Cape Town--Mission Hope Trip
Monday, May 14, 2012 at 2:40PM I recently spent a week in Cape Town, South Africa teaching some very eager people to raise leaders and launch churches from within their own churches.
While most were from the cities, I met a couple who had recently moved from Transkei, a country bordering South Africa. They had come to train for pastoral ministry under my friend Xavier Adriannse.
Having grown up in the bush they were struggling with the culture shock that hit them when they moved from the countryside to one of the most physically beautiful cities in the world.
Meeting these soft-spoken people drives me harder in a quest to help where it is most needed. And, it is most needed where people can afford it the least.
HISTORY
The earliest people to populate South Africa were called the, “San,” often referred to as, “Bushmen,” these brown-skinned people were eventually subjugated by black people arriving from northern parts of the continent.
The first European to arrive in South Africa was a Portuguese explorer who arrived in 1487. He named the southernmost tip of the continent, “The Cape of Storms.” Upon returning to Portugal, his king re-named it, “The Cape of Good Hope,” in the belief that it led to the riches of the far east.
But it was the Dutch who would colonize South Africa in the 1650s. Along with colonization came war, slavery and the discovery of diamonds and later, gold. By the 1800s the Dutch were at war with the British over the riches of the region. The British eventually prevailed. During this time racial segregation was mostly informal but would blossom into the evil of apartheid in the 1960s when South Africa became an independent nation.
It wasn’t until the 1990s that the nation, under severe pressure from the rest of the world, dismantled apartheid. Nelson Mandela was released from prison after 27 years, eventually becoming the head of state. Today the nation enjoys more racial harmony than at any time in its history.
SOUTH AFRICA TODAY
South Africa is multi-ethnic and with a wide diversity of languages and cultures. About 79.5% of the South African population is ofAfrican.Africa also contains the largest communities of European,, and racially mixed ancestry in Africa. Whites make up only about 16 percent of the population.
There are 11 officially recognized languages though English is pretty much common to everyday business.
ECONOMY AND CRIME
South Africa has a mixed economy drawing from mineral resources, tourism and diversified agriculture. It is the largest economy on the continent. Home to more than 20 universities it has become an important intellectual center for the continent.
Sadly, South Africa also hosts horrid crime rates. The United Nations rates South Africa as second for rape and murder per capita among the nations of the world. Most Middle-class South Africans live in gated communities.
Even the stable economy has done little to boost the unemployment situation. Many blacks have joined the middle class but many more live in poverty, some on less than two U.S. dollars per day.
RELIGION
Muslims claim that their faith is the fastest-growing religion of conversion in the country, with the number of black Muslims growing sixfold, from 12,000 in 1991 to 74,700 in 2004
Nearly 74 percent of South Africans consider themselves Christians, although that number is shrinking. While about 15 percent practice ancient native religions. The rest of the population is widely spread in its religious beliefs with about nine percent claiming no religious affiliation.
JESUS POWER
Christianity played a strong role in the transition from apartheid to democracy (though apartheid had operated under a cloak of false interpretation of scripture).
Sadly, the church seems to be losing ground in South Africa and that is why I traveled further than the distance around the world to get there and back.
Frustrated with the time and expense of formal schooling Xavier is busy discipling potential pastors from five Southern African nations. Some have moved to Cape Town to train in his church. But, he often drives as much as 30 hours to spend time with his disciples.
I first met Xavier in Johannesburg a year ago and discovered that he had built his church around a teaching series I had done on cassette-tape over 20 years ago. His thriving congregation now owns a wonderful building and is using it to multiply churches. One of the men he partners with is a university professor/missionary sent out by Hope Chapel Hermosa Beach. It seems the world is indeed a small place.
The trip was worth the long nights on airplanes and I will make it again in a couple of years. It is good to contribute knowledge and experience where people want it badly. .
Thank you again for your prayers and financial support. These people could never afford the cost of the airline tickets, which allow me to spend time with them. You are touching the lives of people you will only meet in heaven.

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