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Prove Me Now - Part 3
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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This sermon emphasizes the importance of honoring God above all else, even in the face of opposition and criticism. It tells the story of a man who chose to prioritize God's commandments over worldly success and faced severe backlash, yet ultimately experienced God's blessings and favor for his obedience and faithfulness.
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He looked at his tobacco lands, and he got on the tractors, and he ploughed tobacco in the ground, and he planted vegetables. Well, that's tobacco land. The valley rose up in protest against what he's doing. You don't do vegetables. This is tobacco. There was virtually almost a violent protest rising up against him for what he was daring to do in that valley. Well, within a few years, he so prospered that 90 percent of that valley ploughed their tobacco into the ground and planted vegetables. Do you honestly think God does not honor them that honor him? No compromise. No matter what the devil says, no matter what people who have business minds, people who have their pulse on the economy say, no matter what anyone says, God honors them that honor him, beloved. God honors them that beloved him, that honor him. My brother Dudley, he lives in Australia now. He used to live in America. My brother Dudley, when he was saved about 38 years ago now, he was really something for a young fellow just over 20. He was the South African champion of his sport. He had sports clubs across the land. He had his own business, which was just flourishing, booming. He really was staggering. Admired by multitudes who would come to all these clubs where he would train them and have people training them. He was asked to represent his country. When his country was sanctioned from the world sport-wise, he was so good they couldn't do without him taking part. He had to come. No one in the world was this good. But what was the sport? Well, that was the beginning days of what took over in the world of young people of sport, karate, an eastern fighting system, mainly self-defense, but anyway, he got mightily saved. And the next day, he said, I must close these clubs down now. Karate is of the devil, he said. He said, I don't care what anybody says. You speak to anyone who goes a little bit deep. This meditating, it's not just for concentration. It's for a power. And it's not God. And there is a power that takes hold of your senses as you go deeper. It's not of God, it's of the devil, and it's dangerous, and I'm stopping. He wouldn't go to represent his land. It was a shock. He closed all the clubs down. He said, I'm not making any money from this devilish thing anymore. There's all these people locked in their throngs to train under something of his supervision in these clubs. Oh, how many religious people opposed him. He's gone mad. Nothing wrong in this. It's just good for the young people, you know. Oh, how many confessing, professing Christians stood up against him. He's gone off the rails, go too far here. Oh, the criticism, the barrage of criticism that rode up against him, the little encouragement he got was unbelievable from Christians, evangelical Christians. His business flourishing, yes, for a young man. He stands up now, say, within a week, he tells everybody, this business does not work on Sunday. I make no money from this business on Sunday. It's God's day, and I'm not desecrating God's day, the Lord's day. Well, then the criticism rose up. Oh, my, you're going to lose the business. His biggest dealers, the ones who gave him the most money with their contracts, the one man marched in when I was sitting there, shouted. He was like beside himself. He said, because you have become a religious fanatic, it doesn't mean the whole world has come to a standstill, Dudley. He said, I give you my business, my contract, and any other of them, we're all speaking about it. We're all socked. If there's a breakdown, if there's a deadline to meet by Sunday, if you have our contract, you work on Sunday. You will work on Sunday, or you lose everything. I will take my business, and I know everybody else is talking. We're getting away from you. You're going to lose everything. You've gone overboard, young man. He shouted at my brother, and I trembled at the way a man could speak to another man because of his love for God, what he had done. My brother stood up, and he was trembling. I noticed that. He was deceived. He was young, and I noticed his little lips were covering, and I looked at him and thought, what did you do now with your God? Is he going to lose everything, Dudley? A little tear came down his face, and he said, Sir, I don't care if I lose your business. I don't care if I lose this business, but I will not desecrate the Lord's day. I love God too much, unless it is a matter of life or death. I will never again allow anyone in this business to work, even if I lose this business. Well, what happened? Well, they might have found somebody that wouldn't work on a Sunday, but they also found somebody that's a very great rarity in the world, in the business world. They found someone that they knew wouldn't overcharge them, wouldn't do superficial work or undermine jobs, wouldn't do any cheating on any level on what things he used in all the machinery. There wouldn't be anything questionable about, well, instead of losing their business, his business just grew and grew and grew and grew. He had to just take on workers upon workers and open up next door, next, by the next building. It just went to such a state. In the end, God laid his hand on him to become a preacher, and on me, and I remember my brother saying, thank God I'm getting out of all of this. It's too much. He couldn't handle it. Oh, God honors them that honor him, beloved. No matter what the devil says through your biggest custom, threatening. No matter what the devil says through religious leaders, warning. You're going too far. This isn't, this isn't God. God honors them that honor him. This book says, and I believe it, in Pretoria, the capital of South Africa, I have come to love a young couple.
Prove Me Now - Part 3
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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.