Watching It All Come Together

For six weeks now, Will and I have been developing and co-teaching a course on entrepreneurship/small business development. The course has covered quite a bit of material, including:

  • The theology behind why we work/our unique value in God’s eyes;
  • An overview of small business principles/business flow/recording an income statement and basic bookkeeping;
  • Personal finance (based on Crown Financial Ministries materials);
  • Marketing/advertising/branding;
  • Developing a marketing plan and business plan; and
  • Running an experimental business for two weeks.

Our students, 14 in all, each have ideas for starting and managing their own businesses once the course ends—everything from selling cookies to selling shoes to being a real estate agent to operating a public phone service to selling dishes to being a caterer to exporting Zimbabwean sculpture… lots of great ideas!

This past Saturday, we had the “grand finale” to the course, taking our two classes on a field trip to the out-in-the-country campus of Operation Mobilization (O.M.) South Africa to participate in the same hands-on business class/game that Will and I ourselves participated in back in October. The business game, formally called the “BEST Game: Bottom Line Basics Course,” is offered through O.M. by the South African Institute for Entrepreneurship. In a very hands-on way, the game essentially simulates what it’s like to operate a small business, handle cash flow, negotiate, manage risk, deal with unforeseen circumstances, strategize production, keep precise records, balance the books and much more—all with fake money and heated emotions between competing teams.

It was awesome to see our students come alive on Saturday! Not only did their personalities all of a sudden appear in ways Will and I had not yet seen, but they caught on to the complexities of the exercise very quickly. Watching each team and each individual get totally into it was exciting, especially knowing that many of the principles we had introduced in the classroom were now coming together and making sense to our students. It was awesome, too, to see everyone dive in together as teammates and encourage and help one another. We pray that this is how they will continue to operate once they are on their own in their businesses. You’ll see how fun it was in the video below.

Overall, it’s been really cool to see the minds of our students expand with a greater framework of understanding business practices and with a greater confidence, necessary to handle the risks/mistakes/sometimes failures associated with owning and operating a business. Will and I have been careful not to promise that taking this class will guarantee success in running a business; but what we do hope is that this class will begin to expand the thinking of a generation perhaps lacking in confidence yet full of potential.

For me and Will, we have found in the exercise of teaching a brand new course that we have been perhaps the biggest students of all, figuring out as we go how best to develop a meaningful curriculum/how best to teach, and of course learning about and navigating all the cultural nuances of how things work in the township. In particular, teaching this class has really opened our eyes to how difficult it is to do business in the township and what all our students are up against as they enter the real world. We were shocked to hear some of the stories about how people sometimes withhold information from one another out of fear of competition; how people suspicious of one’s success will spread rumors, gossip and/or tell lies—whatever to undermine one’s potential of gaining a supportive customer base; and, less surprisingly, how the culturally-accepted way of paying “on credit” can ruin relationships while severely undercutting one’s cash flow. Will and I have tried our best to offer helpful suggestions, rooted most of all in one’s character in Christ. We have encouraged our students to be “wise as serpents and innocent as doves,” and beyond that, have prayed with our students for God’s sufficient grace to cover the difficult, and even unfair, aspects of doing business in the township.

Congratulations and thank you, Thembi, Portia, Peter, Selina, Kate, Nkele, Rejoice, Motlatsi, Thabang, Remember, Prudence, Monika, Andrew and Lingani, on the great term and for learning along with us! We are so proud of you!

Worship Medley

Here’s a fun song from church this past Sunday. You’ll notice the song carries one beat throughout, but it turns out it’s four songs in one (my understanding is that this was unplanned). I love the spontaneity of the worship here and how the congregation just “goes with the flow”—it’s really freeing to experience, even for we Americans who still struggle to follow along on some songs.

Special thanks to Nkele, Pinky and Brenda for helping with translation.

U lulamile Jehova loyi
(This God is good)
Ahe! U lulamile
(Ahe! He is so good)
Kasi nwina umi kume kwihi?
(Where did He get you?)
Ahi kume la, ahi veka la, ahi yisa le
(He found us here, He put us here, He took us there)

Siliwelile i Jordana
(We crossed the Jordan)
Siliwelile (4x)
(We crossed)
Siliwelile singaphesheya
(To the other side)

Ithuba loku thandaza
(We have the time of prayer)
Sinalo (2x)
(We have)
Ithuba loku thandaza
(We have the time of prayer)

Siliwelile i Jordana
(We crossed the Jordan)
Siliwelile (4x)
(We crossed)
Siliwelile singaphesheya
(To the other side)

Khutsi khutsi rena
(In the Lord we are having)
Ra ikhutsa
(Rest)
Amen
Alleluia Amen (3x)

Jesus! Jesus!

