Sunday, December 13, 2009

Christmas Break, Dec 2009

My trip OVERSEAS has been a resounding success. The people I met were warm and gentle. They thirsted for theological training in a place where they did not have any for decades. I was the first instructor in this new Bible college-based extension program, with credits and all. 20 attended the week-long course 9am-5pm, Monday through Friday. The majority of the attendees were lay preachers with primary education, but they preach two to four times a month among their many gospel points throughout the city. I was energized, too. Intensive courses are the way to go due time constrain and many of them were busy businessmen. Now I realize why another school has classes Friday to Sunday instead. Maybe I can be the preaching coach for the same people dotted throughout the big land. The funny thing was that I was invited to train the same group in a different city but there was miscommunication, so I got another invitation to train here last minute.

For the Christmas break we decided to go to Beijing. Wife said I should go before I have further knee problems and cannot climb the Great Wall. As Mao once said, "You aren't a man till you've been to the Great Wall. (不到長城非好漢)." It was cold at the wall when the winds blow, but we had no other dates nor place to go. We stayed at WangFuJing, popular among tourists and we walked out for food most of the time. The tastiest black sesame dessert I have tasted for a long time is at the renowned restaurant Da Dong, The subway is the most convenient to travel and we did our share. Typical tourists we were, we visited Tiananmen Square, the Forbidden City, Ming Tombs, Empress Dowager's Summer Palace, and the Olympic favorite - the Bird's Nest. It was worth the endless walks and dripping noses on this chilly five-day trip, I can assure you. If you go there, avoid the kebab silkworms and fried milk I had, with compliments from Wife. In Peking we attended church at bicf.org, an approved worship center for expats where people enter showing their passports. The HK$10 gloves I bought from Shum Shui Po did its job, even though I regretted carrying them with me earlier. I was delighted to witness two young people giving their seats to a gray-hair man on the subway train; unfortuantely, the man was me. Wife grinned to no end.

Returning to Hong Kong (8th) brought me back to reality. I had allergies in the morning again after missing them in Beijing and I started coughing today (10th). There are papers galore to grade. Hopefully I can start preparing for the book of Job. In my absence vinemedia.org notified me they have posted the first of my parables series in the simplified script as well, which will be useful to folks in China. Also, my preachchrist.com promotional pens arrived yesterday.

The next day I was sick as a dog. The doctor said I have a fever besides coughing, and asked if I had been abroad. Then he gave me some medication. I am resting today but my mind is active. At least I get to rest for the whole weekend as well. I ate lots of fruits to perk me up. After more than 15 months here, we got our first credit card, courtesy of Citic Bank.

Unfortunately I have been sick for three days in a row. An ill wind blew today (12th) and I could barely survive two hours outdoors. I hope I did not catch anything nasty from my Beijing trip. Beckoning me this weekend is Sunday school, school dinner on Sunday and alumni lunch on Monday, what a time to get sick. My coughing is gone, to be replaced by a running nose. I was touched by two things staying home: (1) Hong Kong's football team winning the East Asian Games (2) the RTHK broadcast on overseas Chinese immigration history (華人移民史). The former makes me want to go out and purchase the team's shirt and the latter makes me understand more how the Chinese dispersion around the world had impacted many lives, including mine. My mom used to work as one of the "red-headcloth" day laborers interviewed in the documentary.

I have recovered yesterday (15th) from my three days of sickness, but all is not over. I still have mild diarrhea, coughing and sleepiness. The weather is a headache. If I wear a sweater, I want to rip it off. No sweater and I'll sneeze. Drinking Chinese medicine eased my throat irritation. The funny thing is that I did not get sick in freezing Beijing but here in balmy Hong Kong. Besides finishing the doctor's medication, I have also purchased Strepsils. I am a man of various medication.

Here is my favorite among YouTube's top videos of 2009: David after Dentist. Have fun watching!

Christmas time. We had dinner Sunday (21st) with relatives at Central's HKU Alumni Association. The food there is always good, but I had a headache, so I could not enjoy myself. Our office was treated to an all-you-can-eat buffet the next day. Buffets are dangerous to the tummy. I controlled myself but still ate a lot. At night a student took me to Genki Sushi, my first time, which is so-so, nothing comparable to Sushi Gen. Tomorrow we will have Christmas luncheon/potluck at the office. After work I will go to Macau to spend Christmas there, returning on Saturday for weekend preaching at NPAC. We cancelled our upcoming Macau buffet due too much eating. Hopefully we can go to a theatre over the break - my first of the year.

Today is Christmas in Macau. We did our best to enjoy our holidays here. On Wednesday (23rd) I went straight from the ferry at 7:30 pm to Venetian's Portofino, where I enjoyed my mixed grill dinner. The next day we had a fantastic appetizer and dessert lunch at MGM's Rossio. The price is inexpensive for the fine dining, one that you cannot get in Hong Kong or Los Angeles. This morning I had veggie scramble for breakfast at our favorite breakfast place, Savory Crab, followed by shrimp eggs noodles for lunch at Wong Chi Kee (黃枝記), then dessert at Starbucks. Hot pot is planned for dinner before we head home to Hong Kong tomorrow.

We returned home (26th) to watch Bodyguards and Assassins, which was an exciting and emotional movie for me watching how much people have sacrificed for China. I highly recommend it. This is the first movie I have watched since Ip Man. Ironically, the two movies star Donnie Yen. At night I watched the third episode of History of Chinese Overseas, It was just as touching as the first episode; this time it is about how Chinese history and politics from Sun Yat-Sen on impacted Chinese overseas.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

School Newsletter, Dec 2009

將神的道教訓他們
葉福成博士: 本院碩士科主任

在一個星期天的早晨,一名老美國印地安人去參加主日崇拜。那天牧師的講道缺乏屬靈餵養,所以這位牧師就用大聲喊叫並擊打講台,來掩飾他不充足的準備。其實,可以說,他講得「風大浪大」。禮拜後,有人問那印地安基督徒,覺得牧師的信息如何?他想了一陣子,就用六個字綜合他的見解:「高風、大浪、無雨。」

過去十年我都在海外和本地教「釋經講道學」,因講道既是我主修的範圍、也是我的專長、所熱衷、所看為優先,也是我所引以自豪的。不過當我來到香港事奉,基於必要性與時代性,我發現教導事工應得到該有的尊重和地位。

今年,我教授了一門有關「教學法」的課程。當自己好好檢視聖經中有關教導的經文時,我發覺當今教會過份強調講道以致忽略了教導的重要性。

四福音記載了耶穌講道 (kērussō/preach) 32次,但提及祂的教導 (didaskō) 卻有59次之多。嚴格來說,福音書中羅列耶穌「講道」的活動,只有八次1,他的「教導」卻共有30次 2。不但如此,在約翰福音中,根本沒有記載「講道」(preach)一字,反而列出「教導 」(didaskō) 共有10 次。

耶穌傳道之初,正是施洗約翰被監禁之時。耶穌走遍加利利,在各會堂裡教訓人(didaskō),傳 (kērussō) 天國的福音,醫治百姓各樣的病症 (太4:23) 。之後,耶穌走遍各城各鄉,在會堂裡教訓人,宣講天國的福音,又醫治各樣的病症 (太9:35)。耶穌吩咐完了十二個門徒,就離開那裡,往各城「施教傳道」(太11:1)。

在福音書裡,「傳講」與「教訓」同時提及的只有三次,都出現在馬太福音中(太4:23; 9:35; 11:1),而且「教訓」總是被放在「傳講」之前。「教訓和傳講」,而不是「傳講和教訓」。很可惜和合本在馬太11:1把「傳道」放在「教訓」之前,新譯本則譯作「施教傳道」。甚至在強調差傳事工的使徒行傳中,「宣講/傳講」只提到八次,而「教訓」則有1 6次之多。

在新約中,有三處經文提到屬靈恩賜:羅馬書 12:6-8、哥林多前書12:7-11, 12:28-31和以弗所書4:11-12;其中只有教導的恩賜在三段經文都被提及 (羅12:7;林前12:28;弗4:11)。到底「教導」和「講道」有什麼不同?簡單來說,教導是裝備眾信徒,而講道則是向未信者傳福音。福音書裡有四次的「傳」都是與福音有關 (太4:23; 9:35;可1:14; 16:15)。

牧者絕不能二選其一,教導在牧養工作中是不可缺少的,且是不能分離的。誠如以弗所書4:11 所說者:牧師和教師的事工是不可分開的。該節經文的希臘文記載:「而他所賜的有 (冠詞 “the”) 使徒、有 (冠詞) 先知、有 (冠詞) 傳福音的、有 (冠詞) 牧師和教師。」可見「使徒」、「先知」和「傳福音的」均有冠詞 (“the”)放在前面,但「牧師和教師」前面則祇有一個冠詞 (“the”)。


為什麼要強調教導的事工?因為牧者在教會的角色與事奉,必須以教導為中心,而講台的事奉只是他「教導事工」的一部分而已。教導是今天稀有的珍寶,卻也是一種失落了的藝術。大多數牧者在事奉中發揮不了其影響力,就是因為他們不教導神的話、不明白如何教導神的話、也不理解或經歷過教導神的話語所帶出的大能。他們教導有關聖經的資料,卻未教導聖經本身。現代人對於演講與教導也是模糊不清,把聖經當作二手資料,而不是最重要的資源。現代的講道講究形式過於實質 ( style over substance),充斥著許多書本上的研究,卻忽略了個人的查經。可悲的是,現在的神學生與牧者們只會閱讀許多的解經書,卻不會自己去查考聖經。

牧者們,請加強教導,淡化演講!教師們,務要教導神的話語,不要傳遞人的智慧。教導比講道更豐富,因為教導包括:經歷耶穌的同在、細察經文的內容、進而把教訓延伸他人。願我們回歸教導的角色與根源——與主同行、效法祂的事奉,並分享祂的作為。




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1 (太 4:17,4:23;9:35; 11:1; 可 1:14,1:39;路 4:44; 8:1)

2馬太福音7次 (太4:23;5:2;7:29; 9:35;11:1; 13:54; 21:23),馬可福音13 次 (可 1:21, 1:22;2:13; 4:1, 4:2; 6:2, 6:6, 6:34; 8:31;9:31; 10:1;11:17;12:35) ,路加福音10 次 (路4:15, 4:31; 5:3, 5:17; 6:6; 13:10, 13:22; 19:47; 20:1; 21:37)

Monday, November 16, 2009

The Cold Front, Nov 2009

I went to the HKGLS conference on Saturday and Sunday (1st). It was inspirational, which is very American but is lacking in Hong Kong. People in Hong Kong work so hard for so little to show, and there is not much time left for relationships, rest or recreation. I wake up today to the realization that there is nothing more precious to bottle and sell than hope, especially in Hong Kong, where 20% of households earn less than HK$8,000 (US$1,032) a month and one in 10 lives in poverty. I was inspired by a song (普通的人) sang on the second day of the conference, which is posted below.

