The Amplifier of Gratitude By Harold Mawela Akasia, Pretoria I was standing in the queue at the filling station in Pretoria last week when the attendant smiled and said, "Baas, the price dropped. First time in months." Something stirred in my chest not just relief, but a strange, unexpected gratitude. For a moment, I actually thanked God for petrol. Petrol! The same fuel that has been strangling our households, squeezing our already thin wallets, forcing families in Mamelodi and Soshanguve to choose between bread and transport. And yet, in that moment, standing there watching the numbers on the pump slow their frantic climb, I felt a flicker of thanksgiving. But here is the question that has been nagging at my soul ever since: Was I thanking God for the gift, or was I tracing the gift back to the Giver? Let me be honest with you, my fellow South African. We have become a nation of consumers—not just of goods, but of blessings. We receive and we receive, but we rarely recognis...
THE FRONTIER OF ETHICS What Good Is a Nation or a Soul Gained at the Price of Truth? Let me tell you about a photograph that made my blood run cold. I sat in my study in Akasia, Pretoria, scrolling through the news on a Thursday evening, when I saw it: a photograph of former President Jacob Zuma, standing beside Ajay Gupta in an Indian temple. Same smile. Same casual ease. As if the past decade of state capture had never happened. As if R17 billion in stolen public funds meant nothing. As if the Zondo Commission's revelations were merely yesterday's newspaper. I closed my phone and sat in silence. Because that photograph is not just a political scandal. It is a spiritual symptom. It is the visible face of an invisible disease the erosion of that sacred frontier Jesus spoke of when He asked: "What good will it be for someone to gain the whole world, yet forfeit their soul?" (Matthew 16:26). DEFINING THE FRONTIER Let us define our terms clearly. An ethical frontier is ...