Skip to main content

Posts

The Scaffold of Resilience

 THE SCAFFOLD OF RESILIENCE Scripture: “My soul finds rest in God alone; my salvation comes from him.” (Psalm 62:1) Prologue: The Cracks in Our Walls I woke up on the morning of 1 July 2026 to two pieces of news. The first: President Ramaphosa had reshuffled his Cabinet new ministers for Agriculture, Water and Sanitation, Electricity and Energy. The second: my municipal electricity bill had jumped by nine percent. Same month, same country, same struggle. In Ratanda, residents were collecting water from burst pipes because their taps had run dry for weeks two people died in the protests. In Hillbrow, soldiers were patrolling the streets after anti-migrant protests turned violent. Over 900 people arrested in a single day. And somewhere in the middle of all this, a young South African graduate with a 60.9 percent unemployment rate staring him in the face asked me: “Pastor, where is God in all of this?” I did not have a clever answer. But I had an image. An image that had kept me stand...
Recent posts

The Almanac of Pain

 The Almanac of Pain "He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds." (Psalm 147:3) Part One: The Season of Silence I remember the morning clearly. It was a Tuesday in July, the kind of Highveld winter morning where the sun rises like a reluctant promise golden but cold, beautiful but deceptive. I had just received word that a dear friend, a man I had prayed with, laughed with, and broken bread with, had been shot during a cash-in-transit robbery in Silverton. He survived, but barely. The bullet that grazed his skull left him with a wound that would take months to heal—and a heart that would take longer. I sat in my study in Akasia, the familiar hum of Pretoria traffic drifting through the window, and I felt something I had felt many times before: the weight of a world that groans. The Scripture declares unequivocally that "the whole human creation is groaning". And on that Tuesday morning, I groaned with it. But here is what I have learned, what I am still l...

The Geometry of Influence

The Geometry of Influence: Mastering the Sacred Shapes That Shape Nations By Harold Mawela (From Akasia, Pretoria) The winter chill hangs over Akasia as I sit at Wonder Park Mall, watching the streams of people flow past me like water through a riverbed. A young man in oversized Amapiano streetwear scrolls endlessly through TikTok. A mother counts coins at the till, calculating whether she has enough for bread and milk after the fuel price dropped but only by a few rands. A foreign shopkeeper locks his doors early, fear flickering behind his eyes after Tuesday's marches. And in the distance, the news blares: youth unemployment now at 45.8 percent, real salaries at a two-year low, and a nation fracturing under the weight of its own frustration. And I ask myself: Where is the influence? Where are the shapes that can hold this broken vessel together? The Sacred Geometry of the Spirit The Scripture declares unequivocally: "To one there is given through the Spirit a message of wisd...

The Amplifier of Gratitude

The Amplifier of Gratitude By Harold Mawela Akasia, Pretoria I was standing in the queue at the filling station in Pretoria last week when the attendant smiled and said, "Baas, the price dropped. First time in months." Something stirred in my chest not just relief, but a strange, unexpected gratitude. For a moment, I actually thanked God for petrol. Petrol! The same fuel that has been strangling our households, squeezing our already thin wallets, forcing families in Mamelodi and Soshanguve to choose between bread and transport. And yet, in that moment, standing there watching the numbers on the pump slow their frantic climb, I felt a flicker of thanksgiving. But here is the question that has been nagging at my soul ever since: Was I thanking God for the gift, or was I tracing the gift back to the Giver? Let me be honest with you, my fellow South African. We have become a nation of consumers—not just of goods, but of blessings. We receive and we receive, but we rarely recognis...

The Frontier of Ethics

 THE FRONTIER OF ETHICS What Good Is a Nation or a Soul Gained at the Price of Truth? Let me tell you about a photograph that made my blood run cold. I sat in my study in Akasia, Pretoria, scrolling through the news on a Thursday evening, when I saw it: a photograph of former President Jacob Zuma, standing beside Ajay Gupta in an Indian temple. Same smile. Same casual ease. As if the past decade of state capture had never happened. As if R17 billion in stolen public funds meant nothing. As if the Zondo Commission's revelations were merely yesterday's newspaper. I closed my phone and sat in silence. Because that photograph is not just a political scandal. It is a spiritual symptom. It is the visible face of an invisible disease the erosion of that sacred frontier Jesus spoke of when He asked: "What good will it be for someone to gain the whole world, yet forfeit their soul?" (Matthew 16:26). DEFINING THE FRONTIER Let us define our terms clearly. An ethical frontier is ...

The Anchor of Humility

 The Anchor of Humility Scripture: “God opposes the proud but shows favor to the humble.” (James 4:6) My brother, my sister, pull up a chair. Harold Mawela here, speaking to you from the dusty soil of Akasia, Pretoria. Let me take you back to a morning that nearly capsized my soul. It was a Tuesday the kind of Tuesday where the Pretoria sun blazes like a furnace and the N1 highway hums its usual symphony of frustration. I had just received news that my latest book had climbed into the top ten of a Christian bestseller list. My phone buzzed with notifications. Congratulations poured in from WhatsApp groups. For a moment just a moment I felt it. That intoxicating rush. That whisper in my ear: “You’ve arrived, Harold. You’ve made it.” And then, as if the Lord Himself had a sense of comedic timing, my electricity went out. Not load-shedding, you understand Eskom tells us we’ve had over 300 days without it, and I thank God for that mercy. No, this was my own doing. I had forgotten to bu...

The Current of Completion

 The Current of Completion Scripture: "I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith." (2 Timothy 4:7) From my study in Akasia, Pretoria, I look out at a nation holding its breath. The headlines scream of a city with just five days of cash. They tell of families choosing between food and warmth as electricity tariffs rise six times faster than inflation. They speak of a manganese smelter gone dark, 600 jobs teetering on the edge, because the power became too expensive to bear. They warn of anti-immigrant protests sweeping our streets, over 900 arrested, as fear turns neighbour against neighbour. And in the middle of this storm, I ask you: What have you left unfinished? The Law of the Open Loop Let us define our terms clearly. An open loop is any task you have started but not completed—a debt unpaid, an apology unspoken, a promise broken, a calling ignored, a Scripture unread. These are not merely inconveniences. They are spiritual dams blocking...