Posts

Showing posts from August, 2021

Sunday service at the Haatso Branch

Image
Sunday, August 8, 2021 We chose a branch not too far north of us to visit this Sunday.  The traffic is always good on Sunday mornings and it is an adventure not knowing what the building will look like.  The constant is the warm welcome from the members, old and young.  The saints dress up for Sunday as well, so you meet people looking their best and they feel that way too.  Sunday worship is something these saints take seriously and look forward to.  Their faith is simple and grounded in the basics.  With that said, the Sunday lessons are not remedial.  They are among the best I have attended anywhere we have traveled.  The faith is simple and strong and their understanding of doctrine is mature and generally well taught.   For example, today the Elders Quorum lesson was on ministering and used Matthew 16:24-27.  They tied it all together and spent the last part of the hour discussing the quorum members and how they could be minist...

A full Saturday, with funerals and a wedding, and other things

Image
 Saturday, August 7, 2021 Started the day off with some basketball at the MTC with three other senior elders.  It was good exercise, but basketball is not my sport, especially two-on-two when the last time I played any basketball I have to count in decades, not years. Later in the morning we visited Dubois market.  The bagels are still there, and they are still good.  Elaine picked up a blouse she had "made to order" for her.   A father and son wood carving team were there with all of their great work.  The giraffes are especially fun to see.  One is six feet tall and the others about four feet.  We are working on a way to get a giraffe home and it isn't going to be easy.  To be continued. Our friend, Kathy Kittelson is playing the music at a wedding in their ward today and invited us just that morning to be there with her and her husband, Steve, so we went there after the market.  The Trade Fair ward across the street from the La P...

Trotro Wisdom and other Ghanaian things

Image
August 6, 2021 In Ghana and other countries of the Africa West Area, the most common means of public transit are privately owned vans.  Each has a yellow stripe around it.  The stripe is an indication that the van is licensed by the government to be a public transit vehicle.  The van is called a "trotro" in Ghana, pronounced "troe troe". They were noticeable from the day we arrived.  The driver does his thing while his "mate" hangs out the shotgun window as far as he can or the sliding door and waves people down offering rides.  It is a great team approach to entice people to ride.  The idea is to cram as many people as you can into van.  I avoid the right lane while driving down the major roads in Ghana because the trotros are pulling off into these specially carved out parking stops in the road, picking up people and then quickly getting up a head of steam to re-enter the right lane and head off to the next trotro stop.  Look out for that mergin...