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: 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 ...