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The Ministry of Angels

The Ministry of Angels: When Heaven’s Silent Warriors Work Your Comeback Scripture: “Are not all angels ministering spirits sent to serve those who will inherit salvation?” (Hebrews 1:14) I. The Question That Changes Everything Let me tell you about the morning I sat in my house in Akasia, watching the dust settle on my dining table like a silent accusation. It was 4:47 AM. I had been awake since three, wrestling with the kind of fear that doesn't announce itself—it simply occupies your chest like an illegal squatter. My daughter’s school fees were three months behind. The car had begun making that sound mechanics charge you R2,000 just to diagnose. And somewhere in the distance, I heard the familiar sound of the Johannesburg-bound taxis hooting, ferrying people to jobs I no longer had. I sat there, a man with a theology degree and an empty fridge, and I asked the question that feels almost blasphemous when you’re hungry: “God, where are You?” The writer of Hebrews asks a different...
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The Strategy of the Sacred Sword

The Strategy of the Sacred Sword Scripture: “For the word of God is alive and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword...” (Hebrews 4:12) I remember the afternoon I sat in my small flat in Akasia, watching the rain hammer against the windowpane. The electricity had been off for six hours—another round of loadshedding that Eskom had euphemistically called "planned maintenance." In the darkness, I found myself reaching not for my phone, not for the gas lamp, but for my Bible. The one my grandmother had pressed into my hands thirty years ago in Limpopo, its cover worn smooth by grief and joy alike. As I sat there, a text message buzzed through on the brief moment the towers flickered back to life. A friend from Mamelodi was struggling. His wife had left. His business had collapsed. His church had whispered that perhaps his faith was weak. He asked me one question: "Where is God when the sword falls?" I smiled in the darkness. Not because his pain was trivial—it was ...

The Value of Vision

 The Value of Vision Where Sight Becomes Substance Scripture: "Where there is no vision, the people perish: but he that keepeth the law, happy is he." (Proverbs 29:18) I was walking through the streets of Akasia last week—you know the place, where the dust of Pretoria North meets the determination of people who refuse to be forgotten. And as I stood at the intersection of Daan De Wet Nel Drive and the road that leads to the shopping centre, I watched the taxis hooting, the vendors selling their airtime and oranges, the mothers walking children to school. And a thought struck me like a stone from a sling: What do these people see when they look at tomorrow? You see, my friend, vision is not a business buzzword you learn at a workshop in Sandton. It is not a vision board you cut from magazines while listening to motivational speakers who charge five thousand rand for a weekend. Vision is the difference between surviving and thriving. Vision is what separates the man who digs in...

Praise: Your Preemptive Strike

Title: The Midnight Ambush – Praise as Your Preemptive Strike By Harold Mawela, Akasia, Pretoria Let me take you to a place we all know too well in this country—the corner of Sefako Makgatho Drive and the R80 off-ramp in Akasia. You know that spot. It is where the pothole lives. It has been there for three rainy seasons, swallowing tires and testing the patience of saints and sinners alike. Every morning, I navigate my Toyota around it, cursing under my breath, accepting it as a permanent fixture of my geography. I had learned to drive around the problem. One morning, I saw something that rewired my theology. A man—just a man in a faded overall—walked into the middle of that intersection during peak traffic. He did not carry a wheelbarrow. He did not hold a sign demanding the ward councillor’s attention. He carried a shovel and a bag of asphalt. While the cars hooted and the taxis swerved, he began to fill the pothole. Right there, in the chaos, he preemptively struck against a hazard ...

The Chains That Cannot Keep

 The Chains That Cannot Keep Scripture: “The night before Herod was to bring him to trial, Peter was sleeping between two soldiers, bound with two chains.” (Acts 12:6) I. A Man Asleep in the Belly of Death Let me tell you about the most ridiculous sight I have ever imagined—and I have seen plenty in this city of Pretoria. Picture a man, arms shackled to two Roman soldiers, awaiting execution at dawn, and sleeping. Not the restless tossing of a troubled conscience. Not the shallow dozing of a man counting his final hours. But the deep, undisturbed slumber of an infant in its mother's arms. This is Peter. The same Peter who sank in the storm. The same Peter who swore he would never betray his Lord, then cursed and denied he ever knew Him. The same Peter who ran weeping into the night, certain he had exhausted the mercy of God forever. Now, chains bind his wrists. Herod's sword hangs over his neck. And yet—he sleeps. Beloved, I have learned something from this man that I want you ...

The Fortress in the Famine

 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 ...