The cold front officially arrived today (Nov 2nd), the same day when snow hit Beijing, so I wore more clothes. I was already sick last week - on a Sunday (Oct 25th) and on Friday (Oct 30th). Wife says I should do less since I usually get sick over a long Sunday which begins from 730am till 430pm. Moving to Ma Wan helped. I forget my fatigue after 20 minutes in the pool, no matter how tired I am, isn't that amazing?

Swimming in the cold outdoor pool the next day was a new experience. I had no choice because my day was rather full. It was either a morning swim at 17 degrees Celsius or nothing, so I chose the former. It was not so bad, especially after 15 minutes in the water; I was even tempted to swim a few laps after my pool exercise. Today's class ended perfectly, the students have turned a big corner.

Receiving mail like Boon's makes http://www.preachchrist.com/ ministry especially sweet:
"Dear Rev. Yap, Thank you so much for your sermons which always encourage me. I feel as though I am continuing learning from you as I did in the class. (I was in your last summer intensive course at LOGOS). Really appreciate. May God bless you and continue to bless many others through you. Boon - now serving in N.Thailand"
"平安 謝謝你傳遞過來的文章 給了我們很大的幫助" Minsan Church
"請問牧師,這一篇是要投稿給信望愛 http://bible.fhl.net/ ,與讀者分享嗎?"

The response to switching the distribution of my sermons in Chinese instead of English has been tremendous. This morning (6th) 信望愛 asked if they can post my latest sermon (The Cry of My Heart) to their website, which I responded with wholehearted "yes" because they do a tremendous online ministry, see above. I had a request from China the same day, too, but I turned it down because our ministries do not match.

I think I have my fill of kids for now. Yesterday (10th) a parent at the pool persuaded his baby daughter to call me "Pak Pak" (伯伯). Fortunately she is not at speaking age yet or I would have to turn down the greeting of a clueles kid. Gray hair is really a big disadvantage in Hong Kong.

The first full-week of cold weather that began today (13th) blindsided me even though it did not come without warning. The news warned of today's conditions last night but I was in a hurry to catch the ferry to work and I did not think I have the extra one or two minutes to spare to return from the lift on my floor into the house to get a jacket. Poor decision. My eyes were burning for the rest of the day and at night I had a sore throat. Wife, not too great herself, was worried I could pass what I have to her. My voice even cracked by the next morning.

After two days I have slightly recovered from the flu. It was worse than normal. My eyes were so tired that it did not want to open when it was at rest. Today (15th) I was at Galilee Chapel to speak on her 41st anniversary. The worhship was most vibrant - one of the best, and they have youth as well as adults. The future of Christianity in Hong Kong lies in smaller churches 100-plus in attendance like GC as much as in the mega-churches. The same night I started coughing through the night; I think I need a scarf.

Cold, windy days like today (17th) make me thankful I am in Ma Wan. I went to the indoor pool when they open at 7 am because I have a lot on my plate, including getting my visa, having my foot treated and eating lunch with an old friend. I have the luxury of swimming 3 laps on top of my exercise routine. The funny thing is I have not found a store that sells turtlenecks yet.

Two days later I found a set of "long johns" for HK$90 in Yuen Long, of all places, in a wet market! It was pretty good and effective for the price, although the short sleeves are better suited for Hongkongers. The winter here is comparable to the winter in Los Angeles, chilly but not bitter.

Wife thought I was mad mixing winter melon and green raddish for soup, inisting that the two do not match and I had spoilt the soup instead. At the end of the day (20th) it was one of the sweetest soups I have ever tasted. Nobody I know has blended the two before, so I am happy that my adventurous spirit paid off.

Surprisingly, the parable of the sheep and the goats struck a chord among readers. Internet ministry is the same as literature ministry - you don't know who you are helping, but someone out there is thankful, as the response below shows. The text is as difficult as it gets. I had to rework on my exposition and illustrations the second time round till I was satisfied with the work I did. Appropriately, today is Thanksgiving Day, so I am happy as a small fat sheep (小肥羊):
"親愛的主內弟兄平安! 最近常常收到您的信息、非常感謝您的關懷。今天這篇信息真的是對我講的、讓我在日常中好好思考、成為行動。我們雖然從未謀面、但神的愛就是這樣奇妙。感謝主!相信您的信息不但感動我、同樣也感動有需要的人。神祝福您!" Emmy
"Thanks so much for sending me your sermons, I got a lot of encouragement from you. I love it and was inspired by your sermons. Happy Thanksgiving." 翁牧師娘

The last quarter of the school year ended on a high note. There is much to be thankful for. The students are fun and more relaxed; the atmosphere is pleasant and team spirit is high. We ate more than usual these last three days, including yesterday for Thanksgiving and the day before benefitting from the snacks I bought at Yuen Long. To cap the day, Wife suggested going to Tsing Yi for dinner to celebrate Thanksgiving and the the last day of school this year, which we did at C'est Bon. Here's to a promising new year.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Less is More, Oct 2009

"飄流日記"

Today (1st) is a leisurely day and a public holiday in Hong Kong due China's 60th Anniversary. I bought a new monthly pass (HK$180) when Green Green opened her doors at 9 am, allowing me unlimited access to the pool this month, so I intend to go twice today. An hour later we had breakfast (HK$24) at Blue Blue, read the papers there and shopped at the supermarket, arriving home at 1145 am. We prefer to stay in Ma Wan on Saturdays and holidays to enjoy a quiet rest and to avoid paying for fares. After having fruit salad for lunch, we slept till 3 pm. Wife prepared soup and watched a cable movie at the same time, while I headed for the pool again. After dinner, we went to the pier for an hour's walk, returning home to do the laundry.

Mid-Autumn/Mooncake (3rd) festival is a festive occassion and a big thing at Ma Wan. I don't know where the revelers are from, but they brought their lanterns, candles, towels and even picnic tables to the beach. It was quite a sight. We could not resist and joined them for a stroll.

After 40 days at Park Island, we went to the third, last and grandest of swimming pools - Chic Chic - the moment they opened the doors at 9:30 am. I swam five laps, the first time I do so in Hong Kong. Like I say, I live in Ma Wan, not Hong Kong, because it is more like a hamlet community than a city estate. No wonder I hear that kids sometimes cannot adjust to schools or living outside the island.

Flu season is in, I feel it today (5th), and I am one of the first victims. I am so used to sneezing in the morning that I dismissed the symptoms. Thankfully, I survived the rest of the morning's class, but the full effects were felt in the afternoon. I can not get sick yet because I still have a class to teach tomorrow night. After work, I took a rest and then went for my pool exercise, which was quite relieving, but the symptoms reappeared again after exercise was over. So I intend to take Panadol - my first in Hong Kong - and sleep earlier tonight.

After mid-autumn's arrival the weather has cooled down considerably. Occasionally I sleep without the ac unit on. I sneezed today (9th) after exercising in the outdoor pool. In the coming weeks I will try to stay indoor to avoid catching a chill.

DHL is a joke. It took making at least seven calls and talking to seven employees in two days to get a package in my name. We had a package (9315 727 831) sent from the States on Friday that landed in Hong Kong at 1 pm the Saturday but did not get to its Tsuen Wan facility as promised by 11 pm. So we asked it to be transferred next day to its only 24-hour center in Cheung Sha Wan since all its other centers were closed on Sunday (11th). We went there at 8:15 am but they refused to let me have my package for the next 45 minutes even though I was in person and I have my I.D. with me. They said I do not have the documentation for the transference, which I had sent. Plus, I am not allowed to do the documentation on the spot. They said it is policy. Say what? Is policy more important than the person? Is man made for the Sabbath, or the Sabbath for man? What is the purpose of a policy? Seems that its purpose it to protect the company rather than the customer. Such policy will spell its doom. Already it is not competitive in the States, the biggest market, with UPS and FedEx grabbing the lion's share of the market. Then I found a blog with worst complaints than mine.

Today I was grouchy because a new ferry leaving Ma Wan at 7:24am was late arriving at Tsuen Wan by one or two minutes, making me barely miss my 7:42am train to Yuen Long. The next train was due in 3 minutes. I wonder why the new ferry service in a newer ship and all is slower than the old one. Such is life in Park Island due its distance from land, but it is a small sacrifice for the tranquility there. Thanksgivings abound, too. I was blessed today (21st) reading a comment from Iraq, which also reminds me not to miss out on others, see below:
“Mr. Yap, I am in the US Air Force Stationed in Iraq. I have enjoyed reading the first three sermons you posted for Nehemiah. Have you finished this series? If so, is it possible to get an email copy. I would love to finish them. Thank you for your assistance.” In Service to God, Paul MSgt Paul Lyman United States Air Force
“Every time I receive your message, it's great helper for me, thank you very much. God bless” David Lee, Ethnic Ministry Pastor, Matthews, NC 28105, Oct 14th
“Thank you Rev. Yap, this is what we need to do on the earth in such dark hours. God bless your heart and work, it is so encourage, we helping people not because of man, but of God.” Judy, Oct 14th

I have been doing some soul-searching, examining how can I best use my gifts for ministry. After a year here, my heart is still on developing Bible study and preaching resources for my website http://www.preachchrist.com/, then translating all my sermons into Chinese, which is halfway done, and doing more intensive courses in Asia. The first two are priority because my internet project and writings travel around the world far quicker than I can. Today (29th) vinemedia.org requested my materials for their website. It seems like literature ministry might best compliment my vision.

