I last visited the USA 20 years ago. I found race relations there to be awkward, even strained. Back here in South Africa, where race relations a generation ago were disastrous, I now find joy in race relations every day. I find a happy harmony, and a celebration of diversity. Of course, it will not be like that everywhere.
Urban Ministry Live And Unplugged
A Window On Urban Ministry In Southern Africa
Thursday, June 18, 2026
Potato Patch
Tuesday, June 16, 2026
40 Days a Week
Monday, June 15, 2026
Greeting in the Pews
Me: "I know you! I don't need to greet you!"Answer: "They didn't say you must know me. You must greet me!"Me: "But then again, do I really know you?"Answer: "That's impossible. I don't even know myself."Me: "Don't even know yourself? Isn't that strange?"Answer: "The Bible says that all of humanity is strange."
Sunday, June 14, 2026
Aspirant Intruder
An aspirant intruder this week tried to enter my e-mail account. They typed in my correct e-mail address and password -- nevertheless, Google stopped them. I double-checked: does Google stop people with the correct e-mail address and password? Google says: "Google actively stops hackers from accessing accounts, even if they type the correct email address and password". OBSERVATION: This raises some obvious questions. How did someone obtain my correct e-mail address and password, and what did they want?
Chance Meeting
Saturday, June 13, 2026
Pre-Birthday Celebration
Thursday, June 11, 2026
Ordination Sermon
Laser Microphone
Wednesday, June 10, 2026
Metaphysical Notes 2024
Tuesday, June 9, 2026
Evolution of Electronics
The April Practical Electronics magazine (PE) has an interesting article on the evolution of electronics. I myself have done a lot of electronic design, using discrete components -- the "nuts and bolts" of electronics. The PE article describes how electronics today, compared with a generation ago, is "fundamentally uninterested" in that. The author Clive Maxfield concludes:"So here we are, surrounded by devices which are smaller, smarter, quieter, and vastly more capable than anything our younger selves could have imagined, yet often sealed, abstracted, and inscrutable."
The photo shows a modern electronic "black box". Who needs to know what is going on inside?
Monday, June 8, 2026
Well-Disguised Bug
Sunday, June 7, 2026
‘Western’ Sermon
One of the assignments of my homiletics students is (will be) to grade a sermon they hear. I therefore applied the assignment to a sermon I heard in Church today. This seemed an unusual mix of great positives and great negatives. The preacher was experienced. The sermon was both topical and exegetical. He knew how to make his point -- although he did so loosely. The main failing, in my view, was that it was a typically Western sermon. God's power in particular was largely implied -- rather than being brought into focus. OBSERVATION: And this tended to make the sermon more abstract than concrete. With divided feelings over its great strengths and great weaknesses, I graded the sermon 50%. Perhaps, if I thought more like a Westerner, 75%.
Saturday, June 6, 2026
African Materials
I am preparing three seminary courses for the second semester of 2026. The seminary is largely African. I am therefore deliberately seeking out African materials. My reading matter is about 30% African. My video materials are approaching 20% African. OBSERVATION: The biggest problem is the amount of African materials available (not). Apparently 5% of written materials -- theological materials -- is African. Apart from a want of materials, though, there are other problems. Black authors and producers are so often prophets, apostles, self-made people. They often adopt non-mainstream theologies, too. But one needs African input. It may be substantially different to Western fare, and balances it out.






