I sat in my study in Akasia, Pretoria, watching the news flicker across my screen. The headlines of 2026 were a familiar chorus: a protest march in Durban demanding action on immigration laws, a nation hitting 300 days without loadshedding, and yet, simmering beneath the surface, a cost-of-living crisis where the price of bread and school fees still kept families awake at night. As a pastor, my phone buzzed with messages from people trapped in these very knots. They spoke of financial pressure, family strain, and a gnawing fear of the future. That's when the Lord whispered a profound paradox to my spirit: "Harold, they are fighting shadows with swords, but their lamp sits unlit behind them." Every problem you face is not a location crisis; it is a revelation deficit. The darkness you are wrestling with is not stronger than the light you have refused to activate. The Wisdom War Within Your Problem Scripture: "Get wisdom, get understanding: forget it not; neither decli...
The Peaceful Prisoner: How to Sleep When Your World Is On Fire By Harold Mawela From my study in Akasia, Pretoria, I am writing this on a Tuesday morning that feels like a loud Friday. The air is thick with the hum of generators, a sound we have learned to love, because it means the power is on. We have officially passed three hundred days without the dreaded load shedding, a modern South African miracle. But if you live in Akasia, or Roodepoort where an explosion recently plunged thousands into darkness, you know the truth: the lights may be on, but the grid is still groaning. Our peace, like the power supply, feels temporary, a fragile thing borrowed against the next fault. And yet, this morning, I am not thinking about the power grid. I am thinking about a different kind of prison, and a man who slept through his own execution date. I am thinking about Peter. The Paradox of Peter's Peace The Scripture is stark and beautiful in its brevity: “The night before Herod was to bring hi...