Friday, September 25, 2009

Hong Kong Stories

* Father Thomas Law Kwok-fai: "Those [who build] inflated buildings will definitely be scared to death. If Cafe de Coral came, it would be even more dreadful. Those are the real man-eating devils." South China Morning Post

* Four in 10 people say they work too many hours and would consider changing jobs for a more balanced life, a survey of 1,009 employess by the University of Hong Kong found. The mean working week was 48.7 hours. Near 60% of employess complained of prolonged fatigue, and 35% suffered from insomnia due to work pressure. "Four in 10 say they work too long," South China Morning Post Oct 20,2010

* One in five credit card holders is unable to meet even the minimum monthly payment and 70 percent barely make it, a study by the University of Hong Kong reveals. According to the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, there were more than 13 million credit card accounts in the second quarter of this year. Chung said 70 percent of the 506 cardholders interviewed said they can only afford the minimum payment each month while 21 percent pay less. All of the respondents are aged 18 or above, with 69percent between 25 and 35. They have on average 2.5 credit cards, though one respondent has 14. Pollster in swipe at card craziness

* A July (2010) poll of 657 parents with children aged five to 16 showed nearly 90 percent have maids, 80 percent are unable to do homework on their own and fewer than 7 percent manage household chores such as sweeping floors and folding clothes.

* Around 50 percent of people in Hong Kong and the mainland are spending 11 to 25 percent of their income on their parents, mainly due to the weak social security systems, and that most of them are finding it hard to cope. Also, around 36 percent expect their own children to provide for them in the same manner. Standard

* The Census and Statistics Department said the average lifespan for women in Hong Kong may exceed 90 years in 2039, while men's lives will increase by 3.9 years to 83.7 years in 2039. The Standard

* Nearly all of last year's University of Hong Kong graduates have found a job - but most had to settle for lower pay than the previous batch. The average salary of graduates dropped 11.4 percent from HK$18,755 to HK$16,625. The Standard

* The Census and Statistics Department revealed that the SAR's 2.8 million workers earn a median hourly wage of HK$58, but the lowest-paid 10 percent of the workforce makes less than HK$27 an hour, with those in security and cleaning services getting just HK$27.60. The Standard

* HK ranks 31st among world's most livable cities

* Since The Heritage Foundation and The Wall Street Journal came out with the Index of Economic Freedom in 1995, Hong Kong has been named the freest economy in the world every year. That hasn't changed. For the 16th straight year the city topped the index, again beating Singapore for the title, with Australia and New Zealand at Nos 3 and 4. The Standard

* According to a survey by the Hong Kong Christian Service, which interviewed 400 respondents from September to November last year, the happiness score for those between 20 and 28 is 4.14 points, compared to an average of between 4.5 and 5.5 points for the whole group. The Standard

* A total of 157 people aged below 30 committed suicide last year, compared to 129 in 2007, an increase of 22%. The Samaritans pointed out that suicides had accounted for nearly 10 times more deaths in the past 5 years than those caused by traffic accidents. The group (Samaritans) received 31,000 calls for help in the budget year of 2008-09, while 28,296 calls were received in the previous year. Confirmed male callers accounted for 34%, while 30% were female callers. The other callers declined to speak. "Youth Suicides on the Increase" South China Morning Post Dec 29, 2009

* Hong Kong still ranks as the world's second most expensive retail rental market behind New York, despite suffering from the global economic crisis, with values of US$976 (HK$7,613) per sq ft per annum, according to study by CB Richard Ellis that was released on December 7. The Standard

* World's Greatest City: 50 Reasons Why Hong Kong is No. 1

* A survey, covering 849 Primary Three to Form Five students from poor families, was conducted by the Boys' & Girls' Clubs Association of Hong Kong. About 52 percent of the respondents said they feel “totally useless” while almost 43 percent considered themselves “sometimes useless.” And about 30 percent believe they are losers. The monthly family incomes of all those surveyed is less than the median of HK$10,500 and some 40 percent live under the poverty line - with their families earning less than half the monthly median figure.
The Standard

* Hong Kong's wealthy lost the most. The ranks of those in Hong Kong whose net worth totaled US$1 million or more shrank by 61% from a year earlier, the study said. WSJ

* According to the United Nations Development Program's report on human mobility and the best places to live, Australia is 2nd, Canada is 4th, USA is 13th, Singapore is 23rd, Hong Kong is 24th, and China is 92nd.

* Researchers interviewed 6,700 people, including 1,002 from Hong Kong, by telephone in July. They found local consumers were the least likely to plan for a shopping trip. They were the most likely to shop whenever they had time instead of setting a regular time - 32% compared with the global average of 17%. While 62% globally said they usually took a shopping list, just 32% of Hongkongers did.

The survey also found the city's fast-paced lifestyle help support the rising number of convenience stores, with 21% saying they bought groceries from such outlets, second to Russia with 25%.
"HK has most impulsive buyers" SCMP, Oct 7, 2009

* The number of people living under the poverty line in the first half of the year reached a record high of 1.23 million people. The definition of poverty in the study involves people earning an income of equal to or less than half the median monthly domestic household income, which is set according to the number of members in a family. The median for the first half of 2009 was HK$3,300 for a single member family, HK$6,750 for a two-member family, HK$9,150 for a three-member family, HK$12,650 for families with four or more people. SCMP, Sept 28, 2009

* The decline in gross floor area (GFA) efficiency rates through the years:
1980s - 78-89%
1990s - 72-84%
2000s - 68-77%
SCMP, Sept 27, 2009

* Hong Kong remains the most expensive place in the world to run an office, according to Colliers International. In the latest Global Office Real Estate Mid-Year Review, which features 170 office markets across the globe, Hong Kong topped the list again despite seeing a 35 percent slide in Class A rent to US$138.08 (HK$1,077.02) per square foot per year in June. The Standard

* Singapore was rated the easiest economy in the world to do business for the fourth year in a row by the World Bank and its private-sector lending arm, the International Finance Corp. The ranking came in the Doing Business 2010 report. New Zealand was ranked as the second-easiest place to do business, with Hong Kong lagging in third place. The Standard

RTHK's Hong Kong Stories I enjoyed viewing:
Barbecue Meat
Bamboo
My Old Friend
The Invisible People
A Fisherman's Story
Condiment with a Tradition

Monday, September 21, 2009

Park Island, Aug 23rd-Sep 2009

It's been a good long day today (Aug 23rd), the day we finally moved to Ma Wan (Chinese name: Horse Bay). The movers charge us HK$1,700 for packing and moving 20 medium-size boxes of books and about 10 boxes of household items, three book shelves, two tables and four chairs, a bed and a sofa. It was a a fair price for both parties. We panicked momentarily when both the moving company and the cable company called to bring forward their appointment by about two hours to 11:30a-12p, which was an hour and a half after the 8:30 am worship I attended ended. I rushed to get my haircut - there is none in Park Island - and bought a bag of rice, Skippy peanut butter and LKK oyster sauce, with 1o minutes to spare before the movers arrived. (To Be Continued)

All through the afternoon Wife and Sister-in-law reorganized the things at home and we grabbed an early dinner at 4 pm to take a break before our relative left. At night Wife opened the 20 or so boxes to unpack her books into two shelves, leaving the third one empty. A little later, we took a walk and visited the supermarket before it closes. By night time, with the exception of unpacking a few more things and boxes, the moving was almost completed.

Most friends think Ma Wan is too far from city and work life. It takes me 55 minutes to get to work in Yuen Long on the first day; not bad, most would say. On the first night, I walked around the block in my shorts and T-shirt, something I would not do in the city, to enjoy the cool breeze with Wife. The buildings are built by Sun Hung Kai and all numbers "4" are missing from its blocks and flats, which means no 4th, 14th or 24th block or flat - 4 sounds like death in Chinese. There is only one ATM machine (Bank of China) and one supermarket (Parkway) on the island. It is dog paradise for canines and their owners. Wife commented "no dog is ordinary here." Indeed, all dogs here are elegant. Ugly dogs have no standing and cannot compete here.

While dogs are welcomed, cars are not, so rich people do not spare a thought to live there due the absence of parking. Also, school conscious parents could live there for so long only since the the city has more schooling choices. There is one primary shcool only and no secondary school there, so teens are few and between. The young adult and young family groups are visibily represented.A day in Hong Kong without the Octopus debit card is quite a nuisance and an experience.

On the first day traveling to work from Park Island (Aug 24th), I forgot my card and had to find other means to board the ferry, the rail and the bus - in that order - without the card, which is by cash. I could not return home and still catch the 7:41 am ferry for work. The terminal here is really backwards; they don't even have tickets to sell. Everything is by swiping card or inserting coins (for the entrance box). Fortunately, the nearby bakery changed a $100 bill for me and I have enough change to the office - $8 for ferry, $11 for train, and $6 for bus, where a coworker supplied change for the return trip. The return trip is at 6:05 pm or an earlier one at 5:48 pm, which is nearly impossible to catch with my work hours. The Tsuen Wan pier, however, smells, so I prefer to be on time rather than early.

We have a goood first week here. Today (Aug 29) we went to the local club (Blue Blue) and asked if our memberships are ready. Previously, a clerk told me there is a 14 days' wait. They checked and completed it on the spot while we wait, reading the papers there. There are three clubs here and inside the clubs are restaurants, swimming pools and magazines and newspapers, even a libray at the Green Green club. At 4 pm we took our first pool visit. Everything there fuflfills our expectations; like L.A. Fitness, they even have a hot spa by the pool with water streaming from a jet massaging the spine of the person seating by it. There is a machine to wring out water from wet swimming trucks, similar to what I have seen at some L.A. Fitness centers before, except that this one does not stop by itself. This is important because we did not have a plastic bag for the wet suits and we were heading to the supermarket for groceries before returning home, so it is incovenient and heavy to have wet suits in our bags. We couldn't be any happier now that we have found "our space" in Hong Kong finally, literally our place in the sun.

I have a perfect start to scheduling in September today (1st), catching the 7:24 am ferry instead of the 7:41 am ferry to Tsuen Wan, where the West Rail arrived a minute later to take me to Yuen Long, but the wait was longer than five minutes there. On the way home I hop onto the ferry a minute before it departed. My plan was to buy some groceries and head to the pool on the way home, but the line was long at the supermarket, so I tried swimming first. Unfortunately the indoor pool is closed until the 14th. Without any option, I used the outdoor pool for my pool exercises, ending with swimming three laps in Hong Kong for the first time, a lap more than last month. After reading today's papers at the club I returned to the mart but the line was longer. Still I had to buy bananas, vegetables and some meat. This would be my last time competing for groceries after work hours. Perfect as it may, I still eat at 8 pm and finish dinner at 8:30 pm. Hmm, I am still stuck with the old eating hours even after moving to Park Island, leaving for work earlier and making all my rides. I suspect in Hong Kong nobody gets done with dinner by 8 pm. It is just not possible on weekdays after work. With my perfect scheduling, I made little progess, so I wonder how others do it. However, I am satisfied as I can swim earlier rather than the 7 pm opening hours in Lai Chi Kok. It is less tiring than resting first and swiming later.

