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The Mirror of Feedback

THE MIRROR OF FEEDBACK A Harold Mawela Devotional Scripture: "The wounds of a friend are trustworthy, but the kisses of an enemy are deceitful." (Proverbs 27:6, NIV) A TALE OF TWO MIRRORS I remember the taxi rank in Pretoria CBD like it was yesterday. There I stood, a younger man with a freshly pressed shirt and an ego the size of the Union Buildings. A fellow commuter—a gogo with eyes that had seen more winters than I had seen summers—looked at me and said, "Young man, your tie is crooked, but your heart is crooked too. You push past people like they are rocks in a river." Her words hit me like a minibus taxi at full speed. My first instinct? To tell her about my schedule, my importance, my urgent meeting. But something stopped me. Perhaps it was the Holy Spirit. Perhaps it was the way she held her worn Bible close to her chest like a soldier holds a rifle. What she said was true. I was pushing. I was treating people as obstacles. But her tone? Her tone had more gr...
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The River of Resilience

The River of Resilience Scripture: "Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you face trials of many kinds." (James 1:2) Part One: The Stone That Learned to Dance Let me tell you about a stone I once saw in the Crocodile River, just outside Pretoria, near the R511. I was standing there last December, watching the water rush over ancient rocks. Most stones downstream were smooth polished by decades of persistent flow. But one stone caught my eye. It was jagged, fierce, unyielding. The water crashed against it with foam and fury, but the stone refused to change. That stone, my friends, is the picture of a man or woman who resists the shaping hand of God. You see, resilience is not the stubborn refusal to be changed. No. That is not strength that is rigor mortis of the soul. True resilience is the holy art of bending without breaking, knowing that the Master Potter holds the clay. The Scripture declares unequivocally: "Consider it pure joy... whenever you fac...

Let the Past Stay Buried

Title: Let the Past Stay Buried. Theme Scripture: Isaiah 43:18–19 Dateline: Akasia, Pretoria By Harold Mawela It was a Thursday afternoon in Akasia. The Johannesburg-Pretoria traffic had finally released me from its evening grip. As I turned into the street where I live, I noticed my neighbour, a brilliant young man named Thabo, sitting on the pavement. His head was buried in his hands. His engineering diploma from TUT was somewhere in that house—collecting dust while he collected rejection letters. I stopped. I sat next to him. The sun was setting over the Magaliesberg. "But' Harold," he said, his voice cracking. "I applied for forty-seven jobs. Forty-seven. Not one call back. Last year I trusted a cousin with my savings for a 'business opportunity'—the cousin is in Thailand now, and I am sitting on a pavement in Akasia." We sat in silence. A taxi hooted in the distance. A child was selling amagwinya at the corner. Then Thabo said the sentence that brok...

The Breaking of the Mold

THE BREAKING OF THE MOLD A Devotional Essay in the Harold Mawela Style Akasia, Pretoria — June 2026 I. THE CRACK IN THE CAGE I remember the day I finally understood what pain was for. It was a Thursday—Stage 4 load-shedding had just plunged our street into darkness, and I sat on my veranda watching the smoke from a hundred illegal fires curl toward a sky the city had forgotten. My neighbour, old Mr. Dlamini, was burning scrap wood to cook pap for his grandchildren. His spaza shop had been looted two weeks earlier. Not by foreign nationals—by boys from his own church, boys who had once called him Malume. As I watched him stir that pot in the dark, I felt something crack inside me. Not my patience. Not my hope. My mold. Brother, let me tell you plainly: The world has a mold, and it wants you to fit. It is a mold shaped like fear—fear of not having enough, fear of being left behind, fear of the foreigner, fear of the future. It is a mold shaped like selfishness—me-first, get-mine, look-ou...

Everyone doesn’t think like you

Title: The War Within the Walls: Why Different Minds Are Your Spiritual Shield By Harold Mawela Akasia, Pretoria Scripture: "If the whole body were an eye, where would hearing be?" (1 Cor. 12:17) A Morning in Akasia Let me paint you a picture. It’s 6 a.m. in Akasia. The R80 highway hums with taxis heading toward Pretoria CBD. I’m standing at my gate, watching my neighbor, Mr. Van der Merwe, wrestle with his solar inverter—cursing Eskom’s latest load-shedding schedule. Across the street, Mama Thandi is already hanging washing, singing a Zion hymn that cuts through the morning chill like a spiritual shofar. Now, watch closely. Mr. Van der Merwe believes the solution to South Africa’s crisis is technical: better infrastructure, data-driven decisions, and German-engineered backup systems. Mama Thandi believes the solution is spiritual: prayer, praise, and ancestral alignment with God’s covenant. They love the same Jesus. They live on the same street. But friends, they do not thin...

The War Cry That Opens Heavens

The War Cry That Opens Heavens Scripture: “Pray without ceasing.” (1 Thessalonians 5:17) I. A Breach in the Making The summer heat hangs thick over Akasia this morning. I am sitting on my stoep, watching the sun climb over the Magaliesberg, and my phone buzzes with the day's headlines. President Ramaphosa is tabling the Presidency Budget Vote amid impeachment tensions. S&P has affirmed our rating, flagging no disruption. Meanwhile, young people in Orlando and Mamelodi are stepping out in their Amapiano finest—oversized streetwear, crisp white sneakers, Bathu kicks moving to a rhythm that speaks of joy rising from struggle. On the surface, it looks like progress. Look closer, and you see the walls. The wall of economic stagnation. The wall of political uncertainty. The wall of crime syndicates operating with impunity. The wall in your marriage. The wall in your womb. The wall between you and your destiny. Beloved, let us define our terms clearly at the outset. Persistent prayer ...

The Fast That Fractures Chains

 The Fast That Fractures Chains Scripture: "This kind can come out by nothing but prayer and fasting." (Mark 9:29) By Harold Mawela Akasia, Pretoria A Confession From the Taxi Rank Let me tell you about a morning that still haunts me. It was a Tuesday rainy, the kind of Pretoria chill that cuts through your bones like a regret you can't shake. I was standing at the Bloed Street Mall taxi rank, waiting for a lift to Akasia, when I saw him. A young man, maybe twenty-two, shirtless in the drizzle, eyes like two burned-out light bulbs. He was talking to someone who wasn't there, scratching arms that looked like a battlefield of track marks and old wounds. I knew his mother. I had prayed with her at her kitchen table in Soshanguve three months earlier. She had shown me his matric photo sharp in a blazer, dimples when he smiled, a future in his eyes. "He was going to be an accountant, Pastor Harold," she had whispered, clutching a tea towel like a rosary. "No...