THE RIVER OF RESILIENCE Scripture: “Weeping may endure for a night, but joy comes in the morning.” (Psalm 30:5) Part One: The Breaking Let me tell you about my neighbour in Akasia, Uncle Solomon. Two months ago, he lost everything—his tuck shop in Soshanguve, his savings, his sense of purpose. The July unrest swept through like a wildfire drunk on anger. When I found him sitting on his stoep at 4 AM, staring at nothing, I didn't preach. I just sat. He turned to me and whispered: “Mawela, I am a stone that has been crushed into gravel.” I looked at that broken man—seventy-three years old, pension gone, dignity stolen—and I heard the Holy Spirit whisper back: “Tell him about the river.” Part Two: Defining Our Terms Before we go further, let us establish what resilience is NOT. Resilience is not: The stubborn refusal to bend. The clenched fist of self-will. The Stoic’s grim endurance that says, “I will survive by my own teeth and toenails.” Resilience is: The sacred capacity to absorb...
The Fire of Liberation Where Freedom Begins The jacarandas are dying again outside my Akasia window. Not the trees themselves—those stubborn survivors are still standing, as they have through every Pretoria October for decades—but the purple blossoms are falling, carpeting the pavement in a regal death shroud. It happens every year. They bloom with such audacious, defiant beauty, painting our concrete-gray suburb with the colors of royalty, only to surrender their petals to the first autumn wind. It's a beautiful, brutal, annual reminder: even the most glorious things must fall. I was staring at this purple funeral procession last Tuesday morning, nursing a cup of rooibos and a particularly stubborn grudge. The grudge, you see, was against a man who had wronged me in a business deal. His name doesn't matter. What matters is that I had built him a palace in my mind. Every morning, I'd wake up and walk through its corridors, admiring the tapestries of his offenses, polishing ...