful, eternal, life changing gifts. Grace, peace, joy, love...they are all there!

So, as we head for the end of 2007...we are rejoicing in our family and what God has done for us, in the memories of 31 years with HCJB Global and in the goodness of God to us as He gives us all we ever need.

We also rejoice that He trusted us to be here!

Ron and Barb

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Happy Birthday to Jesus!

It is the Sunday before Christmas here in Cape Town.

It is also sunny and hot. Beautiful weather, but not a white Christmas in sight!

Today I will finish a series of messages about the gifts we received when God sent His Son to earth. The church wanted to use this holiday/summer month to present an invitation to accept Christ in each message. Using the Christmas message for evangelism...what a great idea! That's what Christmas is all about anyway! At the end of each message we challenged the people to use that gift to give a gift back to Jesus since it is His birthday. Most the time we challenged people to give Christ their lives.

I think you can understand the gift He gave us as I present the list we have used, but, can you figure out what He wants from us that will correspond with each gift?
"Grace"...God's Riches At Christ's Expense
"Christmas Day"...What we have today because we celebrate this day.
"The love of God"..."God so loved the world that He gave..." Nothing can take that from us!
"Forgiveness"..."forgiveness in the name of Jesus!"
"The message to Joseph"..."You will name him Jesus for He will save His people from their sins"
"Joy"...in Christ not in things..."that our joy may be complete"
"Life"..."In Him was life..." Is Jesus enough? He wants us to have abundant life!
"Immanuel"...God with us!
"Peace"..."Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace, good will toward men"
"Light"...from "Let there be light" to "I am the light" to "you are the light"
"The Shepherds"...who went out praising God.
"The Wise Men..."who returned a different way"...different men as well?

You can read the manuscripts of most of these messages by going to the Fish Hoek Baptist Church web site indicated at the right.

On Christmas we will join with some friends and have a Christmas meal after the morning service at the church. Our time next Tuesday will be a great contrast with last Friday when Barb, Rich and I went to the homeless center and served the men their Christmas dinner after a brief thought about Christmas. It is very hard to wish men who live on the streets and eat out of trash cans a Merry Christmas. Will the day be any different than other days? Do they have any hope? Any joy? Can they be merry without a bottle of something? So sad to see them dirty and alone, hanging around on the corners and in the parks. But, when you reach out to them, they respond with their desire to be left alone. I spoke about Jesus, the very reason for the season...but, did they get any of it or were they just waiting to be fed?

So, this year we will have ostrich for Christmas eve instead of our traditional fondue and then on Christmas day we will be with some friends and have lamb, chicken and ham. I am delighted. The last Christmas we had in Africa, when we were in West Africa, we had goat.

We trust your Christmas is very special as well and filled with Jesus! It is neat that we are all invited to His birthday party, but in different places all around the world. We trust the party at your house will be a blast!

Ron and Barb

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Africa is different


This is the week before Christmas here in Cape Town. Yet, you don't see many Christmas decorations anywhere, even in the malls. On television, there are no advertisements to "buy this gift or that gift for that special person", and, I have only seen one Santa Clause. There are a few (3-4) homes with lights on the outside between our home and the church (about 10 miles).
The house we are house sitting has very few Christmas decorations. We will put what we can up. I have yet to see a nativity scene.

The only thing that seems to go with Christmas are plans for the family to be together. In other words, they somehow have not attached the commercialism with the celebration.

Of course, being in bright sunny, warm summer days could effect it somewhat. People are in the ocean at 7 AM across the street from the house we are in.

The church, however, does celebrate Christmas which will include a Sunday morning (23rd) Christmas message, a Sunday evening family picnic followed by a Carol by Candlelight service with a message. On Monday afternoon (24th) we will make the rounds of a few retirement homes and sing carols and I will give a brief message.

Then we will have a one hour service on Christmas morning (25th) at 9AM. It is said to be the largest service of the year.

The elections here are also very different from what you seem to be getting in the United States. In fact, almost all the news we get from America is about the election. Here you need to go on the web to find out what is going on.

