23/12/2025
AMAZING TO SEE HUNDREDS OF FULFILLED PROPHETIC WORDS FROM THE GOD SAID 2025.
HOW TO SHARE THEM WITH YOU ALL?
I'M GONNA DO IT IN BATCHES OF 25
HERE THEN IS THE FIRST 25 WORDS FULFILLED WORDS FOR SOUTH AFRICAN AGRICULTURE.
SOUTH AFRICA
AGRICULTURE
Agricultural Colleges Re-established
Prophecy number: 1
Original prophecy:
New agricultural colleges will be built in various provinces.
Fulfilment:
South Africa has reactivated and expanded agricultural education through the reopening, upgrading, and restructuring of agricultural colleges and training centres across multiple provinces. These institutions have increasingly focused on practical farming skills, mechanisation, agribusiness management, and support for emerging farmers, directly addressing long-standing skills shortages in the agricultural sector.
Lnks:
• https://www.dalrrd.gov.za
• https://www.farmersweekly.co.za/agri-news/south-africa/
AgriSA Established as an International Voice
Prophecy number: 2
Original prophecy:
AgriSA is becoming a voice that is established internationally, with its research and development section gaining global recognition and collaboration.
Fulfilment:
AgriSA has expanded its international influence through policy engagement, research collaboration, and participation in global agricultural forums. Its research outputs and advocacy have increasingly informed international discussions on food security, sustainability, and commercial farming, positioning the organisation as a recognised stakeholder beyond South Africa’s borders.
Lnks:
• https://www.agrisa.co.za
• https://www.businesslive.co.za/bd/
Automation in Agriculture and Labour Resistance
Prophecy number: 3
Original prophecy:
Automation will modernise agriculture, but resistance from labourers, job losses, security risks, and uneven adoption will occur.
Fulfilment:
Automation and precision agriculture have expanded across South African commercial farms, improving efficiency and yield consistency. At the same time, labour resistance, concerns over job displacement, and increased farm-security pressures have emerged. High implementation costs have limited adoption among smaller farmers, resulting in a dual agricultural system where advanced and traditional methods coexist.
Lnks:
• https://www.farmersweekly.co.za/agri-technology/
• https://www.news24.com/news24/southafrica/
Backyard and Community Farming Expansion
Prophecy number: 4
Original prophecy:
Backyard farming projects will grow from household provision to feeding communities.
Fulfilment:
Urban and peri-urban food gardens have expanded significantly as households responded to food insecurity and rising living costs. Many small backyard initiatives evolved into cooperative community projects supplying neighbours, informal traders, and local feeding schemes, strengthening grassroots food resilience.
Links:
• https://mg.co.za
• https://www.groundup.org.za
Free State Bumper Crops
Prophecy number: 5
Original prophecy:
After failed crops, the Free State will experience bumper maize and corn harvests.
Fulfilment:
Following earlier seasons of crop failure, the Free State recorded strong maize and grain harvests due to improved rainfall patterns, adaptive planting strategies, and better soil management. The volume and quality of production exceeded industry expectations and reinforced South Africa’s role as a key regional grain producer.
Links:
• https://www.sagis.org.za/crop-estimates
• https://www.news24.com/fin24/economy/
Crop Blight and Scientific Collaboration
Prophecy number: 6
Original prophecy:
A crop blight will spread, prompting farmers and scientists to collaborate on an experimental solution.
Fulfilment:
Localized crop diseases affecting specific agricultural sectors led to coordinated responses between farmers, researchers, and agricultural scientists. Experimental treatments and revised management practices were developed and implemented, producing broader applications for disease control beyond the initial outbreaks.
Links:
• https://www.arc.agric.za
• https://www.farmersweekly.co.za
Climate-Specific Water Filtration Innovation
Prophecy number: 7
Original prophecy:
Young engineers will design climate-specific water filtration systems implemented nationally.
Fulfilment:
University-linked engineers and start-ups introduced region-specific water filtration and treatment technologies designed to address local climatic conditions such as heat stress, salinity, and pollution. These systems have been piloted and scaled in agricultural contexts to improve water security across provinces.
Links:
• https://www.wrc.org.za
• https://www.engineeringnews.co.za
Chinese Farmland Purchases and Political Opposition
Prophecy number: 8
Original prophecy:
Chinese entities will purchase farmland, prompting political opposition and public debate.
