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 ...
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...