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The Boundary of Compassion

The Boundary of Compassion: When Love Must Speak a Firm "No" “Speak the truth in love.” — Ephesians 4:15 There is a dangerous heresy sweeping through our churches, our families, and our communities. It wears the mask of compassion, speaks the language of grace, and yet it is destroying the very people it claims to love. This heresy is the belief that love without boundaries is the highest form of Christian virtue. I have seen it with my own eyes. I have lived it. And I have wept over its devastating fruit. Let me take you back to a moment that changed everything for me. It was a humid Thursday afternoon in Akasia, Pretoria. The jacarandas were in full bloom, their purple canopies swaying gently in the summer breeze. I was sitting in my small study, the ceiling fan struggling against the heat, when the phone rang. It was a young man I had been mentoring for three years let us call him Thabo. Thabo was crying. His voice cracked like dry earth in a drought. He had just discovere...
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The Friction of Sanctification

 The Friction of Sanctification: A Theology for a Nation Being Sanded By Harold Mawela Akasia, Pretoria — July 2026 Scripture: "Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you face trials of many kinds." (James 1:2) I. THE GRINDING OF THE GRAVEL Let me tell you about a Thursday that nearly sanded me flat. It was last month, in this very city of Pretoria. The Jacarandas outside my study in Akasia were still recovering from the harsh Highveld winter, their branches bare like the arms of a man who has given up waving. I sat on my stoep the one overlooking the zinc roofs that shimmer like fish scales in the afternoon heat and I scrolled through the news on my phone. Petrol had dropped for the first time in months. A small mercy. But everywhere else, the grinding continued. Treasury had frozen funds for 69 municipalities. Youth unemployment sat at 45.8 percent. Xenophobic tensions were tearing communities apart, and somewhere in Hammanskraal, a mother was lighting a pa...

The Symbiosis of Growth

 THE SACRED SYMBIOSIS: HOW DIVINE CONNECTIONS CATALYSE YOUR DESTINY The acacia tree and the antelope do not negotiate their alliance. The one provides shade; the other warns of danger. Neither pauses to calculate the cost of partnership they simply need each other. And so it is, my beloved, in the Kingdom of God. Let me take you to a morning not long ago in Akasia, Pretoria. I was standing at a filling station in the shadow of the Magaliesberg, watching the sun bleed gold over the rooftops. The attendant, a young man with tired eyes, handed me my change and said: "Pastor, I've been applying for jobs for three years. Three years. My CV is like a prayer that God hasn't answered yet." I looked at him this son of the soil, born in the same South Africa where the unemployment rate now stands at 32.7%, where youth unemployment hovers at a staggering 45.8%. I wanted to give him a slogan. Instead, I gave him something harder: I asked for his number. And I asked him to meet me...

The Annex of Unlearning

 The Annex of Holy Unlearning “Renew your mind.” (Romans 12:2) I was sitting in my small flat in Akasia, Pretoria, scrolling through my phone, when the news hit me like a wild Highveld thunderstorm. Over 900 arrested. Nationwide anti-migrant protests. Foreign-owned shops looted in Durban. Ethiopian refugee Helana Wolde, who fled political persecution twenty-one years ago, watching television in terror as thousands marched past his shop. A third of South Africans unemployed youth unemployment now at a staggering 45.8%. Senior police officers arrested in a R360 million Medicare Tshwane contract scandal. Municipal officials in Ekurhuleni allegedly running rogue units, stealing copper cables under the guise of official operations. And in the midst of it all, the Church speaking: "We cannot remain silent," said Bishop Joseph Mary Kizito. "The Church must stand with the widow, the orphan and the stranger," declared Cardinal Napier. "All persons possess human dignity ...

The Lens of Legacy

 The Lens of Legacy What is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal. — 2 Corinthians 4:18 I was sitting in a taxi in Akasia last week, weaving through the familiar chaos of the R80, when I saw something that stopped my heart. A young man maybe twenty-two, twenty-three was standing at the traffic light. He wore a faded T-shirt and held a sign that read: "I have a Bachelor's degree. Please help me find work." His eyes were not angry. They were empty. Hollowed out by a system that had promised him a future and delivered a brick wall. Three days later, I watched the news. Over 900 people arrested in anti-migrant protests. Our unemployment rate has climbed to 32.7%, with youth unemployment exceeding 60%. More than 3.9 million young South Africans are not in employment, education, or training. A 23-year-old boy named Katleho Mokoena was killed during a service delivery protest in Ratanda. Fifty-eight people are murdered every day in this country. And in the middle of a...

The Horizon Unburdened

The Horizon Unburdened By Harold Mawela (Akasia, Pretoria) The winter chill still clings to the Akasia morning as I sit at Wonder Park Mall, watching the taxis disgorge their human cargo men and women carrying burdens heavier than any bag or briefcase. I see it in their stooped shoulders, in the furrow of brows that never seems to smooth. I know it because I have felt it. There was a season when the music industry the very industry where God gave me a platform closed its doors on me. Rejection became a rucksack I carried everywhere, and anxiety about tomorrow became a chain around my ankles. I was running, but I was not free. I was moving, but I was not advancing. The Scripture declares unequivocally: "Cast your cares on the Lord and He will sustain you" (Psalm 55:22). But here is the great contradiction of our faith we who claim to trust the Almighty often behave like Atlas, trying to hold the whole world on our own backs. We have become burden-bearers in a kingdom where the...

The Scaffold of Resilience

 THE SCAFFOLD OF RESILIENCE Scripture: “My soul finds rest in God alone; my salvation comes from him.” (Psalm 62:1) Prologue: The Cracks in Our Walls I woke up on the morning of 1 July 2026 to two pieces of news. The first: President Ramaphosa had reshuffled his Cabinet new ministers for Agriculture, Water and Sanitation, Electricity and Energy. The second: my municipal electricity bill had jumped by nine percent. Same month, same country, same struggle. In Ratanda, residents were collecting water from burst pipes because their taps had run dry for weeks two people died in the protests. In Hillbrow, soldiers were patrolling the streets after anti-migrant protests turned violent. Over 900 people arrested in a single day. And somewhere in the middle of all this, a young South African graduate with a 60.9 percent unemployment rate staring him in the face asked me: “Pastor, where is God in all of this?” I did not have a clever answer. But I had an image. An image that had kept me stand...