Fulfilmen:
Foreign land ownership, including Chinese-linked agricultural investments, has become a focal point of political debate and media scrutiny. Calls for regulatory oversight, transparency, and protection of national agricultural assets have intensified, confirming the anticipated public and political response.
Links:
• https://www.news24.com/news24/southafrica/
• https://www.businesslive.co.za
Community of Praying Farmers
Prophecy number: 9
Original prophecy:
Farmers will form accountable, praying communities with mentorship between generations.
Fulfilment:
Farmer networks centred on prayer, mentorship, and mutual accountability have grown, particularly linking experienced farmers with younger entrants. These communities have fostered cooperation, shared resources, and a renewed sense of stewardship over agricultural land.
Lnks:
• https://www.agrisa.co.za
• https://www.farmersweekly.co.za
Increased Farm Security Awareness
Prophecy number: 10
Original prophecy:
Farm security will increase as farmers recognise their custodial role in food security.
Fulfilment:
Escalating rural crime and theft compelled farmers to invest in enhanced security measures, surveillance technology, and coordinated response systems. This shift has been accompanied by growing national awareness of food security and the strategic importance of protecting agricultural production.
Links:
• https://www.news24.com/news24/southafrica/
• https://www.afriforum.co.za
Department of Agriculture Shake-Up
Prophecy number: 11
Original prophecy:
A shakeup in the National Department of Agriculture will lead to cleansing, renewed focus, improved access for farmers, and government incentives for farming.
Fulfilment:
The Department of Agriculture underwent administrative restructuring, leadership changes, and policy realignment that improved engagement with farmers and sector stakeholders. Access to departmental offices, incentive programmes, and financing mechanisms for emerging and commercial farmers improved compared to prior years, signalling a reset in institutional focus.
Links:
• https://www.dalrrd.gov.za
• https://www.gov.za/news
Departmental Clean-Up and Ethical Leadership
Prophecy number: 12
Original prophecy:
A new agriculture minister with biblical values will drive a clean-up focused on farmers’ needs.
Fulfilment:
Leadership transitions within the agriculture portfolio introduced stronger ethical oversight, renewed accountability, and practical engagement with farmer concerns. Policy emphasis shifted toward service delivery, transparency, and restoring trust between government and the agricultural sector.
Links:
• https://www.gov.za
• https://www.businesslive.co.za
Improved Disaster Relief for Farmers
Prophecy number: 13
Original prophecy:
Farmers affected by disasters such as fires and floods will find it easier to access departmental assistance.
Fulfilment:
Disaster-relief mechanisms for agriculture were streamlined, enabling faster access to emergency funding, feed relief, and rehabilitation support. Farmers impacted by floods, droughts, and fires reported improved response times compared to previous disaster cycles.
Links:
• https://www.dalrrd.gov.za
• https://www.news24.com/news24/southafrica/
Agricultural Indabas with Actionable Outcomes
Prophecy number: 14
Original prophecy:
Government agriculture indabas will occur more regularly with concrete resolutions and fewer false promises.
Fulfilment:
National and provincial agricultural indabas increased in frequency and produced clearer resolutions tied to implementation frameworks. Engagement between government, industry bodies, and farmers shifted toward measurable outcomes rather than aspirational commitments.
Links:
• https://www.gov.za
• https://www.farmersweekly.co.za
Export Growth and Logistical Pressure
Prophecy number: 15
Original prophecy:
Agricultural exports will increase rapidly, creating management and logistical crises, especially in citrus and fresh produce.
Fulfilment:
South Africa experienced growth in agricultural exports, particularly citrus and fresh produce, which exposed bottlenecks in port capacity, logistics, and cold-chain management. Export volumes outpaced infrastructure readiness, forcing urgent negotiations and operational adjustments.
Links:
• https://www.transnet.net
• https://www.engineeringnews.co.za
Export Losses Due to Timing and Market Shifts
Prophecy number: 16
Original prophecy:
Farmers will lose harvests due to export delays and changing export destinations.
Fulfilment:
Delays at ports and shifting international trade conditions resulted in export losses for certain producers, despite strong harvests. Farmers were compelled to seek alternative markets and adapt product specifications, confirming vulnerability within export-dependent supply chains.
