What's in a name?
Quite a lot, where Footsteps to Good Hope is concerned. Choosing a name for a cause can be as difficult and challenging as choosing your child's name. It has to mean something to you, but also to everyone hearing it. It has to have a deeper meaning - more than just what the eye can see.In choosing Footsteps to Good Hope, we hoped to achieve just that: to be more meaningful than just a name, a few words stringed together.
Footsteps to Good Hope firstly, asks the attention for the physical journey of 977 km on foot: a gruelling 30 km per day hike, in December's best hot summer weather with the sand of the beach reflecting the brilliance of the sun. A demanding chore for nearly 6 weeks: wake up, pick up your equipment and walk - day in, day out! And just when you think you can get comfortable and in autopilot rhythm, you realize you have to use all your senses to watch, learn, count, observe, take pictures, make mental notes and study. Really see what is around you, the damage done by mining activities, by poaching and looting, by careless people enjoying the beach and ocean waves, but not wanting to take responsibility for it! But also see God's glory shining through in the tiny detail of fauna and flora, making a living and surviving in spite of men's best efforts to destroy everything that is precious and beautiful...
Thirdly, Footsteps to Good Hope symbolises in its name the hope we have that our Lord Jesus Christ is at his Father's right hand - meaning He is ruling the universe. And He will come back and in an instant will change everything so that the whole world will once again be perfect - be as it was supposed to be: glorifying God's great name, his omnipotence and his everlasting love and grace.
And in the Name of this Lord of Lords and King of Kings, Jacobus will start his footsteps-trek. And by the grace and favour of our Saviour, he will be able to finish this trip. And it is in these powerful and almighty hands that we lay this journey, the participants and all of you supporting them! The Lord will perfect that which concerns me: your mercy O Lord, endures forever: forsake not the works of your own hands (Psalm 138: 8)
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