The Sword That Never Sleeps I. A Nation Under Siege The summer sun hangs heavy over Akasia. From my veranda, I watch the traffic crawl along Sophie de Bruyn Street—taxi drivers hooting, vendors selling amagwinya at the intersection, a mother clutching her child's hand as they cross toward Wonder Park Mall. But beneath this ordinary afternoon hum, something darker pulses. Just yesterday, Police Minister Cachalia stood in Pretoria less than twenty kilometers from where I sit and told us what we already feel in our bones: 58 murders every single day. Fifty-eight. A number so staggering it loses meaning until you remember: that is a father. A daughter. A neighbour. A soul. The Western Cape bleeds with gang violence. Gauteng drowns in organized crime syndicates that move like ghosts—carjackings, kidnappings, cash-in-transit heists executed with military precision. And while the politicians debate statistics, while the pundits argue whether crime is "dropping" or "rising...
BREAKING CURSES THROUGH RADICAL OBEDIENCE “If you are willing and obedient, you shall eat the good of the land.” — Isaiah 1:19 I. The Summer Everything Changed Let me take you back to a scorching December afternoon in Akasia, 2019. The potholes on Rachel de Beer Street had swallowed two of my tyres that week, my youngest son’s school fees were three months behind, and the car—that old Corolla that had carried more prayers than passengers had just died again. I sat on my stoep, watching the Highveld thunderheads pile up like God’s own judgment, and I prayed. Oh, how I prayed! I prayed with the desperation of a man whose back was against the wall. I quoted Psalm 35, rebuked every demon in Pretoria North, and commanded every financial curse to break by the blood of Jesus. Nothing happened. The next morning, my neighbour Mrs. Nkosi knocked on my gate. "Harold," she said, "the church down the street needs someone to clean the toilets. It pays five hundred rand a week." I...