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Prove Me Now - Part 6
Keith Daniel

Keith Daniel (1946 - 2021). South African evangelist and Bible teacher born in Cape Town to Jack, a businessman and World War II veteran, and Maud. Raised in a troubled home marked by his father’s alcoholism, he ran away as a teen, facing family strife until his brother Dudley’s conversion in the 1960s sparked his own at 20. Called to ministry soon after, he studied at Glenvar Bible College, memorizing vast Scripture passages, a hallmark of his preaching. Joining the African Evangelistic Band, he traveled across South Africa, Namibia, Zimbabwe, and made over 20 North American tours, speaking at churches, schools, and IBLP Family Conferences. Daniel’s sermons, like his recitation of the Sermon on the Mount, emphasized holiness, repentance, and Scripture’s authority. Married to Jenny le Roux in 1978, a godly woman 12 years his junior, they had children, including Roy, and ministered together. He authored no books but recorded 200 video sermons, now shared online. His uncompromising style, blending conviction and empathy, influenced thousands globally.
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Sermon Summary
This sermon emphasizes the importance of integrity, restitution, and the love of money in relation to one's soul and relationship with God. It tells a powerful story of a man who made things right with his wealth, highlighting the significance of leaving a legacy of honor and righteousness rather than material inheritance. The sermon also addresses the dangers of wealth becoming a barrier to spiritual growth and the eternal consequences of prioritizing money over God.
Sermon Transcription
Thousands and thousands, and I want to pay it back, he made checks, and he told them why. I've come to Jesus Christ. He's my savior. Do you know, in the end, they knew he was coming. The phone calls went around the business world, and when he walked in, they would stand up and say, No, we refuse to take anything from you, sir. One man, weeping, said, I won't take it from you, Mr. Daniel. I can't. He said, Sir, you sold waste, and we, we would have thrown it away, but you sold it. You did something. That isn't stealing. My father said, I should have told you how many thousands I was making daily with the waste. You would have taken it. I didn't tell you what you could do with it. I didn't do it honestly, and they said, Sir, you didn't steal. Nobody that you've been to, nobody you're going to, will accept that you've stolen. They look upon you with integrity. As a man of integrity, what are you doing, making us take this money? My father said, weeping. A man told me this. My daddy didn't tell me this. He said, When I said that to your daddy, you know what your daddy said? He said, Please give me the right to die with nothing left that hasn't been made right in God's eyes. Give me that right. Do you know what they did? They phoned ahead, by the way, everywhere they knew he was coming, and they decided how to word it. They said, If you make a check out, you make it out to a church or a missionary society for your God. For your God's work, we will not accept it, and I'm telling you now, Mr. Daniel, no one else is going to accept it. You give it to the church, wherever you feel it. They said, most of them with tears coming down. My daddy gave so much of what I, one day, could have inherited, and my brother, he left my mother well off, more well off than most ladies her age, right to this day. He didn't leave us an inheritance. I am going to get nothing. I got nothing. But do you know, he left me with more wealth than if he left me with a billion pounds. He left me with a testimony that I revere and treasure that I was his son, that I have a father to testify across the world about, who had no compromise on any issue in life. No one can point a finger to anything he didn't make restitution for. He left us with wealth that I would be in poverty if he left me with a billion dollars. I wouldn't have wanted it, God knows I'm true, in the place of what he did leave me with. Honor, honor, honor. I have had to sit before many people who have had great wealth, when they come to me town upon town and tell me that they have had tax evasion involving millions. Now they want to see God, what does this mean now, what about this? You know why Jesus turned the rich young man away? Why he walked away from Christ? Because he had great wealth. He had too much to lose. Jesus doesn't expect everyone with wealth to give it up and give some to the poor, but if that keeps you, if that stands between you and God, he touches it, he touches it straight away. And I've seen many a man walk away with a heavy heart like the rich young man, because God touched that and they weren't willing. What is the profit if a man gains the whole world and loses his own soul, Jesus said? You're poverty stricken at death. And death is in a moment, that's all you've got, this moment called life, it's gone so fast it's fearful. If you don't have it yet, then you've got eternity. Sir, money is not the root of all evil, the love of money is. The love of money is. I've seen men who have wine farms of four generations, with millions of rands in our currency, who want to come to God, who get right with God, and they say, what about this, where a great percentage of our poor class lie drunk daily in the gutters, and they pay them with wine. That's their money, that's all they want, is to be drunk, drunk.
Prove Me Now - Part 6
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Keith Daniel (1946 - 2021). South African evangelist and Bible teacher born in Cape Town to Jack, a businessman and World War II veteran, and Maud. Raised in a troubled home marked by his father’s alcoholism, he ran away as a teen, facing family strife until his brother Dudley’s conversion in the 1960s sparked his own at 20. Called to ministry soon after, he studied at Glenvar Bible College, memorizing vast Scripture passages, a hallmark of his preaching. Joining the African Evangelistic Band, he traveled across South Africa, Namibia, Zimbabwe, and made over 20 North American tours, speaking at churches, schools, and IBLP Family Conferences. Daniel’s sermons, like his recitation of the Sermon on the Mount, emphasized holiness, repentance, and Scripture’s authority. Married to Jenny le Roux in 1978, a godly woman 12 years his junior, they had children, including Roy, and ministered together. He authored no books but recorded 200 video sermons, now shared online. His uncompromising style, blending conviction and empathy, influenced thousands globally.