Links:
• https://www.businesslive.co.za
• https://www.farmersweekly.co.za
Food Security Pressure and Media Attention
Prophecy number: 17
Original prophecy:
Food security concerns will rise as farmers receive lower prices while carrying national feeding responsibility.
Fulfilment:
Rising input costs and compressed farm-gate prices placed pressure on producers, elevating national discourse around food security. Media coverage increasingly highlighted the strategic role of farmers and the risks posed by declining agricultural profitability.
Links:
• https://www.news24.com/fin24
• https://mg.co.za
Agriculture as a Source of Job Security
Prophecy number: 18
Original prophecy:
Agriculture will provide job security and attract international investment.
Fulfilment:
Despite broader economic strain, agriculture remained a relatively stable employer, supported by foreign investment in production, processing, and export infrastructure. These investments reinforced agriculture’s role as a foundational contributor to employment and economic resilience.
Links:
• https://www.businesslive.co.za
• https://www.dalrrd.gov.za
Political Pressure for Land Grabs
Prophecy number: 19
Original prophecy:
Political pressure for land grabs will intensify, with threats of violence against farms.
Fulfilment:
Land-expropriation rhetoric intensified within political discourse, accompanied by heightened tension in agricultural regions. Threats of unrest and intimidation, particularly in viticultural areas, increased pressure on farm operations and security planning.
Links:
•https://www.news24.com/news24/southafrica/
• https://www.politicsweb.co.za
Leadership Emergence in Agriculture
Prophecy number: 20
Original prophecy:
A farmer-rooted leader will emerge, implementing ethical systems and restoring confidence in agriculture.
Fulfilment:
Sector leadership increasingly reflected practical farming experience, ethical contracting, and anti-corruption emphasis. These leaders improved confidence across agricultural value chains and strengthened cooperation between producers, processors, and government.
Links:
• https://www.agrisa.co.za
• https://www.farmersweekly.co.za
Micro-Farming in Communities
Prophecy number: 21
Original prophecy:
Micro-planting projects will start in homes and expand to supply local grocery stores.
Fulfilment:
Community-based micro-farming initiatives expanded in townships and peri-urban areas, with households producing vegetables and herbs that fed into informal traders and small retail outlets. Collaboration with experienced farmers improved yields and market access, embedding micro-farming into local food economies.
Links:
• https://www.groundup.org.za
• https://www.dalrrd.gov.za
Northern Cape Protection and Agricultural Growth
Prophecy number: 22
Original Prophecy:
The Northern Cape will experience protection, agricultural restoration, strong sheep farming, and growth in wind harvesting.
Fulfilment:
The Northern Cape recorded stability and growth in livestock farming, particularly sheep production, supported by improved land management and favourable conditions. Renewable-energy investment, especially wind projects linked to agricultural land use, expanded significantly, contributing to regional economic resilience.
Links:
• https://www.engineeringnews.co.za
• https://www.farmersweekly.co.za
Northern Hemisphere Agricultural Strain
Prophecy number: 23
Original prophecy:
Agricultural challenges in the Northern Hemisphere will create export opportunities for South African farmers.
Fulfilment:
Weather disruptions and production challenges in key Northern Hemisphere regions reduced output of certain fruits and crops, creating supply gaps. South African exporters capitalised on these conditions by increasing market pe*******on and expanding export volumes.
Links:
• https://www.fao.org
• https://www.businesslive.co.za
Overseas Farming Opportunities for Youth
Prophecy number: 24
Original prophecy:
Young South Africans will increasingly farm overseas, including Germany for winemaking.
Fulfilment :
A growing number of young South Africans pursued overseas agricultural placements, particularly in Europe and North America. Germany emerged as a key destination for viticulture training, reflecting structured exchange programmes and skills migration trends.
Links:
• https://www.farmersweekly.co.za
• https://www.daad.de
Call to Praise and Spiritual Stewardship
Prophecy number: 25
Original prophecy:
Farmers are instructed to stop complaining, praise God, and rededicate their land.
Fulfilment:
Amid prolonged pressure, farmer gatherings increasingly emphasised mental resilience, gratitude, and stewardship. Faith-based farming networks reported improved morale and cooperative problem-solving where intentional spiritual and emotional support was prioritised.
Links:
• https://www.agrisa.co.za
• https://www.farmersweekly.co.za