They have just finished the pre-election here. President Thabo Mbeki, who has ruled since 1997, was defeated yesterday by Jacob Zuma. This all happened in the African National Congress which took power with Nelson Mandela in 1994. The winner of their pre-election congress is usually the president. However, Mr. Zuma has some corruption charges currently against him in court, so it should be interesting. Thabo Mbeki and Nelson Mandela are from a Xhosa tribal background, while Jacob Zuma is of a Zulu background.

There is a little nervousness here. One political evaluation is that Zuma"does represent a hope among the vast majority of the black underclass that he represents some kind of redistribution."
What that means, no one yet knows.

Speaking of Nelson Mandela, a real national hero here, yesterday, Barb, Rich and I went to visit the prison on Robbin Island which sits in the middle of the Cape Town Bay. It is the place where many black political prisoners were held until 1991 when apartheid officially ended.

The photo above is how it was years ago, because today it is no longer a prison, it is a national monument. That's the yard where Nelson Mandela was held for 18 years. The men are breaking rocks. That did that all day. But, that is also the yard where Nelson Mandela was involved in the 'Open University'. That and the lime quarry were where educated, professional black leaders passed on their experience and education to others who had not had the chance to study. They did this one on one. Many men learned to read and write while in prison. Many of these men went on to become leaders in business, education and the government.

When Nelson walked out of prison, he was swept into the president's office as the black majority were allowed to vote. Instead of a blood bath against the whites who had held them down, President Mandela led a movement of reconciliation that continues today. He has become the very symbol of the word world-wide!

Continue to pray for this country.

Ron and Barb


It was very moving to hear our guides, all former prisoners, describe life in the prison. It sounded terrible. Yet, they had such pride in what has happened since their days in prison. They all seem to share with the growth of the country and reminded us that this country has really changed in the last 15 years and still has a long ways to go.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Rich arrives in Cape Town


Our oldest son, Rich, who has lived in London, England for the last 15 years, arrived on Saturday to spend Christmas with us. In London he works as a journalist, editing the magazine for Evangelical Alliance. He also critiques movies for the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). Aside from these major responsibilities, he writes articles and creates web sites.

He moved to England when he was serving as a radio trainer in Russia and Ukraine for HCJB Global. Soon he had trained others who then took his place as they trained others as well. (II Timothy 2:2)

The picture above was taken Saturday on top of Table Mountain which stands in the center of Cape Town.

Today I preached about another gift we receive at Christmas because of Jesus. So far, we have discussed Grace, Christmas Day, Forgiveness, God's Love and Joy. Today we added "Life" to the list. We always end the service discussing how we can use the gift God has given to us to give something to Christ, since it is His birthday. We can give Him our life...really give Him our lives, like He gave His for us!

Tomorrow we move into the Pastor's home in St. James. That means we will be about 100 feet from the Indian Ocean and we will be able to see the ocean from any room in the front of the house. Tough assignment, but, someone has to do it!

Christmas here is not as commercial as in the states. They have lights, but just a few. I have yet to see a Santa in a mall. Of course, there are so many poor people, it is not surprising that they don't make a big deal about gifts and stuff.

Thanks again for your prayers...

Ron and Barb

Wednesday, December 12, 2007


Today Barb had a neat experience. She went to a graduation. Not just an ordinary graduation. This one had a special story.

Three years ago, Wendy Ryan visited from Virginia. She was a journalist so she offered to help do some writing. But God.... Aren't those two wonderful words?

Out of the blue she was asked to help some women escape some very bad living situations. Here women are very often abused, but, they have no place to go. They have no money, usually no marketable skills, they are often far from home and family and usually have kids to care for. These women needed a skill if they were going to have any hope.

What could Wendy do? Teach them to write. Most didn't have those skills.

Someone suggested she teach them to sew. Wendy didn't know how to sew, let alone teach someone in a different language how to do it, especially when they lived in a shack with limited electricity.

