Title: The Wall That Watches Scripture: “He has walled me in so I cannot escape.” — Lamentations 3:7 Imagine, if you will, a man standing in the middle of a vast, dry veld in Akasia, just as the Highveld thunderclouds begin to boil on the horizon. He feels the first cold drops of rain. He looks for shelter. To his left is a thorny, impassable fence. To his right, a crumbling, neglected wall. Behind him, the road he came from is now a muddy river. He feels trapped. He curses the walls. But what he does not know is that beyond the thorny fence lies a sinkhole that would swallow him whole. Beyond the crumbling wall, a pack of feral dogs prowls. The road behind him is not just muddy; it is a flash flood that would sweep him to his death. The wall that he thinks is a prison is actually the architect’s drawing of his preservation. This is the theology of the walled garden. And it is the very lesson I had to learn in the dust of Pretoria, in the chaos of our beloved South Africa, and in ...
The Sweet Side of Suffering Then he cried out to the LORD, and the LORD showed him a piece of wood. He threw it into the water, and the water became sweet. — Exodus 15:25 My dear brothers and sisters, let me tell you what happened to me last Thursday in Akasia. I was standing outside my gate, watching the municipal truck struggle past the potholes on Daan Street—those craters we have been complaining about since 2019. And as I stood there, a neighbour I shall call Brother Themba walked past with a bucket on his head. "Harold," he said, his voice carrying that familiar weight of exhaustion, "the water is bitter again." Bitter water. Not just the taste—the whole experience. The pressure is low, the pipes are old, and when it finally comes, it tastes like rust and regret. I looked at that bucket and I heard the Spirit whisper: There is your sermon, Mawela. There is your text. You see, beloved, Israel had just walked through the Red Sea. They had seen Pharaoh's char...