Praying through the month of July 2010  
Click Here to read

This month is called “Ab” in Hebrew. It is equivalent to the fifth (5th) Jewish sacred calendar month. It is reckoned as the eleventh (11th) month with reference to the Jewish civil calendar. It was called “QUlNTILIS” in Latin meaning ‘fifth’. Julius Caesar assigned 31 days to the month of July in the year 46 BC. The Roman senate named the month “Julius” in honour of Julius Caesar; this is how it acquired its name – JULY. According to the Gregorian calendar, July is the seventh (7th) month.
In the Northern Hemisphere, July is usually the height of summer season. In the Southern Hemisphere July is the coldest part of the winter season. Jesus spoke to His disciples concerning the flowering of the fig tree during the summer season. It is a season when many crops begin to flower in anticipation of coming fruitfulness. 
 
     
  Operation Nomakanjani Boot Camp - March & April 2010  
Click Here to read
 
  WOMAN OF INFLUENCE 1

Let me begin by extending a warm welcome to our brand new readers. It is my prayer that you will all be thoroughly enriched through the articles presented in this magazine.

 On Sunday 23rd July, I invited my Pastor and our Discipleship Ministry church members to my newly acquired house to have a thanksgiving ceremony and have it dedicated to God. During the dedication service, a prophetic word was given to proclaim that it was a “New Day, A new season and a new beginning”. I believe this is a timely and rhema word for all women out there. We are walking in a dispensation where God has begun to use women and the youth like never before. He surely is equipping us for battle and is putting us in the frontline to wage war.

 

 
 
 

WOMAN OF INFLUENCE 2

Greetings beloved handmaidens of God and welcome to the second publication of this magazine.

With the rising food,  fuel and electricity prices and escalating interest rate hikes in SA, the region and globally there is an increasing need to stretch the monetary value. According to the newly established South African National Credit Regulator,  more than 6.3 million people in South Africa  alone have a bad credit record amounting to over a trillion rands worth of debt. This represents almost 15% of the total South African population..