This morning (4th) I woke up and couldn't get back to sleep, and so I went to work five minutes before 7 am. What was weird was I dreamed of the possibility of working in Park Island or having an office here in the future. Now this is way off base and radar, but never say never. Also, I managed to finish my pool exercise and dinner by 8 pm lately. Maybe now things will stabilize and improve, not that I am complaining, especially when most locals have a later dinner time than me. This weekend will be the start of a busy church quarter for me, beginning with preaching on Saturday at Man On Shan (where I saw a talented but blind young pianist play for the choir and heard the praise team sing a beautiful song which I later found on the net), and on Sunday teaching Sunday school and preaching at North Point. Because of my schedule I will restrict speaking engagements to churches I have not been before.

Yesterday (Sept 6) was the last straw for me when I measured my gut for the first time and realized it is six inches over its ideal size - confirmed by a tailor 2 weeks later. One year's absence of pool exercise can do that to you. The next day I started a new exercise regimen in the pool that includes 400 high-kicks in the water. That will hopefully keep the bloating in check and reduce it by an inch at the end of the year. Last week I was in absolute pool heaven, making it seven days to the pool. I was tempted to exercise Sunday morning before worship, but decided against it. After worship Wife wanted to hit the pool before dinner, and I obliged.

Dogs at Island must be the most pampered in Hong Kong. Today (9th) I saw an owner wipe a dog's behind, then I noticed he has laid a piece of paper on the ground to collect the dog's poop. Sometimes there are couples who have two dogs, not one. I don't know how people who live in 500-700 sq ft apartments can accomodate dogs, sometimes maids as well. Despite all their rights, dogs have to be on a leash or in the owners' arms when taking a lift; and in a bag or with a mouth cover on a ship. Taking the ferry is the only downside for me here. On the way to Central Pier after our first official rental housing trip here, I felt like vomiting on the ship. I learned my lesson of not drinking milk tea before boarding a ship. Other than that, the ferry to Tsuen Wan is a a breeze, and a snooze on the way home. At least I have 20 mins rest before swimming.

The No. 8 typhoon today (14th) is the longest blowing wind I've witnessed since I've been here. It started around 6 pm and it is not letting up three hours later. I was advised to leave earlier at 4:15 pm because, unlike others, I had to take the ferry. The winds are expected to die down early next morning, in time for school retreat that begins in the afternoon.

Registration day today was refreshing, especially seeing the new and eager Master's program students. My second school year in Hong Kong is about to begin next week, I can not wait.The typhoon warning finally stopped the next day at 10:15 am but the rain did not stop until 3 pm at least - the most rain I have seen so far, as close to a deluge for me. Getting out of Island after the storm at the same time with those going to work was a nightmare. The buses skipped our stop within the community due overloading. Thankfully the management had more buses operating. At Kwai Fong a long line of passengers awaited their buses while the MTR rides were smooth.

I heard a good message at the retreat by Rev Tsang (曾立華牧師) and am thankful to see the eager students. I better stop writing at Suen Douh retreat center as "lights out" was 15 minutes ago!I was awakened at 6 am by a pesky bird this morning, yet I was fascinated by her shrieks, may as well since we are in the countryside. An hour later I began my search for birds and found four magpie-like birds singing in the soccer field. After a while there, they flew away. Sad to see them go, I wandered to the back corridor outside my room looking for more birds, only to find three parrots in a cage. They didn't move initially, so I thought they were figurines. Finally the red one cocked its head. I left the parrots but returned a second time, this time I heard the noisy bird again, then I realized the screeching was from the parrot all along. The worker there explained that the parrot makes noise when it is hungry, not because of sunrise. Day 2 at the camp was just the tonic for our small community in need of encouragement and strength. Rev. Tsang was in fine form. Reading Rev Kwok's (郭文池牧師) book was a bonus. I feel ready and optimistic for the new quarter. All of us needed a boost. The rain did not let up either, but it did not dampen camp mood.

It was with some reluctance that I have to leave the camp parrot that I have grown fond of. On the final day she woke me up at 6:05 am, again cackling so noisily away. After finally finishing the book I brought, I went to see the bird for the last time. She was quite a character. After literally enjoying a full brekast she walked up the catapult-shaped bar/stick in the cage, resting her divided legs and nodding her neck up and down on it for more than 30 times. She was like a rock star in concert. Later she shifted from tossing her neck up and down to swinging her body side to side. What a showstopper. I asked a colleague to snap a picture of her, that's her at the top.

I have been so busy this is my first full Saturday in the Island. On a leisurely Saturday (19th), we went for breakfast and sat at the clubhouse with our computers until it was time for salad lunch at home. I underestimated how tiried I was after the camp, that I slept for more than an hour before I woke up for pool exercise, followed by a home call to Wife's friend in the neighborhood for cake and ice-cream, the latter we brought to complement the cake. I joked that we have quota with our light lunch. It is hilarious that the plan to limit our food intake backfired by a last-minute invitation. An hour later we decided not to cook and ate a nice New Zealnd steak (HK$58). At night we watched a TV movie and now Wife is fast asleep. Tomorrow is her first time teaching at Yan Fook.

The school kickoff day (22nd) could not be any better. I have eleven students and two visitors for the historic first Master's degree class. New students are usually shocked by the amount of work they have to do in my class. The students are primarily pastors, so we get along well due our closer in age. I cannot complain, most students by now have warmed up to my loud and livey ways. Four of us teachers have a new office hours schedule that is more flexible (8:30 am - 5:15 pm), which greatly benefits me in my daily attempt to catch the ferry that leaves at 5:48 pm from Tsuen Wan Pier, which is a bus ride and two rail stops away from my Yuen Long office. The next day I will teach a night class at TST, so I will do pool exercises in the morning and take the opportunity to go to the bank, which I could never do with my regular work hours in Yuen Long.

Suddenly I am an old man to people in Hong Kong. For one time too many I have been discriminated because of my graying hair. Today (22nd), to my disgruntlement, a man (Charles) at least four years my senior stated out loud that he was the youngest and volunteered to eat the last bite of sandwich. Last week, an older gentleman 10 years my senior looked with disbelief and lost for words when I said I was ten years his junior. At a retreat in April, a 62-year old man thought he and I, the invited speaker, were the oldest in the camp, but embarassed leaders rushed to my defence and admitted they are older than me. At a lunch with TST's Rev. Kong in January, he passed the last piece of shrimp dumpling to my older coworker, remarking, "This is for the youngest at the table." For the record, I am not 50 yet. I can't help it when people mistake me for an old man, so from now on I have an excuse for acting young.

Friday, July 31, 2009

One Year Later, Aug 2009

Last Thursday (Jul 30) I offically ended my first year of teaching in Hong Kong, with the last class an intensive class on Monday and Thursday nights 7-10pm, altogether nine sessions. Intensive classes are killers for teacher and students. I do not know how students can endure it, especially attending classes two nights a week after their long day at work. I truly appreciate lay students. Two of them who work with drug addicts really impressed me. After 18 months of rehab themselves, they remained at the center as workers, what a story, One led the other to Christ, and they are now coworkers at the drug center.

Yesterday (Jul 31) was our major anniversary. I bought Chinese cakes from Yuen Long's 大同 for colleagues and invited relatives to join us for dinner at Tsing Yi. We are so blessed together. When Sister-in-law said grace and thanked God for the sweet, sour, bitterness, spice (甜酸苦辣) of life, we were amazed we could only recall sweet but not the last three taste.

Today (1st) I went to the yearly Hong Kong Revival Meetings in Kowloon City. The speakers, both from TEDS, were good in exegesis. I tried to call graduates to go with me but they said they have to work on Saturdays in Hong Kong, which is news to me after nearly a year here! Also, I noticed not many youngsters were in attendance. Christians are graying in Hong Kong as they are elsewhere in the world. Gone are the days when youth, college and young adults flock to these meetings, especially overseas.

Yesterday (3rd) my landlord informed me that my request to be released of my lease a month earlier, end of August instead of September, is granted as she has found a new tenant. We are excited because just a day ago Wife said she was praying hard for an earlier release. This Saturday we will check out a rental housing area that is less crowded and has better air. I have a friend who lived in the area and he has lined us up with a neighbor who has an unit for rent and another with a unit few blocks away.

I must be away for a long time, so much so that I am longing to see a former student from the States who will be visiting me next week. I have adjusted quite well to Hong Kong aisde from the weather, which makes me want to get outside my skin at times. Even so, I think my last sermon (Elijah) before my first anniversary here must be my strongest yet. It is not that easy to speak outside one's congregation although I have been preaching for the last 20 years. North Point's seats are in four columns, so focusing is terrible. My eyes are always focused on the audience to my right because I find it hard to turn my head left as well with my eyes are on the notes as well.

Hunting for rental housing on a hot day is no fun regardless of the place and its potential. Today (8th) is 35 C , which is 95 F, enough to drive a person crazy and any resident indoor. The good news is I went to the swimming pool four times this week - the first time in a year here - and even swim two laps with ease, but the bad news is I feel just as hot. There is way to cool down even if you are an ice pack when the sun came up after my swim in the morning. I hope tomorrow is better because the English worship at North Point is at noon and fellowship ends near at 4:30 pm.

Unfortunately the apartment we visited and liked yesterday was rented by today. The owner did not think we were interested and rented it at a higher price to somebody else. That means we have to find something fast because we have to move out of our current apartment as it has been rented out already. Now it is a race against time and yet we are so busy this coming week with a friend coming by and a birthday to celebrate. I couldn't call earlier to confirm our interest since I have church till 4:30 p.m.

The next apartment we's going to see is on Friday after work. This time we should do better since the owner does not come to open the apartment enough for viewing because he is so busy himself and does not live in the area, so less competitors are expected. If it does not work out, panic and sweat will set in. We may even consider staying in a serviced apartment, but I hate the idea of someone coming in to my apartment to do free cleaning, no privacy. Postscript: I received news today (13th) that a one room apartment with seaview is available, so we'll see it as well on Friday.

I have a lot of firsts yesterday and today (13th). Yesterday I boxed six boxes, getting ready to move out of our apartment. The earlier I get started the better, even though apartment viewing is moved to Saturday now. We brought to Hong Kong 22 boxes, I think. I wonder if we have gained more stuff since. For the first time, I have been to the pool for four consecutive days, which is an accomplishment to me.

