It was the kind of Tuesday afternoon in Akasia that makes you question all your life choices. The power had just clicked off—load reduction, Eskom called it, though for our home in Pretoria North, the distinction between a planned outage and a crisis was purely academic. My laptop battery was gasping its last digital breath, the kids’ homework was vanishing into the gloom, and a familiar, simmering frustration began to bubble in my chest. In the middle of my grumbling, my neighbor, Gogo Mthembu, a woman whose faith is as solid as the Magaliesberg mountains, called over the fence. “Ah, Harold,” she chuckled, her voice a warm beacon in the deepening dusk. “Don’t you see? The darkness just makes His light in us shine brighter. The Sanhedrin met in fancy rooms, but we meet here, in the shadows. It is the perfect place for His power to be made perfect.” Her words, simple and profound, landed like a perfectly placed stone, sending ripples through my self-pity. She was right. I had been so fo...
The Name That Breaks the Back of Paralysis Scripture: "Silver or gold I do not have, but what I do have I give you. In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, walk." — Acts 3:6 Part One: The Man at the Beautiful Gate Let me take you to a place you know very well—a gate. Not just any gate, but the Beautiful Gate of the temple in Jerusalem. Imagine, if you will, a man sprawled on a mat so worn that the fibres whisper the story of forty years of waiting. Forty years of being carried. Forty years of being laid down. Forty years of watching sandals shuffle past—priests in their fine linen, merchants counting coins, women bearing sacrifices. He asked for silver. He asked for gold. He had trained his tongue to beg before he could walk. Every morning, someone carried him up that steep path to the temple. Every evening, someone carried him back to a dark room where the only sound was his own breathing and the rats scrambling for scraps. But here is the paradox that will either liberate ...