The Arithmetic of Ashes: Finding the Witness of Compassion in a Nation on Fire “Cast all your anxiety on him because he cares for you.” — 1 Peter 5:7 From my study here in Akasia, Pretoria, I look out at a nation holding its breath. Just last week, twelve souls were gunned down in a Johannesburg informal settlement. Anti-immigrant protests have turned violent. Migrants clash with police at deportation sites. The headlines scream of a country hemorrhaging hope. And in the middle of this madness, we are told to cast our anxiety on a God who cares. Is it not true that we all feel the weight of this moment pressing down on our chests like a concrete slab? Let us define our terms clearly. Compassion is not mere sympathy—that sentimental nod from a safe distance. The word derives from the Latin compati, meaning “to suffer with.” It is the gut-wrenching capacity to enter another’s pain without being destroyed by it. But here is the paradox that shatters modern psychology: You cannot truly suf...
The Law of the Empty Vessel: Why God Cannot Fill What You Refuse to Empty By Harold Mawela | Akasia, Pretoria The winter chill hangs thick over Akasia this June morning, and I am sitting at Wonder Park Mall, watching the morning commuters shuffle past—some clutching coffee cups like lifelines, others staring into phones as if the answers to our nation's troubles might appear in a notification. The jacarandas stand bare, their purple glory surrendered to the season, waiting. Even the trees understand what we Christians so often forget: you cannot receive the new until you release the old. I think of my neighbour, Mr. Dlamini the same man who stood at our fence last year, counting the years the locust had eaten. He came to me again last week, but this time his burden was different. "Harold," he said, "I've been a Christian for forty years. I know the songs. I know the doctrines. I know what to say at funerals and what to pray at weddings. But something is stuck. I ...