Amagama Okuhlabelela | 113
The Zulu hymn "Amagama Okuhlabelela 113" is a well-known hymn titled "Siyakubonga, Thixo wethu" (We thank Thee, our God). It is widely used in South African churches, particularly within the UCCSA (United Congregational Church of Southern Africa) and Lutheran traditions.
3. Kusukela empumalanga kufike empendulenyonke makadunyiswe igama leNkosi.
The Context of Psalm 113
Origins and Evolution
Grief, Mfundo discovered, was a stone-cutter. It had chiseled away his laughter, then his words, and finally, his song. He stopped going to church. He let his choir robes gather dust and moth holes. He told his wife, Nomusa, that the hymns had become lies. “How can I sing ‘Uyangihola noma kubi’ (He leads me even when it is bad),” he rasped, “when I have been stumbling in the dark for a decade?” amagama okuhlabelela 113
And many more!
The choir members felt it. Their voices softened, not from weakness, but from a sudden, holy reverence. They made room for this ruined, glorious noise. Thandi caught her breath. Nomusa, who had been sitting on a bench outside pretending to shell peas, let the bowl slip from her lap. She heard her husband’s voice, not as it was, but as it had become: a stone learning to weep. The Zulu hymn "Amagama Okuhlabelela 113" is a
But that was before the year of the great fracture. The year his only son, Bheki, took the taxi to Johannesburg and never came back. Not in body, not in letter, not even in a whispered rumor. He simply vanished, swallowed by the city’s concrete stomach.
Moreover, amagama okuhlabelela 113 have contributed to the preservation and promotion of South Africa's linguistic diversity. By being sung in various indigenous languages, these hymns help in maintaining the relevance and vitality of these languages within contemporary society. He stopped going to church