Belle Moji
11.5K posts

Belle Moji
@BeleJuba
Love Lives.....I Believe...
Centurion, South Africa Katılım Haziran 2015
1.8K Takip Edilen1.7K Takipçiler

@RealLifeGold What do you mean? Coal still gets wet and compromise production big time. It's fortune we now have enough stations and rains haven't been as severe.
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30 DAYS OF SACRIFICE: MEETING GOD AT 4AM
Let me prepare you properly for what we are about to do. Waking up at 4am to pray is not cute. It is not aesthetic. It is not something your flesh will agree with. Your body will resist. Your mind will negotiate. You will suddenly feel more tired than you have ever felt.
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🔥 THE MYSTERY OF THE SPIRIT OF OFFENSE: HOW IT TAKES ROOT IN A MAN 🔥
Beloved, hear this by the Spirit… the spirit of offense is not just an emotion—it is a spiritual seed. And like every seed, it seeks soil, permission, and time to grow. Many destinies have been delayed, relationships destroyed, and spiritual sensitivity corrupted—not by open sin, but by hidden offense. 😔✨
The Bible says in Luke 17:1, “It is impossible but that offenses will come…”—not might come, but will come. This means offense is inevitable, but captivity is optional. The real danger is not the coming of offense, but the receiving of it.
💡 1. OFFENSE BEGINS WITH AN UNGUARDED HEART
Every offense starts when the heart is not fortified with truth and maturity. When expectations are high but understanding is low, offense finds an entrance. Many people are not offended because they were wronged—but because what they expected was not met.
When your heart is not trained to interpret situations through God’s lens, you will interpret everything through pain. And pain, if not managed, becomes a voice louder than truth.
💡 2. OFFENSE IS WATERED BY MISINTERPRETATION
The spirit of offense thrives on assumptions. “They ignored me.” “They don’t value me.” “They are against me.” Meanwhile, many times, there is no such intention.
Beloved, not everything is an attack—some things are misunderstandings. But when discernment is absent, imagination becomes your prophet. And imagination without truth will always prophesy error. 😔
💡 3. OFFENSE TAKES ROOT THROUGH PRIDE
Pride is the hidden fertilizer of offense. A humble heart is difficult to offend, but a proud heart is easily wounded. Why? Because pride says, “I deserve better treatment.”
But in the Kingdom, we are not sustained by what we deserve—we are sustained by grace. The moment you become entitlement-driven, you become offense-prone.
💡 4. OFFENSE GROWS THROUGH REHEARSAL
Offense deepens when you keep replaying the hurt. You sit down, and you meditate—not on God’s Word—but on what was done to you.
And every time you replay it, the root grows deeper. Soon, it is no longer just hurt—it becomes bitterness. And bitterness is dangerous because it defiles not only you, but everyone around you.
💡 5. OFFENSE SEEKS AGREEMENT AND VALIDATION
Offended people rarely stay alone. They look for others to agree with their pain. “Did you see what they did?” “Am I wrong?”
And when they find people who validate their offense instead of correcting it, the root becomes a tree. This is how offenses spread in families, churches, and communities. 🌿
💡 6. OFFENSE ULTIMATELY SEPARATES YOU FROM GRACE
The greatest danger of offense is not emotional pain—it is spiritual disconnection. Offense can make you withdraw from people God sent to help you.
Many have left divine relationships, spiritual coverings, and destiny helpers—not because God released them—but because offense drove them away.
Listen carefully:
The devil does not need to destroy you if he can isolate you.
🌿 THE WAY OUT: THE ANTIDOTE TO OFFENSE
Walk in humility
Give people the benefit of the doubt
Be quick to forgive
Guard your heart diligently
Interpret life through God’s Word, not your wounds
Forgiveness is not weakness—it is spiritual intelligence. It is the ability to refuse the seed the enemy is trying to plant.
✨ Beloved, offense is a trap—but discernment is your escape.
#GuardYourHeart #PeaceWithin
#Copied
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A Zimbabwean national, Makwambeni Sheu, who was employed as a doctor at Mafeteng Hospital, has reportedly disappeared after learning that he was under investigation by Lesotho Medical, Dental and Pharmacy Council over allegations of a patient's death.
newsdayonline.co.ls/unregistered-d…
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Anyone thats been defrauded by @StandardBankZA , please dm @Amahashi_ your contacts she will pass them to me and I’ll get in touch in the morning.
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If you think Pharaoh was the real enemy at the Red Sea, you’re reading the story too quickly.
Most of us look at the Red Sea story like it’s a victory lap; God opens the water, Pharaoh’s army gets wiped out, and Israel walks away free. We treat it like the "happily ever after" moment of the Bible.
But if you actually look at the Scripture, something far worse hunted the Israelites than Pharoh’s pursuit.
In Exodus 14, as soon as they see the dust from the Egyptian chariots, they start losing it. They weren’t just panicking; they literally ask Moses, "Was it because there weren't enough graves in Egypt that you brought us here to die?" They actually told him it would have been "better" to stay as slaves.
Keep in mind, these people just saw ten plagues. They saw the Nile turn to blood. They watched the land go dark. But the second things got tight, fear deleted their memory of the miracles.
And we do the exact same thing.
How fast do you start romanticizing your past when your current situation gets uncomfortable? How quickly do you start missing the things God actually rescued you from, just because the future feels a bit blurry?
Even the miracle itself wasn't instant. Exodus 14 says God drove the sea back with a strong wind "all night." It was a slow, step-by-step walk. It wasn't a magic trick; it was a process.
But look at what happens just one chapter later in Exodus 16. They start complaining about food. They start talking about how they "sat by the meat pots" and had plenty of bread in Egypt.
That’s a lie. They were in forced labor. They weren't enjoying a buffet; they were being worked to death. But anxiety is a hell of an editor. It makes you remember the "comforts" of your old life while completely cropping out the chains that kept you there.
Then you get to Exodus 32. Moses is up on the mountain for forty days. No updates, or any signal he’s coming down soon. So the people go to Aaron and say, "Make us gods who will go before us."
They didn't stop believing in God you know, They just couldn't handle not seeing Him. Egypt had trained them to only trust what they could touch. So when God didn't move on their timeline, they went back to what felt familiar.
That’s the real issue here. They were out of Egypt, but Egypt was still in their heads. They were physically free, but they were still using a slave’s toolkit to handle fear and delay.
So, when things stall in your life, what do you start building? When you don't get the answer you wanted, what "golden calf" do you reach for? Is it a drink? Is it an old relationship? Is it just a desperate need to control everything around you?
The real threat wasn't the Egyptian army behind them. It was the urge to run back to what was predictable.
The beauty of this story isn't just the parting of the sea. It’s that God didn't walk away when they started acting out. He kept sending the manna and kept showing up for them. He didn't just pull them out of a country; He stayed with them while He pulled the "slave-thinking" out of their hearts.
Leaving your past is a one-time event. But learning how to be free? That takes time.
Be honest with yourself; What part of your "Egypt" are you still defending? Are you rewriting your history because you’re scared of the unknown? If God took away every problem you have right now, would you still be a slave on the inside?
#Christianity #BiblicalTruth #FaithOverFeelings #Exodus #Deliverance
Ellis Enobun