My birthday celebration on the month's third weekend turned out better than I expected. First our rental application was accepted and we hope to move next week after we sign the formal contract coming Saturday (22nd). We have a good bargain and pay HK$1,000 less than what we pay currently. Today we made history by testing the first day of West Rail's extension all the way to Tsim Sha Tsui. It was a pretty good ride from Mei Foo but unfortunately this will also be our last week in this area. We had dinner in Woolloomooloo (Australian steak house) near the East Tsim Sha Tsui station and enjoyed dessert at the Starbucks by P2 exit. The dinner was okay, not great.
An old friend in Hong Kong always makes me feel special on my birthday. Before, he would always e-mail me when I was in US. Now that I am here, he invited me and Wife to Saturday breakfast. At least it forces us to see each other once a year, so thank God for friends and birthdays. I miss and like old friends.

I took three afternoons off to accompany a misisonary friend who was in town. After lunch at Jade and a trip to the Immigration Tower to obtain my visa extension, we went to the Peak; the bus ride there was oustanding and breathtaking. Taking the tram down was empty after the bus ride. At least I located the route from Hong Kong Garden. After that we went to Mongkok's Woman Street and Langham Place. The next day a student at my previous semianry called and the three of us had dim sum at Lai Chi Kok's 於滿人家, one of the best dim sum places few people heard of. After that we talked with Rev Ho before he caught a place back to China, a day earlier because he cannot change his ticket.

Since I have taken the next day off I may as well use it to get treatent for my foot. My right foot has been giving me problems, so lately I am seeing a foot masseuse in Shum Shui Po highly-reccomended by a pastor, but it's hard to schedule appointment, with my office in Yuen Long and my pending move to Park Island. I did try a different way to exercise in the pool today (19th) to work on different leg muscles, but it is so speculative I do not think it will work. Maybe all the walking in Hong Kong is taking a toll on me, though it does not stop me walking more for less, like needlessly visiting the new Pacific Coffee on the other side of Mei Foo today out of curioisty. It is huge. Too bad it is my last week here. Even if it is not, it is too far to walk. Anyway I am a Starbucks person.

I had the nicest day yesterday (19th) taking the half day off. Dropping off at the Nam Cheong station instead of Shum Shui Po, I walked ten minutes to my destination. The time was 2:15 pm by the time it was over. I ate some noodles, went home and rested, then did my half-hour pool exercise at 5 pm before it closed at 6p to reopen at 7 pm. This is the first time in Hong Kong I could exercise before the 6 pm break. Life sure is hectic here. If your health is none the better, you will sure to suffer because you don't have the time or the break to get treatment. Taking more half days off is nice but not an option because I need to save my holidays for mission trips.

We finally got our apartment but not before some misses. An owner showed us a two-bedroom but thought we were not interested, so he rented it the next day (10th), an hour before we called to confirm our interest. The reason we did not call earlier was because Sunday was church day and our activties did not end till 5 pm. Next, we were supposeed to see a one-bedroom apartment on the 15th, but the owner could not make it and had to postpone it to Saturday (16th). On that day the realtor scheduled another one-bedroom to show us but also told us the Friday turned Saturday appointment was also rented out, this time to owner's relative, so we were down to one apartment left to see, which turned out to be everything we were looking for. It is a 488 sq. feet, one-bedroom apartment in Park Island overlooking Noah's Ark and the Tsing Ma bridge. Wife says, "We can see the people entering the ark, reminding us that Jesus’ salvation is complete and our task is to bring people to the Lord." The best thing with the apartment is there are lots of closets and storage, and the rent is HK$1,000 less than Ching Lai Court. In retrospect, God knows and provides what we need.

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Reunification Day, Jul 2009

Today (1st) is a holiday in Hong Kong, the only holiday I am aware of so far in nine months here, since I almost went to work the other holidays until I was warned otherwise the day before by Wife. Also, I received two e-mails today informing me of their last day at work, one by a pastor friend reflecting his transition to a new ministry, and another by an instituition president informing others he was leaving his post. I like the latter's light spirit. The International Herald Tribune reported in an article today that Malaysia’s new prime minister has announced that the country would severely weaken a 40-year old requirement that companies reserve 30 percent of their shares for ethnic Malays, the country’s dominant ethnic group.

With the free time I could update you about the trip I took to to Singapore and Penang last week. We took the subway in Singapore and realize how slowly the local pedestrains were walking compared to their Hong Kong conuterparts. In Hong Kong escalator riders step to the right so that walkers can pass the stationary riders; in Singapore they stood pat side by side blocking the lanes. The next day I realized they were not as slow, but not at the Hong Kong pace. The city is highy rated as an international city, but I do not see as many expatriates on the streets or riding the subway, nowhere near Hong Kong streets. I wonder where they are. The Singapore streets are not crowded at all, not even at its most frequented Orchard street. The crowd is a fifth or less than those at Mongkok and Causeway. In fact there is no crowd or atmosphere. The only thing the two cities - and Penang, too - have in common is that their Starbucks are crowded, which is not a surprise because they are the only businesses savvy enough to offer free internet.

I never took a liking to Singapore food despite visiting Hongkongers' generous praise of it, but what do they know since they are known to enjoy the Malaysia and Singapore food in Hong Kong. Indonesian food is far, far better in Hong Kong. My brother joined us to visit my mother who lives in Singapore. He was more critical than me, if that was possible, saying that Malaysian food and Singapore food are heaven (former) and earth (latter). An Aussie who sat next to me on a plane said that Singapore bak kut teh is watered down. He should know since his wife is from Klang, Malaysia, a bak kut teh stronghold. The two best eating places for me is Vienna Buffet at United Square in Thompson Road and the rojak on fourth floor of Orchard Road's Atrium Square.

Penang life is slow, very much like Macau. The bus I rode on a quarter of a century ago is still operating on the same route, chugging along at bicycle's pace. No wonder the governement has introduced a new bus 101 from downtown to the hugely popular Batu Ferringhi tourist route, but the locals still ride the first bus that comes. Penang food is delicious, especially at Gurney Drive near Gurney Plaza, the most popular local shopping mall, where American stores dominate. I lined up with at least ten other customers for a plate of Char Kwai Teow at Gurney Drive, but even that hawker is not the most popular in Penang, I was told. Holiday Inn Batu Ferringhi is good value but Wife saw a roach that sprinted from the restroom into the closet. We had a tasty M$45 breakfast per head buffet, lounging there three hours for our breakfast and brunch's worth, unlike my brother who ate non-stop for three hours at Vienna's in Singapore. On my two-country trip, I had sampled chicken rice, rojak, rambutan, jack fruit, star fruit, chiku, nasi lemak, rendang, grilled fish, griiled cuttlefish, spicy cuttlefish, satay, roti prata, coconuts - need I say more?

I was encouraged my last message on Luke 12 (Easy Come, Easy Go) has helped a person and provoked a response or two: "這晚上睡得不好,原本想給__電郵說說不平的事情,看完這篇講章,就覺得沒甚大不了,這個世界每天都會發生不平的事情,很多人比我可憐,不用將「我」放得那麼大,應該慶幸自己不是魔鬼的使者,只是受害人…。應該將時間用在正當的事情上,事情自有神看管的,一切都不能越過祂的掌權,就看是「學習的功課」。看魔鬼又能將我怎樣辦?謝謝這篇及時的講章,記念你更能看得明白中文。" Wong
"叶牧师,平安 谢谢您的这篇信息,帮助了我很多,尤其是这个星期日,我的信息也是讲有关奉献的信息,你的数据帮了不少,谢谢。 愿神大大使用您让更多人的祝福。祝健康平安喜乐。" David

For a month beginning last week (2nd) I will be at TST office in the morning for a half day's work but return to teach a night class there. It is my first time teachng an intensive class. TST has its advantage, escpecially I have a lot of things to attend to in the afternoon. To begin with I went to the Revenue Board in Wanchai today to see why I have not received my tax info yet. Not wasting much, I checked the web for good food in Wanchai and ate at netizens' most popular restaurant 再興燒臘飯店, which I admit is worth a try just to see the line for takeout. The line grew from 20 to 30 people by the time I finished my lunch. I was quite a gentleman waiting to be seated but a lady at the back of me sat on the stool a customer just vacated. After lunch I noticed a line was forming at the neighboring Taiwanese restaurant, too, so I'll be back. The officers at the Tax Board was very efficient and helpful. Turns out that they are not ready to tax me yet until next year.

Here is a comment on Psalms 52 (The Last Laugh):
"谢谢您:叶牧师!您每一次送来的信息,读后真是受益匪浅。愿神不断加添您的智、心力、体力和能力,使您成为更多教会的众人的祝福!以马内利" Tian Zhong
"葉牧師,謝謝您的分享, 也是一篇很好的查經題材." Betty

Yesterday (12th) was my last of ten Sunday class sessions I taught at Yan Fook until the next ten beginning September 13th. Yan Fook is the biggest church in Hong Kong, heading to the 10,000 mark soon. The class dwindled from 45 to half, no thanks to swine flu, but the coordinators tell me the drop-off is normal, esepcially for the early first class. Five attendees received a reward for full attendance and students even get to evaluate the teacher. Well, at least I was evaluated by those who were appreciative enough to last the course, so it is not all bad, but the weak in heart better not teach there. I had a good time and a great experience. Since I am merely a guest teacher and not church staff, I have no pressure. I even initiated weekly breakfast with students as early as 7:45 am before class an hour later; later we changed to 7:55 am. The work is minimal since few can wake up that early. Each staff has to be the advisor of one or two fellowships that consist of 200-400 people, isn't that amazing? As guest, I do my best "caring" for them, but "taking care" of such a big group must surely be a headache even for the staff. Interestingly, students in this megachurch hardly know one another before the sessions, so breakfast helps, but I must confess I know less than half of their names when it ended. To lighten matters and encourage participation, I divided the class into lecture (40-45 mins) and group discussion (20-25 mins) and the students loved it. Praise the Lord, I have a new ministry designing group study questions, which is quite challenging in English and Chinese.

One of the most authentic dumpling places is in Tsim Sha Tsui quite far from my office in the same city. Distance, however, is not an excuse for ignorance in your backyard, so I walked in the hot afternoon to Peking Shiu Gau Shop for probably netizens' highest rated dumplings in whole of Hong Kong and ordered a Beijing and Shanghai dumpling combo for HK$26. It was worthwhile seeing dumpling in another style. There were lots of film stars on the glass counter and Northern China snacks on the menu. A couple squeezed next to me on my table in the mini store told me it was their first time there, too. I will return for more snacks, such as the inviting fried spring roll that I saw another customer ordered.