Siliwelile i Jordana
(We crossed the Jordan)
Siliwelile (4x)
(We crossed)
Siliwelile singaphesheya
(To the other side)

Listen to the fun the Powerhouse has in praising God by clicking the button below.

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Be A Revolutionary! AR Now Accepting Intern Applications

It’s that time of the year! Africa Revolution is now accepting applications for its 2009-2010 interns. Time frame: September 2008—July 2009. Site: Mamelodi, South Africa.

Do you want to discover the face of Jesus in the world’s marginalized and poor? If so, consider committing a year of your life to serving in Southern Africa. Come explore what the Gospel lived out in intentional community and service can look like. Pour yourself into something that really matters, by building God’s Kingdom through the local church. Come and learn, ask and see what God is doing. Be part of God’s redemption in Africa by reflecting His love. —www.AfricaRevolution.org

The Africa Revolution internship is perfectly suited for young people interested in the experience of putting their faith into action beyond just a short-term missions trip without the commitment of becoming a full-time missionary. The yearlong internship combines the experience of working closely with a local church, daily pouring into meaningful work while being given the autonomy to figure out one’s purpose in serving throughout the year, living in intentional community and sharing devotions/book studies/meals/loads of fun together, traveling through Sub-Saharan Africa and much more.

If you are up for being a learner in another culture and want to grow enormously in your faith, we highly recommend considering committing a year of your life to the Lord in Africa. Already, we are having an amazing year and one that will, no doubt, be life-changing on many levels.

Check out more by visiting Africa Revolution’s website and by clicking the icon below to check out the Internship Application. We encourage you to contact us with any questions, too!

“The greatest challenge of the day is: how to bring about a revolution of the heart, a revolution which has to start with each one of us? When we begin to take the lowest place, to wash the feet of others, to love our brothers and sisters with that burning love, that passion, which led to the cross, then we can truly say, ‘Now I have begun.’” —Dorothy Day

South Africans on Obama

A lot of people here have been congratulating us on the presidential election, asking us if we’re excited and expressing their thoughts on Obama. We thought we’d share some quotes and headlines found in the local newspapers.

“The voting in of the first black American president has many people thinking back more than a decade ago, to another election on a different continent, when the world erupted in similar ecstasies of renewed hope. Desmond Tutu himself has said: ‘It is almost as when Nelson Mandela became president of South Africa in 1994.’”

(source: The Star)

“In July, the U.S. Senator sent a birthday video message to Mandela in which he said: ‘When I visited South Africa a few years ago, I had a chance to go to Robben Island and stand in your cell, and I reflected on your…fundamental belief that we do not have to accept the world as it is; that we can remake the world as as it should be.’”

(source: The Star)

“Your victory has demonstrated that no person anywhere in the world should not dare to dream of wanting to change the world for a better place.” —Former South African President and anti-Apartheid icon Nelson Mandela

(source: The Sowetan)

“Despite the vast differences in their personal backgrounds, [Mandela and Obama] have—by ascending to their respective countries’ number one position of power—imbued black people with a sense of pride and limitless opportunity.”

(source: The Star)

“‘It’s an epoch-making event filling the whole world with hope that change in possible. It is just tremendous; it is saying to people of colour that for them, the sky is the limit,’ said [Desmond] Tutu.”

(source: The Star)

“Your election to this high office of the American people carries with it hope for millions of your countrymen and women as much as it is for millions of people, particularly of African descent both in the continent of Africa as well as those in the diaspora.” —South African President Kgalema Motlanthe

(source: The Sowetan)

While there is clearly a lot of support and excitement for Obama here in South Africa, many here also recognize the enormous challenges he will face from his first day in office. And while I personally am uneasy with the idea (because I know as a country we are far, far from perfect), many in South Africa look to the U.S. as source of hope and inspiration, and this election reminds them that anything is possible. Pastor Vincent even remarked that many African leaders could take a lesson from Obama, who he sees to be a humble man.

Stocking The Pantry

Pick-n-Pay’s donation of food this week was enormous! Above is a photo taken on Tuesday of Nate, Annie, Allan, Vivian, Nkele, Pinky and Will as we were unloading the AR Vito and stocking the fridge and freezer inside the kitchen room at the Powerhouse. We appreciate everyone’s prayers that this ministry continue to be the blessing that it is each week to families in need throughout Mamelodi. The change from destitution to hope that we are seeing from week to week among the families we visit speaks to the light and joy that only the love of God can bring.