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The Hospital of the Broken

Hospital of the Broken: Why Your Wound Is Your Welcome Pass I know loneliness. Not the quiet kind you choose on a retreat—but the raw, bleeding kind. In 2019, before I found my feet in Akasia, I sat in my cramped rented room in Soshanguve for three straight months. A church splitting had left me—left us—gutted. I trusted that deacon. I poured into that ministry. And when the elders turned on each other over—what else?—money from the building fund, they turned on me too. I became the collateral damage of a holy war I never signed up for. So I pulled back. And my silence felt safe. My prayer couch became my confessor. My Bible became my only brother. I told myself: No more hypocrites. No more politics. Just me and God, right? Wrong. By month two, I found myself watching scandalous late-night television and justifying it. By month three, I had stopped praying aloud. My theology remained correct—but my heart had grown cold. I was like a kettle kept off the fire: still full of water, but un...
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The Crown in the Storm

 THE CROWN IN THE STORM Scripture Foundation: “But He knows the way that I take; when He has tested me, I shall come forth as gold.” (Job 23:10) PART ONE: THE PARADOX OF PERSECUTION Let me tell you something that will either liberate you or infuriate you: Your storm is not a sentence it is a scepter. I learned this truth in the burning crucible of my own back yard—right here in Akasia, Pretoria. It was 2023, and load shedding had just hit Stage 6 again. There I sat, candle flickering, sweat dripping, and my youngest daughter asked me: “Papa, why does God allow darkness?” Before I could answer, the gunshots rang out from the kasi next door. Another taxi war. Another soul sent to eternity unprepared. And in that moment, the Holy Spirit arrested me. Not with comfort—but with confrontation. “Harold,” the whisper came, “stop mistaking your battlefield for your burial ground.” PART TWO: WHAT YOUR ENEMY REVEALS ABOUT YOU Let us define our terms with surgical precision: Storm — Any soverei...

The God-Shaped Silence

The God-Shaped Silence Scripture: “My soul finds rest in God alone.” (Psalm 62:1) A Confession from Akasia Let me tell you something I have learned the hard way, sitting here in my flat in Akasia, Pretoria, with the distant sound of taxis hooting and my neighbour’s television bleeding through the wall. Three weeks ago, I found myself doing something ridiculous. There I was—midnight, thumb scrolling through Instagram, watching people I haven't spoken to in years post pictures of their dinners, their babies, their new cars. And I thought to myself: Why am I here? What am I searching for? I was lonely. Not alone—there is a difference. Lonely. That hollow ache that makes you reach for your phone the moment you wake up, hoping someone has noticed you exist. But here is the truth that broke me free, and I want you to hear it clearly: Loneliness is not the absence of affection—it is the absence of direction. Defining Our Terms Let us be precise, because the enemy of our souls loves vaguen...

The Joy That Fights Back

Title: The Joy That Fights Back: A Harold Mawela Devotional Scripture: “I have learned to be content whatever the circumstances” (Philippians 4:11) Introduction: The Cell Is Not a Place; It Is a Perspective Let us define our terms clearly before we go to war. Joy is not the absence of tears; it is the presence of Jesus. Contentment is not the satisfaction of having everything you want; it is the certainty that you already have everything you need. Circumstances are not your master; they are your classroom. The apostle Paul declared these words from a maximum‑security prison in Rome—chains on his wrists, a guard at his side, and the threat of execution hanging over his head like a storm cloud. Yet he dared to write: “I have learned to be content.” That little word learned is the hinge of the whole matter. Contentment is not automatic; it is acquired. Joy is not a feeling you find; it is a fighter you train. A Personal Story from the Trenches of Akasia I remember a Thursday morning in Ak...

The Push Before the Praise

I stood in my backyard last week, staring at the Jacaranda tree that has stubbornly refused to bloom for three seasons. My neighbor, Mama Dineo, leaned over the fence with that knowing look. "Harold," she said, "the tree is not dead. It is digging. The roots are fighting through rock. The push is coming." As she spoke, my phone buzzed. Another news alert. The International Monetary Fund had just downgraded its global growth forecast. Fuel prices were surging. The Minister of Higher Education had announced that 3.4 million young South Africans are neither employed nor in education or training—a lived reality, he called it, not a statistic. Across the street, the Mkhatshwa family was packing their belongings. After eighteen months of job hunting, their eldest son, a cum laude engineering graduate, had finally surrendered to despair. "The system is leaking," the Minister had said, describing our education pipeline. "We are failing to move young people fr...

The Burden You Were Never Ordered to Carry

The Burden You Were Never Ordered to Carry: A Wake-Up Call from Akasia Scripture: "Cast your burden on the Lord, and He shall sustain you; He shall never permit the righteous to be moved." (Psalm 55:22) A Personal Confession from the Dusty Streets of Akasia I remember standing at the corner of Sophie Street and Heuningvlei Road, watching a mother chase after her thirty-year-old son who had just lost another job at the factory in Rosslyn. Her voice was cracked with desperation: "My boy, just apply again! I'll fix your CV!" She was exhausted—not from her own labour, but from fighting battles her son refused to enter. That mother was me in disguise. For years, I carried burdens God never packed into my suitcase. I tried to fix my grown nephew's drinking problem with midnight phone calls and tearful sermons. I attempted to resurrect a marriage that had flatlined because I was playing Holy Ghost for a spouse who had his own direct line to heaven. I was exhausted,...

The Grave of Comparison

The Grave of Comparison Scripture: "I will praise You, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made." (Psalm 139:14) Part One: The Digging Let me tell you about my neighbour, Thabo. Thabo lives three houses down from me in Akasia. Last month, he bought a brand-new BMW X5—pearl white, leather seats that still smell like wealth, rims that catch the morning sun like mirrors. I stood at my gate, coffee in hand, watching him reverse out of his driveway. And in that single moment, something slithered into my chest. Not envy. Worse. Comparison. I started calculating. His gate motor is quieter than mine. His lawn is greener. His wife laughs louder at his jokes. By the time I finished my coffee, I had turned my own home into a museum of inadequacy. And I had not even stepped back inside. Comparison is not a weakness, beloved. It is a grave. And you have been digging it with your own glances. Part Two: The Anatomy of a Grave Let us define our terms clearly. Comparison is the sin of measurin...