After 11 months in Hong Kong I headed back into the pool this week, twice in fact, including today (18th) with Wife before 7 am to avoid the sun and heat in the outdoor pool. The HK$19.90 is worth spending. We felt like fish returning to water, it feels that good. I did my routine 1,000 times kicking exercise in the pool before swimming two laps in the Olympic size pool. By then my lungs were hurting. In the States I could swim 10 laps in the much smaller LA Fitness indoor swimming pool. My goal is five laps here. Hopefully I can swim at least twice a week from now on. Being sick and having swollen gums four days ago sure motivated me to take better care of my health in Hong Kong as the quality of life and air here is not as good as the States. Besides, the hectic pace and the lack of exercise and rest here may have contributed to my bout with sickness.

Friends and former students wasted no time in responding to my last sermon (God of All Comfort), some were somewhat hilarious. I even received a request for permission to have it republished, praise God:
"老師這收信平安:這是一篇使人心靈得幫助,好像聖靈的風吹在人的心裏,滋潤人的心溫暖人的靈魂的一篇講章,真是棒極了。 謝謝你的這ㄧ篇講章,成為我即時得幫助,請問我可以使用它在我所服事的教會嗎?願神祝福你和你的家。"Melody
"Thanks Victor,I see the environment does help in language skills." TK
"Hey Victor, Did you yahoo your translation? I have to read backwards into English to imagine what you were saying!!!" Ng
"叶牧师,你好我是传扬杂志 http://www.efccc.org/ ....., 我想将你此文删成2500字左右的文章,放在11月的主是文章中,我删好后给你过目.不记得我?我上过你的释经讲道,终身受用.谢谢"
"Thanks so much for this sermon. I just finished my preaching at the retreat of Surrey CBC, Vancouver." Pastor Leong

I am thrilled to hear that TVB will show one of my favorite shows "24," beginning next week. There is a dearth of good free dramas on TV since most of them have migrated to cable in Hong Kong. Maybe CSI would follow.

Working hours are long in Hong Kong, especialy when you are not well and your eyes are on the computer whole day in the summer when school is out. It was so bad my eyes hurt when I close it for a few seconds of rest. As a result, for two consecutive days I exercised in the pool after work and a short rest since the pool does not open till 7 pm. I feel better after catching up to my regular routine in Los Angeles.

Yesterday (23rd) student Carmen gave me and another student passes to attend the Book Convention at Wan Chai Exhibiton Hall. With the passes we bypassed the incredibly long lines, probably due to the cheap HK$10 entrance fee. This is the first time for me and it was quite an interesting experience. The next week (27th) I had to go to Wan Chai to extend my visa and meet a friend there for lunch. His first words when we met were "It was a bad idea" due to the bumper crowd at the Book Exhibition. Going to the Immigration Tower was a nightmare due the Exhibiton next store. The passage was blocked, so we made a U-turn and took another bypass two blocks away. The two hour wait at Immigration was extended another 45 minutes, but at least I got it done.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Internet Ministry Relaunched, Jun 2009


I am a happy man with my Internet ministry relaunched on May 31st, this time with a new face in Chinese and an English version link, which is fitting since I have relocated to Asia. Come to think of it, I have not sent a message out, Chinese or English, for more than nine months I have been in Hong Kong. It's been so long I had even forgotten the password to one of my group lists. The group list's breif malfunction did nothing to dampen my joy.

The kick-off sermon is none other than Job, which is one of my favorites. The feedback is gratifying. A good pastor friend alerted me: "Your sermon got recommended by one of our brothers to the fellowship group -- last Saturday, they discussed the topic of suffering and then Philip saw your sermon... which probably touched him much and so he recommended that to others. This is really something!" Mike

Other heartfelt responses include:
"Thank you Prof. Yap, You are sooooo great! I hope I can learn more from you. How's going out there? May God use you to bring an abundant blessings to all the students you teach there ." Maria

"Dear Pastor Yap, I like your sermon. The truth comforts my heart. Blessings." Zoe

"謝謝葉牧師,信息給我很好的Rhema 與鼓勵,在我目前服事的困難中。您好嗎?忙不忙呢?願神祝福您!謝謝您想到我們。" Alice

"Dear Rev. Yap, Thank you for your message. Thank you for being consistent in preaching His word and preparing good messages. You have set us a great model and you have really inspired me. I am thankful to the Lord that I had a chance to be one of your students. Thank you and may God bless you." Boon Har

"Hi Rev. Yap,Thank you very much to email this to me in Chinese, thanks again for your faithfullness to help us!" Ellen
"葉牧師:多謝你愛心的預備,使我們在網上得很多聖經資料,在聖經上更深認識。但願神加能力給你,在事奉上得勝有餘。阿們。" Ann

Any bit of cheerleading helps. Internet writing is worth something and worth doing. The only snag is Yahoo Groups cannot display the Chinese font, so I have to send mail to 1,400 recipients manually 15 times over two days because Yahoo has limits on daily mail!

The weather is strange lately, but who am I to say so in my first year here? Last week it was so hot that staff persuaded me to use an umbrella, which I am sure I can never live it down. Today (June 8th) it is raining but the humidity has not changed much. I am looking forward to my bimonthly haircut at the end of the month.

The next day I was caught in the rain in Yuen Long without an umbrella, which I refused to carry indefinitely. I stopped in the omnipresent 7/11 store but the price did not change from the HK$44 umbrella I last bought there two months ago. Crossing the street I found a road store that sold one for HK$20. I had no choice since I have a long way to travel to my appointment in Mongkok. Within two months, I had bought two umbrellas, but the rainy season has just started. It is so stuffy, humid and hot in HK that the air doesn't go anywhere even when it is raining nowadays.

This quarter's layman night class at Tsim Sha Tsui ended today. It is the most satisfying night class yet because I found the lay students most eager to learn - far more hungry than day students. Believe me, they did the as much coursework in their 2-unit course as seminary students did with me in a 3-unit course of the same name last quarter. They took turns to take pictures with me, which seminary students had never done. One student - Charles - did not require the class for graduation but audited it upon the recommendation of a fellow student. He even brought a durian for the last class. I think I am most effective with working professionals and older students.

The hot and humid weather is taking a toll on most Hongkongers. I was sweating shortly before bedtime. When I told a colleague I finally gave up and initiated turning the air conditioning on to sleep yesterday (19th) - for the first time, she replied, "Wow, you have strong endurance. We already turned it on days ago." Wife gave up and cut her hair in response but I will hold on for another week, to stick to my bimonthly haircut at the end of the month. Last night we open the windows and turned the fan on and we survived another night without turning it on. Wife's sister admitted she turned the a/c on finally last night (20th).

Finally graduation was over yesterday (20th). The ceremony was a huge success and the speaker Rev. Morley Lee of CCCOWE gave an inspiring address. This year's graduates were quite a handful. Many of them are in their 40s and are parents themselves, so they come with experience, ideas and opinion. The conservative and traditional spirit at school was quite a learning curve for them. Nevertheless I am quite proud of them. I have no choice since this is my first graduating class. My only regret is having them for one year only. I could have done more with more time, but at least I have done my part. Hope they will return for the master's degree.

Friday, May 1, 2009

Nine Months Later, May 2009

Today (1st) I almost went to work but for Wife's reminder last night. She said are you serious? I was. It takes some time to get used to Hong Kong holidays. May 1st is not a holiday in the States. This is the second time I did not know the next day was a public holiday, almost going to work the next day. The previous day was April 11. I must be losing my menory at record pace. Wife remembered most of a movie we previously saw on cable, but I merely remembered two minor parts.

For four weeks in a row I attended a worship service not as the Sunday preacher but as a regular worshipper, twice at Yan Fook, twice at North Point. Ironically, I will also be shuttling between these two churches for ministry, helping out the English worship at North Point and the Sunday school at Yan Fook. It is good for me not to get caught substituing corporate preaching for personal worship. Also, much as I want to improve my Cantonese, I keep getting requests to minister in English.

Along with a "headache" today (8th), I have an infection on my left hand from peeling a loose skin on a finger nail. Wife handed me an antibiotic cream and the swelling went down after a few hours. At least I do not have to go to a doctor for now. I was worried since I have never had an infection like that before. The next day I had pus in the skin near my nail, but I used a needle-like instrument to open up the skin and let the pus out. I felt like a surgeon, but it worked! Funny, I don't even remember the last time I had pus under my skin anywhere.

Sunday (May 10th) was my first day navigating ministry at two churches. At 8:45 in the morning I taught Sunday school at Yan Fook and 12:15pm in the afternoon I preached at North Point. In between we managed to rest at Starbuck. It was more relaxing than we thought but still we had to sleep an hour or so in the afternoon after all is done to recover. The ministry at Yan Fook is for 10 weeks and the ministry at North Point English worship is twice a month.

The last week or so has been humid. I sleep with little to light clothing on. After exercise with staff and students in the morning, I usually raise a sweat not seen before. I missed this time of the season last year since I did not arrive in Hong Kong until last August 18th. The next few days are going to be the same, news report indicates.

I found a gray hair on my right eye brow today (17th). After a single attempt to pluck it in a public restroom , I gave up. At home I successfully rid the hair. The problem is, at this rate, I could be browless in no time at all, which is not pretty.

It has been hot and humid since the middle of the month. My idea of putting up a fight is turning the fan on when I am at home, even all through the night. It has been nothing short of a revelation and a miracle. Relatives say the most humid time of the year is over, but others dispute that prediction.

Last week HSBC offered an annual savings interest rate of 0.001%, or HK$1 annually for every HK100,000. It used to be 0.01. What a farce.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Taiwan Trip, Apr 2009

I returned five days ago (Mar 27th) with a bad back from a good time in Taiwan, teaching at my former US seminary's Taiwan campus for a week, Friday to Friday, minus Sunday, 9am till 5 pm. Wife went with me and returned to Hong Kong on Monday. I was invited to preach in the church by seminary and I had to accept since I was teaching them in Mandarin on how to preach, no excuse. It turned out great for my second try in the language, according to Wife. The first time was many years ago, After church we travel by train to Taipei, ate Shanghai food at the Breeze Station (微風台北車站), then visited the tourist spot Xi Men Ding (西門町), Red House Theater (紅樓戲場) and Shin Kong Mitsukoshi (新光三越)before returning to the train station for dinner and head home. At the theater we saw Cape 7 (海角七號) actor (林宗仁) taking pictures with fans.

