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Breaking Curses Through Radical Obedience

BREAKING CURSES THROUGH RADICAL OBEDIENCE “If you are willing and obedient, you shall eat the good of the land.” — Isaiah 1:19 I. The Summer Everything Changed Let me take you back to a scorching December afternoon in Akasia, 2019. The potholes on Rachel de Beer Street had swallowed two of my tyres that week, my youngest son’s school fees were three months behind, and the car—that old Corolla that had carried more prayers than passengers had just died again. I sat on my stoep, watching the Highveld thunderheads pile up like God’s own judgment, and I prayed. Oh, how I prayed! I prayed with the desperation of a man whose back was against the wall. I quoted Psalm 35, rebuked every demon in Pretoria North, and commanded every financial curse to break by the blood of Jesus. Nothing happened. The next morning, my neighbour Mrs. Nkosi knocked on my gate. "Harold," she said, "the church down the street needs someone to clean the toilets. It pays five hundred rand a week." I...
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The Shield That Silences the Serpent

 The Shield That Silences the Serpent I. The Midnight Confession The summer heat hung over Akasia like a wet blanket last December. I remember sitting on my stoep at 2 AM, unable to sleep, scrolling through news alerts on my phone like a man possessed. The headlines screamed at me: "Eskom Corruption Scandal Deepens – SIU Freezes Luxury Assets" . "Crime Syndicates Still Thriving Despite Dropped Murder Stats" . "Sober-Curious Revolution: South Africans Ditching the Bottle" . And there I sat a man who had preached faith for twenty years paralyzed. Not by fear of crime. Not by frustration with load-shedding . Not even by the painful irony of influencers sipping champagne in Santorini while asking if "load shedding is still a thing" . No, what gripped my chest that night was something far more venomous. Doubt. Not doubt about God's existence—I've seen too much to go there. But doubt about tomorrow. Doubt about whether my prayers were bouncing ...

The Obedient Warrior

THE OBEDIENT WARRIOR Akasia, Pretoria — 2026 I. The Sound of Bleating in the Dark The other night, load-shedding had us sitting in the dark again. Stage 4 or was it Stage 6? These days, we lose count. My neighbour, old Vusi, was on his porch, and through the fence I heard him sigh: "Yazi, this darkness is training us to become thieves. We move around our own houses like criminals." We laughed. But his words stuck. Because isn't that exactly what spiritual disobedience does? It trains God's people to operate like criminals in their own inheritance sneaking, hiding, making excuses, keeping the bleating sheep quiet so the Prophet doesn't hear. Imagine, if you will, the scene: King Saul, fresh from battle, armour still gleaming, standing before Samuel with the audacity to say, "I have performed the commandment of the Lord." And all the while, behind him, sheep are bleating and oxen are lowing—the very animals God commanded him to destroy. Partial obedience i...

Faith That Fights Fear

Faith That Fights Fear: The War Cry of a Sound Mind Scripture Foundation: "For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind." (2 Timothy 1:7) I. The Grip That Grips This Nation Let me take you to a taxi rank in downtown Pretoria—any taxi rank will do. It is 6 PM. The December shadows are stretching across the tarmac like long, bony fingers. You see a woman there, let me call her Mam’Rose. She sells vetkoek and chakaleka from a plastic container. Her hands are stained with flour and curry, but her eyes—her eyes are stained with something else. They dart left, then right. She clutches her phone like a lifeline, but the battery is flat. The last text she sent was to her daughter: “Ngiyeza, sthandwa sami. Just late.” But the real message, the one she did not type, was this: “I am afraid.” Mam’Rose is not a character in a parable. She is the statistical reality of a South Africa we pretend not to see. The crime statistics for early 2026 show ...

Guard the Cup Before You Pour

Guard the Cup Before You Pour By Harold Mawela, Akasia, Pretoria Come to Me, all who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. — Matthew 11:28 The Ceremony of the Cup My grandfather, a man carved from the granite of a forgotten generation, had a ceremony for everything. I remember watching him prepare his morning tea in the dim glow of our kitchen in Limpopo. He would take his chipped enamel cup—washed spotless from the day before—and hold it to the window, inspecting it against the dawn light. No cracks. No dust. No residue from yesterday’s brew. Only then, only then, would he pour the hot water. "Guard the cup before you pour," he would murmur, "because what you pour is only as pure as what you receive it." I was too young then to understand the theology simmering in that small ritual. But now, seated here in Akasia, with the Johannesburg skyline smudged on the horizon like a question mark, I understand. That chipped cup was not ceramic; it was a soul. And...

The Courage to Begin

 The Courage to Begin A Devotional Essay by Harold Mawela Part One: The Morning I Hid From My Own Life Let me tell you about a Tuesday morning in Akasia—a Tuesday that nearly cost me everything. I sat on the edge of my bed, the sun already fierce over the Pretoria skyline, a cup of rooibos growing cold beside me. My phone buzzed with messages. My laptop glowed with unopened emails. My spirit whispered with unfinished prayers. But I could not move. I was a man frozen in the doorway of his own destiny, held captive not by chains but by the fear of beginning. Is it not true that we all feel this? That the weight of what we must do presses down until we cannot breathe, until the simplest task becomes a mountain, until we choose the paralysis of procrastination over the possibility of progress? That Tuesday, I did not write. I did not answer. I did not pray. I simply sat, and in my sitting, I allowed the assassin of peace to do its work. The email I avoided grew fangs. The phone call I ...

The Weapon of Your Warfare

Title: THE WEAPON OF YOUR WARFARE: Why Your Panic is Proof You Have Forgotten Your Provider Scripture: "In every thing give thanks: for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you." — 1 Thessalonians 5:18 (KJV) Brothers and sisters, let me ask you a question that might sting like antiseptic on a fresh wound: Why are you panicking? I was sitting on my stoep in Akasia last Tuesday morning. The sun was rising over the Magaliesberg, painting the sky in shades of orange and gold that would make a painter weep. I had my mug of Rooibos in hand. The birds were singing that beautiful, chaotic symphony they sing every morning. And I felt... a knot in my stomach. Loadshedding was scheduled for 10 a.m. The car needed a new tyre. My niece's school fees were due. The news was full of talk about the Budget Speech and the rising cost of everything. In that moment of beauty, I was preparing for a battle that hadn't even started. Then the Holy Spirit whispered to my spirit: ...