Monday, November 20, 2006

Elias Letwaba - An Exceptional If Little-Known Man

You probably have never heard of Elias Letwaba, even though was a man of exceptional ability and character. There are several reasons for his not being well-known. Firstly, his ministry was in rural Africa, the Upper Transvaal in the first half of the twentieth century. That on its own would take him somewhat out of the lime-light. When you couple that with the fact that he was blcak and that his own denomination, the AFM, followed a policy, at that time, where non-whites were second-class members of the church it becomes even more easy to believe that he would not be well known.

He was one of John G. Lake's early converts and many believe he was the one that received Lake's mantle for healing. He is credited with over 10,000 healings and miracles during his ministry. Lake himself, wrote of one incident where a baby had a broken neck and he had no faith to see it healed, so he left so as not to rob Elias of his faith. The baby was healed, and Lake had to repent of his unbelief. He realized that his greater medical knowledge of the seriousness of the condition was actually a hindrance in this case.

He started a Bible School called Patmos Bible School in Potgietersrus, this school trained thousands of Christian workers that spread the Gospel throughout the rural areas of South Africa. It was never formally recognized as a Bible School for training Pastors, by the AFM, so most of its graduates were forced to do the ministerial work without any recognition by their denomination.

Elias was obviously a man of exceptional humility. Most people who have worked that many miracles and are doing a good work for God would have a hard time staying in a denomination that held separate baptismal services for whites and non-whites, and as a structure made it clear that the non-whites were second-class members. Yet Elias not only stayed true, but he refused to be sidetracked from what he believed his call was to dabble in politics, or fight against the racism in his denomination.

That's the thing I like best about him and why I thought he should be better known. Don't let anything sidetrack you from your call. If people are unfair, ignore it, do what God has called you to do. He's the one we are working for after all.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Nice little post, Dan. I had never heard of the man at all.

Anonymous said...

Thanks Daniel. I am a born again South African who have just learnt about Elias Letwabe. The message have to be spread that God uses whomsoever He chooses.

Luvuyo Zantsi

luvuyo@bolanddm.co.za

Nkisheng said...

Thanks Daniel. I am a South African and a member of AFM and I am ashamed to say I only learnt about Letwaba this morning, that led me to search more about him, that is how I ended up in your blog. I can see you are heading for Malawi, Missions is my call, my heart is in Malawi, amongst other countries. Stay Blessed and Keep the FAITH - Nkisheng (nkisheng@yahoo.com)

Anonymous said...

Hi Dan
Thanks for the article, to be honest, i have not known about Elias, i knew about JG Lake and Katherine Kuhlman and many other missionaries, i only learnt about Elias 2 days ago (26/08/08) about a brother in the office who sent an article about the prayer and intercession that Letwaba made for the little girl whose neck was broken, then i went to the internet started searching info about him, my goodness, i want to be on fire like him. Cleo

storch said...

thank you daniel.
i was just doing a little investigation on letwaba and found your blog.
why do you have a german motto? i am from germany, that's why i'm asking. god bless!

Daniel Kropf said...

Storch:

Thanks for commenting. The reason I have a German motto for my blog name is that when I was thinking what to call my blog, I thought it would be nice to do a word play on my surname. It would be a little bit different, and maybe funny in a self deprecating sort of way. After all if you have a surname like Kropf you can't take yourself too seriously. :)

Anonymous said...

Hi Daniel, I had never heard of this wonderful man of God until today! Amazing that we are not told of such a giant of faith that our country was once blessed with.

Hlengiwe Gcaba