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@NkosiTheWise @Paballooooooo Nkosi disrespecting a whole nation and culture. Ha tloha, I will die blah blah. Well, you shouldn't have said you stand to be corrected if you refuse to be corrected akere? 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂E ngole Ka moo U e batlang nKoSi.
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Hi Mpho. If it’s a Mosotho from Lesotho we capitalise the M, not the S. And for the language we capitalise just the first S. (I’m not fighting😭🙏🏽)
Luna M@tiredfeminist_
A moSotho guy posted a TikTok video with a seSotho song and one Zulu man responded “umnandi lo maskandi wenu” and other comments from Zulu men have me in stitches😭😭😭😭😭
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I’ve received so many DMs about this. Guys, there’s money in online teaching, I won’t lie but also you need to put in the work. Here, I will share which platform I’m currently using and how I did it. I believe if you want it, you can do it too. So here goes 🧵
Gugu Dlamini@ggdlams
I will do a thread about teaching online when I’m free. Today, my schedule is a bit hectic. I will try to be as detailed as possible so that you won’t struggle when you sign up. So don’t worry, I got you. Also, I will be sharing my experience so hopefully it will be helpful
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The post mixes English and Sesotho: "Basotho mahaeng mane" translates to "Rural Basotho there" (Basotho are Sotho people from Lesotho/South Africa; mahaeng means rural areas, mane means over there).
Full translation: "🤣🤣 Rural Basotho there are the realest human beings, I tell you. ❤️"
Context: The attached video shows rural Basotho locals playfully teasing a white man about his pale skin under the sun during an outdoor gathering, emphasizing their genuine, humorous nature.
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