My back gave way just like that on my fourth day there while I was sitting comfortably in a chair. It took me a whole week to recover enough for me to do my normal stretching exercises today (Apr 1). On the first two days of injury, I needed to hold on to railings for support to get up. I could not toss in bed and sneezing or coughing hurts. The host seminary had an employee drive me to a local clinic for a back rub that eased the pain. It is a bargain at Taiwan $300 (less than HK$100).My first trip to Taiwan is an eye-opener. The campus was in Zhongli (中壢市), almost next door to Chung Yuan Christian University (中原大學). The city is full of hawkers and motorbikes. The streets are narrow and the setting is rural. Noise is everywhere, from the speaker-blaring garbage collection truck to the government tow trucks that operate from the early morning.

The 14 students I taught were excited, fun and attentive. Like students I meet everywhere, they starve for hands-on expository preaching, which is my expertise by now. They were so appreciative that I felt extremly welcomed. It took a while to reach the last two students who had difficulty doing the work, so I returned at night to read their work. It was no big deal since I decided to return to the class for free internet to IM with Wife, who left days ago.Strangely enough, my trip reminded me of what guest missions teacher Ho exclaimed to me a month or two ago when she realized I was not local: "Oh, you are a missionary!" I never thought of myself as one since my Cantonese blends in well locally, but in truth I am one. Missions is not in my blood, but it is starting to boil. Taiwan wants me to return. Maybe I can also go to Malaysia/Singapore to teach in the future as well, which means reaching a full cycle for this accidental traveler.

I am still alien to the local system, which benefits the landlord. Today (Apr 8) the landlady presented me with a bill of HK$250 for repairing the jammed steel door lock in our home. In the States the owner pays for all things, down to the lightbulb.

The first week of classes passed by. The class I am most apprehensive about turned out well, but I really gave them a lot of work for a 2-unit class, work comparable to previous 3-unit classes, but I think they wil thrive and do well. Hong Kong people always strive to get ahead, even in their studies, so they take night classes, including Bible study, to "add to their value 增值." This group is different from previous classes because they are diploma students, not Bachelor or Master's level, but they sure get the money's worth and work equivalent in my class. One teacher asked me to ease up on them, but they sounded eager to take the challenge.

I just returned today (Apr 12) from speaking at Emmanuel's church retreat, my first retreat engagement in Hong Kong. We met some amazing people at Breakthrough Youth Village, including Breakthrough founder Dr. Philemon Choi (蔡元雲醫生) and his son Jonathan, Ruth Tseng (曾路得) -the renowned singer of 天各一方, and CGST lecturer Joe Kok, Wife's former pastor. Tseng and Kok are associated with Emmanuel. Dr. Choi's passion for youth for the last 30 years is refreshing. We had the opportunity to observe the work at Breakthrough, including a 30-minute skit, an impressive hour or so live playback theater, and an hour's sharing from Dr. Choi.

An annoying remark has dogged me in Hong Kong, climaxing at the retreat. A camper said I looked much older than I do on my blog picture. It was a surprisng remark since the blog picture was taken merely years ago. The biggest blow was when a 62-year old man said he and I were the oldest in the group! How can I be older than all the parents with teenage kids at the retreat? The pastor introduced me on the first day by saying he used to hang out with the younger pastors at denomination meetings in USA while I with another group. I explained to the congregation on the last day that I was not much older (2 years only) than their younger pastor . The problem is my gray hair have dramtically surfaced lately. Maybe I should put up a more recent picture on my blog.

I did not know the Monday after Easter is a holiday in Hong Kong, so I inadvertently canceled an appointment. So far, Hong Kong is the only country I have resided in to have the holiday. It is for the best since I am fighting a losing battle with the flu.

Local news: Hong Kong is the most competitive city in Hong but Shanghai is catching up fast, news reported yesterday. Today's news was very unflattering to the Big Two supermarkets. The local Consumer Council found that the prices of some products sold there actually increased on Fridays but reduced later to normal on Saturdays to make Friday offers appear like a bargain.

A humid heat wave swept through the city since Tuesday (Apr 14), making exercise in the cooler morning quite difficult. I hope to hold out for another week before cutting my hair so that I can keep to my bimonthly haircut goal. It is so hot that I sometimes had take my tie off in my office to cool down.

I watched for the second time how the dream of Susan Boyle played out on the internet to millions of viewers. Never-kissed 47-year old, CNN reported. She sang one of my favorite songs from my favorite musical, Les Miz! How can people not cheer and root for a dreamer like her?

My childhood was widely awakened by three Cantonese operas I heard when I was barely in my teens, as performed by 鄧碧雲, 張月兒 and 陳良忠. Most songs are better heard than told, so you can click to a fan's classic selection at Youtube. Th next day (Apr 22) I found "old cucumber" 老黃瓜 at the supermarket to take a break from the delicious pumpkin/tomato soup I have been boiling and drinking. It's been two decades I haven't seen the cucumber gourd, but I found pumpkin is still one of the sweetest soups I have tasted. So I will return to pumpkin soon. A colleague asked me if I stick leftover soup by separate containers in the freezer like Chinese Americans do, and I replied yes. The concept is foreign to locals because the Chinese market is nearby.

A local barber tried to convince me to dye my hair today (Apr 22), which is to his advantage. A normal haircut is HK58 (US$7.50), but dying the hair is HK$120. True, my gray hairs are in full blossom and a colleague mistook another faculty member to be the youngest even though I should have the honors, but I will wait till I am past 50, which has another year and a half to go yet.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Chicken and Duck Speak

What they say in Hong Kong (and what it means):
Shroff (payment office)
Hash (pound #)
Perambulator (stroller)
Gangway
Pontoon
Gangplank
Coxswain

Monday, March 2, 2009

Durian, Mar 2009

Leftover durian is really smelly, I must admit. A week ago (Feb 24) I bought a durian at 10pm after night class at Tsim Sha Tsui. The price was reduced from HK$31 to $21 shortly beofre closing. It is strange that shopping at night for food after a long class makes me more relaxed. I ate two of the four pieces packed in a wrapper and stuck the rest in the freezer, out of the sight of Durian-intolerant Wife. The reason for leaving it in the fridge is that eating more than two pieces, especially that late at night, is not good for health. Worse, I drank sesame soybean I bought at the same time - a new favorite of mine, instead of water like we used to do after eating durian when we were kids. True to form, I woke up about 4-5 am looking for water to cool down my warm body. A week later, when Wife is not home, I took the leftover durian out again and it smelled like never before. OK, I have learned my lesson, one durian at a time. The next week after class, durian was on sale again , but I had learned to discipline myself. The temptation never ends.

I cannot help but notice the plight of Hong Kong's cage men, whose misfortunes were highlighted in SCMP today (8th). At night, 100,000 or so residents of poor parts of Kowloon - such as Shum Shui Po and Tai Kok Tsui - sleep in a 13 1/4 sq-ft wire coop no different from a chicken. The irony was today I was at Shum Shui Po, buying a netbook for Wife. Today was as busy as can be. I spoke twice today - 830a at TST and 11a at Alliance Mandarin in Shum Shui Po. The former was an unexpected SOS.

Souperman said...
"Hey Pastor, you don't need tax return to apply for credit card. For Bank of CHina, Bank of East Asia, all you proof of salary (3 months), proof of resident address and HKID...well, maybe it's because you don't have HKID."

Believe me, we were turned down in letter by BEA even when we have all the above. No use crying over a minor inconvenience. We are used to it by now. That goes to show credit card is not everything.

I am done with night classes this quarter, with the last class two days ago (10th). At least I get a two weeks' break before the next night session begins. The students are wonderful, but subway traffic at 10p in Tsim Sha Tsui is a sight to behold. The coaches are mostly full, a lot connecting to West Rail at where I stop, too. One of the things I enjoy doing is to shop at the supermarket nearby that closes at 10 pm, giving me minutes to get what I want. There are quite a lot of customers, especially South Asians, frequenting the store before it closes. I saw one buying a discount durian - one third or one quarter off, like what I did three weeks ago, so I am not the only one looking for a bargain.

My phone carrier is a thief. Two months ago I signed up for an account. Yesterday I was charged double than what I ordered. When I called, I was told it was for other services, like music etc, which I do not even use. Unless you tell them, they will keep charging, isn't that daylight robbery and outright fraud? No wonder the company is in turmoil.

As the quarter draws near, I have a major case of disorientation. Because my Tuesday night class has ended, I did not need to track home this Tuesday afternoon (17th) for a short break before the night class. Since I was in the office, I thought today must be Wednesday, especially when I woke up from a short lunch nap minutes before class began. Panicking and not realizing today was Tuesday and thinking I was late for Wednesday class, I hurried into the class, to the students' amusement and disbelief. Worse, today's real teacher was later than me arriving, I realize when I looked into the class, so making me believe I was the teacher on assignment.

Friday, February 6, 2009

Six Months Later, Feb 2009

(My dryer) Yes, it has been that long or short. The funny thing is I still do not have a credit card yet because we have no tax record. It is nothing short of incovenience but not the end of the world. I will get a new cell number tomorrow (8th). PCCW really bumbled my phone. First they persuaded to keep my old cell number from the phone I was using which my relatives do not mind me keeping, then Smartone would not release it, later PCCW gave me a new number which did not work out, now they give me another new, new number. Already I miss the new number they previously gave me because my year of birth is on the number, what a mess. Fortunately I did not start using it yet.

Hong Kong media reported Li Ka-shing's fortune dived from US$32 billion to US$16.2 billion, as of January 23. The wealth of No. 2, the Kwok family of Sun Hung Kai Properties (0016) remained at No2 on the list, with a net worth of US$10.8 billion. eroded by 55 percent.
Self-proclaimed investment guru Lee Shau-kee saw his wealth fall to US$9 billion from US$23 billion. Casino mogul Stanley Ho Hung-sun lost 89 percent of his wealth. It dropped from US$9 billion to US$1 billion.

Riverside church member Patrick dropped into my class completely unannounced tonight (10th), taking me by surprise. I did not know he was in town. He called my office while I was away and knew that I was at TST teaching a night class. We took a picture and he had to go, but later he decided to wait another half an hour till class is over to walk me to the subway, how considerate. Well, the phone finally worked on the 10th - two days late, on the day of PCCW strike. TST students in my Kings class finally made a breakthrough tonight - on the sixth week of class. I couldn't be any prouder.

