Where Tears Water Seeds of Glory: Finding God in South African Suffering My Encounter with the Sacred Wound The screeching tires echoed like a devil's chorus on the N1 highway near Akasia last winter. My car hydroplaned, spinning in a terrifying dance with gravity before crashing into the barrier. In those suspended seconds between control and chaos, I experienced the strange peace of absolute helplessness. The ambulance arrived, then the concerned faces of strangers, then the long recovery—both physical and spiritual. That crash became my classroom, and in the aching stillness that followed, I discovered a profound truth: God doesn't eliminate our pain; He inhabits it. This personal trauma intersected with our national pain. Just weeks earlier, the Umtata flooding had devastated the Eastern Cape, claiming nearly a hundred lives and leaving thousands homeless . As I lay watching news reports of washed-away homes and grieving families, my minor suffering paled against their monu...
The Idol Maker’s Heart: A South African’s Journey from Crafted Gods to Crucified Grace Part 1: The Craftsman on Church Street Just last Tuesday, I met a man on Church Street in Pretoria—a craftsman with fingers stained by wood polish and eyes weary from too much seeing. He sat outside the gleaming glass offices of a new bank, his weathered hands carving a small figure from tamboti wood. Tourists gathered around him, admiring how the form of a graceful impala emerged from what was once a formless block. "This will bring you protection," he whispered to a fascinated onlooker. "The spirit of this creature will watch over your home." I stood transfixed, not by the carving itself, but by the sacred irony of it all. Here on Church Street, between the stained-glass windows of a historic chapel and the mirrored facade of economic power, a human being was doing what we all do—shaping something to worship, something to trust in, something to give us what only God can give . ...