But, as she prayed, it seemed to be the only answer. So, two years ago she started a sewing school in the Masiphumelele Church in the middle of a township of 40,000 people.

Today, after eleven months of classes, her second class of 12 women and one man graduated and were given their own sewing machines. For graduation, each student wore clothing they had made themselves. It was wonderful! That's one of the students, Noncedo, in the photo above with her family. She is in her own designed dress that she made for herself standing by the box with her new machine. Thirteen people now have good marketable skills, respect for themselves and strength to improve their lives.

Wendy started "Evangeline Ministries" to support her ministry here! An amazing lady! A wonderful story of someone making a difference. She has now added computer classes to provide additional skill training.

People, doing what they can, for other people...the hope for Africa!

Ron and Barb

Sunday, December 9, 2007


We are just finishing our fifth week down here in Cape Town, South Africa.
We are full speed in two different kinds of ministry..first, a new one for us...the poor, the displaced and those with Aids. Everywhere you look they are there. People with nothing, living in shacks, bunched together in townships (we would call them squatter camps) on land the government gave to them. Thousands, maybe millions of them. There are still those who live on the streets, some are children without obvious families. Many seem to be refugees from other countries and they speak different languages, so communication is tough.
There are a lot of drugs, too much sex among the children, and so much violence with young gangs roaming the neighborhoods...and, there we are right in the middle of it all trying to do something with meaning...talking about the love of God and the gift of His Son...naming the name of Jesus, praying with people with Aids and smiling and laughing trying to let children be children. Our main job is to encourage those who work with these people everyday! Many of those people are connected in different ways with the church where we are serving for these three months.
The church is our second area of ministry and has many programs to try to touch the people mentioned above...I am so impressed. Our hosts are pastor John and Avril Thomas. They started Living Hope which ministers to the poor in this part of the country. Amazing people. We have between 400-500 who attend on a Sunday morning, yet they staff and pay for multiple programs to these poor people. It is a great model for the churches in the west. Our pastor was just at Saddleback Church with Rick Warren talking about what they are doing in Aids education and prevention here, and, what they could do there.
That's why we are here, helping to cover for him for 13 weeks while he travels.
We just hosted an Extreme Response team that came for a week to help us. They put on events in different townships, at a homeless center, at an orphanage, in an Aids hospice, and with the staff at Living Hope. The paid staff at Living Hope do the Aids testing, teach "Life Skills" with a Christian emphasis in the public schools and run support groups. They also have many volunteers who help in many ways. The 13 people on the ER team touched over 1600 needy people in just one week with the message of Christmas.
Barb has been busy meeting with the paid and volunteer staff in different settings, encouraging them and teaching them. She is having a ball! She loves these people who are in this world everyday and who have given themselves to make a difference. In the next few days I will be speaking several times in all kinds of settings...one on the beach, one in a park, at some old folks homes, in churches, to parents, to kids...lot's of opportunities to present Christ. The adults call me 'Pastor' or 'Father' while the kids call me 'Uncle'.
Last night our partner radio station here, CCFM, another ministry of the church, hosted a night of Christmas carols in a local park (pictured above). Between 2500 and 3000 people brought blankets and chairs and spent three hours singing carols, listening to popular Christian singers and then, I got to share the power of the name of Jesus with an invitation to accept Him as their Savour. A great outreach for local radio. That's the first of three rallies they will put on around the area.
So, thanks for praying for us!
Ron and Barb

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Touching 800 children for Jesus


Ocean View...doesn't it sound beautiful? And, in fact, it could be as it is a community that exists on the side of a mountain looking out West over the Atlantic Ocean. Higher up the mountain you can also see the Indian Ocean a few miles to the East.

But, I don't think anyone ever sees the view. They are too busy looking out for neighbors that steal children for sex or sell drugs to their kids. They are watching out for the roving gangs preying on others or the unemployed men just 'hanging out'. It is one of the most dangerous areas in all of Cape Town. It was forced into existence 25 years ago when the government (during the days of apartheid) moved all the blacks out of a city onto this mountain. There were thousands of them that had to move and they had just days to do it. They have been angry ever since.