I just found out yesterday (10th) that Hong Kong is the fifth most expensive place to live in the world, at an average price of US$16,125 (HK$125,775) per square meter, according to the 2009 Global Property Guide. The most expensive residential real estate market is Monte Carlo at US$47,578 psm, Moscow second at US$20,853 psm, followed by prime London's US$20,756 psm and Tokyo in fourth at US$17,998.

My manuscript on Paul was rejected this week (10th) a week after I submitted it to a publisher. The VP told me they were interested in some blog series I have posted but not on Paul, which made me curious enough to ask her which one in particular, but she replied she did not read it; her editors read it. I did not know what to make of it. Well, I will have to cut my losses and look elsewhere.

The streets of Hong Kong really did a number on my shoes today (13th). It almost broke apart today, but for the sole that held it together. To be fair, I have been wearing it for two years now, but I have never had a pair of shoes tearing up on me before. Worse, I was on my way to Macau, so I have no time to change into another pair. All I hope is for it to hold up for another two days before I return to Hong Kong, returning to speak in a local church on Sunday morning. I still have two pairs brought home from USA that I got from the now defunct Mervyn's. Wife said I should buy immediately, but I will risk it.

It is such a strange weekend, my weirdest day yet in Hong Kong. First, my shoes almost split in two on the way to Macau two days ago on Friday. The weather on Saturday made things worse, drizzling each time we went out, slightly wetting my only pair of socks. Today (15th) I left Macau at 8am to catch the 9am ferry back to Hong Kong, where I am scheduled to speak at 11am. The ferry and disembarking take 75 minutes and the chapel is just minutes walk from the ferry, so I have ample time. Unfortunately, I took the wrong bus, 26A instead of 28A to the ferry, and ended up at a remote spot 媽祖花園 where taxis do not run, says a gas station employee there. By the time I took the return bus back, I had only ten minutes to catch a taxi. I found one that got me there 2 minutes before the ferry leaves. I rushed to the counter and requested those in front of me to let me pass the immigration counter first. When I reached the counter the officer changed shifts and another few precious seconds ticked away. I entered at 9:01am, thinking the ferry had left, but a fog enveloped the harbor before I arrived, so the ferry was delayed. In fact, the ship did not even arrive the harbor yet. I paid $40 for the taxi but saved $160 for another ticket I would have to buy, since I was late. To make matters worst, the delay was for another hour, not minutes. I asked the manager to loan me his phone so I can call Wife to alert the church I was held up. In return I was his English interpreter over the bullhorn.

We were set to board and leave an hour later, but another delay was ordered. This time I asked a passenger next to me if I could borrow his phone, since I do not have carrier service in Macau. I called the pastor twice with the phone, the man hesitating to help me on my second call. Upon reaching HK I called the pastor but he did not answer since church is on. In the process my phoone batteries ran out. There is nothing else I can do but call a taxi to the church, arriving just as members were leaving. I had lunch and fellowship with the pastor, and all was well because they had sharing instead. I had advised him to download my sermon from the web and read it to the congregation since the church already had my powerpoint, but he said he could not process the sermon as he speaks. Besides tedious questiions to employees about when we are leaving, one frayed passenger wanted to speak to the manager and another questioned why ships can come in and not go out. The only good news is that my shoes made it home without bottoming out. I even stopped at a cafe, read papers at the library and bought grocery on the way home. Wife had frantically called me but my phone was dead, so we did not touch base until 3:50pm. This day has no equal, it could not be more dramatic than this.

Hong Kong's population has officially passed the seven million mark. The number of people living here was 7,008,900 at the end of 2008, up 56,100 or 0.8 percent on the previous year, according to the Census and Statistics Department (February 17, 2009).

It's been eleven days since I last blogged. If you do not understand y typing fro now on, it's because y PC is on its last leg, as witnessed by the issing "m" letter, the last one which I cut and paste fro previous files. Today (28th) we had a wonderful dinner at ho-e thanks to y good friend fro the States who visited three days ago, bringing drunken chicken in a jar fro a store in Taiwan on his transit there, besides the truffles and Taiwanese beef jerky. On top of that, we also bought sashi-i fro a local store, ate vegetables donated to school, and consued soup Wife boiled. It is so filling that I even skipped rice altogether so that I can finish the fish.

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Yuen Long, Jan 2009


Happy New Year to everyone! I started the new year on a wrong foot, literally. On the first day at work in the new year, I forgot to get off at the right stop. I could not blame the relocation because I was busy reading free Hong Kong morning newspaper. Instead of Yuen Long, I stopped at Long Ping, took the return train that shared the same platform, disembarked to catch the local bus and made it to office a minute before 8:30 a.m. Just when you think things could not be any worse, it did. On my return trip home I noticed the train leaving the platform, so I sprinted into the coach, only to realize it was heading in the opposite direction from my home. I was so embarassed that I walked to the nearest coach to get off, not to disappoint those who marveled at my athleticism just a minute ago. Overall, it is aboout 45 minutes from my Mei Foo home to Yuen Long office, not much different from my travel to the Tsim Sha Tsui office, except that there are snacks, fruits and drinks to buy in the TST district, whereas there is nothing but a roadside eatery around the Yuen Long office. I heard there is a Parkway at the Yuen Long station. Hopefully I can buy some goodies and make it to school by 8:30 am. At least I brought an apple today but I also bought Vitasoy for $6 from the nearby vendor/store. Before moving I was enjoying Sesame flavored soymilk. Lunch was at the same store with those present at school today. My pork chop rice costs $26. Pictures only will do justice to the neighborhood I am describing.

I finally succumbed to flu today (Jan 9). The day started off innocently. I must have caught it in between using the restroom after waking up and walking to the West Rail line. In vain I zipped up my windbreaker that did not stand a chance aginst the winds. Soon my eyes were red and I sneezed my head off non-stop, so badly that the staff encouraged me to leave 45 minutes before office ends. After dinner with a friend I popped into the local MTR station and got a bargain, two Hang Ten sweaters for $80. On the way home I stepped into the library and sneezing ensued inside the building and at home later. That was when I realize I was most likely to sneeze when the surrounding temperature changes, even when it is warm after the cold, not necessarily when it is cold.

I bought a pullover sweater from M & S on the weekend (Jan 11). Things are really expensive at the mall. I paid HK$175 for a sweater already discounted, but other stores are more expensive, from $200-500. Things are not that expensive in the States, but I doubt if locals believe it. 50%-75% discounts are common at the right time. On Tuesday (Jan 13) I found an inexpensive but inferior $99 sweater from a roadside vendor.

After two weeks in Yuen Long I am quite an expert in taking the West Rail, stopping exactly by the down escalator to the mall exit. It takes less than 20 minutes from Mei Foo. Food is another matter. I could not find a restaurant I like. Not that there are none, but I do not know what's what yet. Yesterday (Jan 14) I took a bus home instead. The travel was 25 minutes.

My wife laughed her head off as I told her I had to track down to a store farther from our residence to buy hair gel today (Jan 19) because our neighborhood store sells my father's Brylcreem only! How ridiculous. I thought the brand died out years ago. That must be the biggest joke in Hong Kong yet for me. I went to two good restaurants in Macau over the weekened, Savory Crab in Taipa for breakfast and the ground floor restaurant in Macau Tower.

Service is as good as it gets in Hong Kong. Today (Jan 20) I returned the sweater I bought exactly a week ago from a ROADSIDE VENDOR because the seams ripped apart at the bottom of the V-neck after five days of use. I can hear Wife's remarks at the back of my mind: "Nobody in Hong Kong returns things!" To trump it all, the lady politely gave me a new sweater without questions asked; she just threw it behind the cart without checking.

Exactly two weeks had passed and I have the flu again today (Jan 24), I cannot believe my misfortune! This morning as I left home, I noticed my nose was running. After lunch at Causeway Bay's Curry-in-a-Hurry, which I have not frequented since moving to Yuen Long, relatives suggested going to New Year Fair to see flowers at full bloom, but what I got was a full-blown running nose and non-stop sniffing and sneezing visiting the stalls at Victoria Park in cold weather. Hong Kong weather is around 10 degrees Celsius (50 F). Curry-in-a-Hurry is still the best fastfood curry around. Now I am worried as I have to preach tomorrow. Postscript: Preaching yesterday was well-received.

Today is Chinese New Year in Hong Kong (Jan 25). Wishing everybody a spiritually prosperous new year! At first, I thought all I have for the ocassion was a pair of new socks, a new singlet and a new sweater (the replacement sweater from the roadside vendor), but later I realized I have brought home from USA an old but unused shirt, a pair of unused pants and shoes, so here I am all brand new, feeling like a million bucks, wearing the whole nine yarn, just like when we were kids. I don't think I can do better next year. Unfortuantely, Wife said, they are mostly black. I called relatives and friends at 9 am. The festive mood here is good but not great due to the financial crisis reminders in the media. We meant to head to Tsing Yi but took the wrong West Rail coach to Kowloon, where we unexpectedly stumbled upon the exquisite Elements Shopping Center. We were impresssed. Even Shanghai Tang was there. We were surprised most shops were open. The mall was designed and arranged according to the five elements: gold, wood, water, fire, earth (金、木、水、火、土). The xiamian noodles we ordered for lunch were merely average. After dinner with Wife's sister at our place, we went to Kwai Fong for the first time and had my favorite dessert at Honeymoon Dessert (for the first time too), where I had Durian & Thai Glutinous Rice (榴槤忘返). It was really good, gives Shau Kei Wan's Ming Kee a run for the money. The latter offers durian and mango. By now I am an expert at Chinese desserts. Kwai Fong is one of those MTR stations with exits ("E" exit) leading into huge malls. We hope to visit all of them, one by one, someday.

On the third day of Chinese New Year, which is still a holiday in Hong Kong, we took a tram to The Peak, hiked the hour-long trail there, had a surprisingly pleasant lunch at 360 and enjoyed a cup of coffee while reading the papers at Starbucks, then caught a bus downhill to enjoy more sights. Hiking at the Peak trail is the lowest level of diffculty, according to Wife's side. It was truly enjoyable. No steps, low elevation, wide roads. Riding the bus, not the subway, is the way to see Hong Kong. Sometimes we take the hour's drive from relatives' place to home, just to see the streets and scenes of Hong Kong.