This post is about some fairly typical behaviour for South Africa -- which is illegal. I submitted a formal complaint to the Legal Practice Council on 28 October 2025, which is 150 days ago today. As best I am aware, I received no written receipt or reference number to date. If this is true, this "likely constitutes unlawful, unreasonable, and procedurally unfair administrative action", in terms of the PAJA (2000) Act. OBSERVATION: This is not the New South Africa that many of us -- including, surely, members of the Council -- dreamed about.
Urban Ministry Live And Unplugged
A Window On Urban Ministry In Southern Africa
Friday, March 27, 2026
Thursday, March 26, 2026
Book in the Works
In 2006-2007, I wrote a book which I did not, however, publish. I rediscovered it this year, nearly 20 years later. It was better than I thought -- so I embarked on a revision. DeepSeek AI considers about my revision (first draft):
This manuscript has the potential to be a very significant and controversial work of religious fiction. It could become a landmark work. Its central idea is original, provocative, and thematically rich.
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
Fisheye Church Photo
Encrypted
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
Almost 1.5 Million
My blog is romping along to 1.5 million views. It is almost there. All the other influence that I have seems to pale by comparison. What is 100 people in a service, thirty of forty people at a seminar, so and so many books sold, when in a single day, thousands of people read my blog? OBSERVATION: In the last day, hundreds of people have looked in from (each) India, Iraq, Chile, Saudi Arabia, Vietnam, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Russia, Brazil, and many countries besides ... Today, the USA is at the top of my readers' list, but that is not always so.
Monday, March 23, 2026
What's Wrong With a Bribe
In many parts of the world, Christians are likely to be faced with the problem of bribery -- not least in Africa. There may be a lot at stake. If one doesn't pay the bribe, one may lose precious income, one might be repatriated, one may lose a license, and so on. It is tempting then just to pay. Here are some reasons not to (there are more):
1. No matter which country, it is a criminal offence.
2. Even corrupt governments have checks in place. You could be caught out.
3. Who says a bribe taker is honest? You may not get what you paid for.
4. There are places to turn for help. A minister. A superior. A law clinic. And so on.
5. Your payment of a bribe makes the next bribe more possible. And
6. The Bible says we should avoid even the appearance of evil.
POSTSCRIPT: Have I been offered or asked for a bribe? Yes. Several times, as a minister. But it was never a simple ask, or offer. It was always very cleverly done.
Sunday, March 22, 2026
Linux on Chromebooks
Friday, March 20, 2026
More Than Conquerors
Thursday, March 19, 2026
Google Rankings
For reasons perhaps known only to themselves, Google push some posts down the rankings. Far and away my most popular post at the moment is Mystery Musical Instrument -- which I see by the data behind the scenes. However, it is not under my Popular Posts in the right hand column. OBSERVATION: Posts get weighted by Google, so that the ones with the most views may not be seen on the Popular Posts list -- as in this case. This can become annoying where one is running a more serious blog, and selected news and views are suppressed.
No Driving License
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
Doing Things With My Books
Sunday, March 15, 2026
Mystery Musical Instrument
Last week, I completed my mystery musical instrument -- rather, I finished a proof-of-concept -- see my post of 26 February 2026. It is potentially a very sophisticated instrument -- I merely proved that it would work minimally. Today I submitted the design to a publisher in Australia -- and we shall see. OBSERVATION: The question is whether they would publish for the idea's potential, or only see the bare-bones proof-of-concept, which may be too crude. It would potentially be big, because it is groundbreaking.
Saturday, March 14, 2026
Responding to Church Conflict
Friday, March 13, 2026
AI and Government Correspondence
Many times, I have found AI to be useful when I fed it correspondence. Most recently, I received an e-mail from a government official. It didn't look right to me. They wanted to talk to me, off the record, about a serious problem. I consulted DeepSeek AI -- I fed it the correspondence. DeepSeek replied that, under the circumstances, the official concerned was putting her entire career at risk. "This is precarious for her." It recommended serious action. OBSERVATION: This is the Programme Implementation Co-Ordinator of the Department of Social Development. And a core question: did they deliberately put their career at risk? I did take action, as DeepSeek recommended -- and sent the Co-Ordinator DeepSeek's summary analysis.