That's where we decided to hold the big Extreme Response party down here this year. We had already had the party at the orphanage. We had visited the hospice where Aids victims go to die and sang and prayed with each of them. We had served the lunch to the homeless and sang Christmas songs with them. We had marched through a township and the local mall, encouraging people to get tested for Aids. We had fed the 170 workers at our partner ministry, Living Hope (www.livinghope.co.za), thanking them for their hard work all year.

It was time to reach the kids in this needy community. After two hours of set up, over 800 children came, most from Ocean View and some bused in from three other townships. Our ER team along with about 70 volunteers from Living Hope teamed up to put on a party on a huge field with a large building right in the middle of Ocean View. We divided the kids into four teams and moved them around four venues. Inside the building the Living Hope volunteers put on the Christmas Play in the kids language and told the story of God's love and the gift of Jesus. We sang songs and gave them food. That's where Barb worked all day. Fixing hot dogs for 800 hungry kids plus all the workers.

There was an area where they did crafts that they could take with them and painted faces like the South African flag on the child above. There was an area for tug-of-war and a group game I never figured out.

My job was to keep the water slides wet so the kids could run and slide in the cool water on a warm day. We had four slide that were full of bodies for the whole three hours of the party.

Then we gave each child a gift pack (soap, facecloth, comb, toothbrush, tooth paste, piece of fruit, candy, another hot dog, a cup of pudding) and sent them home with huge smiles on their faces. We were told it will be the only Christmas many of these children will have.

We did everything 'in the name of Jesus'. Our prayer is that they catch the fact that Jesus loves them and so do we. These children are the teachers and leaders in future Africa. We want to reach them for Jesus.

Ron and Barb

Monday, December 3, 2007

Celebrating "World AIDS Day" weekend


We spent the afternoon at an orphanage yesterday. I am not sure I have words to describe it. My heart hurts just thinking of the children, most of them were there because AIDS took their parents, and many of them have AIDS themselves. I am talking about 120 little kids...3-10 years old with a few older ones.
The orphanage is in the middle of a township of 11,000 or so very poor people, most living in very small shacks. They have no place else to go. The shacks are made out of whatever they have been able to find and packed in right next to each other. I didn't see one flower or a patch of grass any where.
Seventeen of the children sleep in small wooden buildings inside the orphanage yard. The rest go someplace else at night. But, during the day, all of them are at the orphanage. There is one water tap just outside the make shift fence that surrounds their small buildings. There are three small outside toilets that serve all the children. There are no facilities for bathing.
The pastor and his wife, pictured above, are the one's who care for these children. Their vision and their compassion is amazing. They are on duty 24/7.
I couldn't help but think, while we were painting a heart on a little girls cheek, or putting a decal of a basketball on a little boy's arm, or just holding a child for a bit, that some of them might have only four or five more years to live. It was sad. Praise God for this couple who were doing what they could, rescuing as many of the children as possible.
Barb took Polaroid pictures of each child and gave the photo to them. The smiles where awesome. Some had never had a picture of themselves. They were so well behaved and so responsive. You wanted to take this child, then that child, then the other child...you wanted to take them all home with you. They were so precious.
The pastor told us that these children would never forget the Americans who came and loved then for a day. He thanked us. I felt bad that it was only for a day. Words could never thank him.

Today we were at the homeless center. One hundred plus adults who have lost their way in life. They were dirty and very lost. Volunteers from the church and in the community feed them lunch and dress and redress their wounds everyday and help them find work. We served lunch to the group, sang some Christmas carols with them and told them about God's love for them and the gift He gave us that we mark as Christmas. This will be the only Christmas for most of them. Many of these people have AIDS and this might be their last Christmas. We talked a lot about Heaven.

That's what it is like out here...

Thank you for your prayers...we need them as we respond to these people.

Ron and Barb