For Nelile Simelane, faith was not something she discovered later in life, it was something she grew up in. Raised in a Zion church background, she recalls how her childhood was firmly rooted in religious routine.
“I grew up in church, my mother made sure that we attended Sunday school as well as the main service without fail,” she shares. Like many children raised in a Christian environment, Simelane believed that consistent church attendance was enough to define her relationship with God. To her, being present every Sunday meant she was on the right path.
This belief remained unchallenged until a turning point came at the end of her primary school years. After completing Grade VII, her family faced financial difficulties and could not afford her high school fees.
Instead of continuing her education immediately, she took on work as a nanny for the grandchild of her former Grade 1 teacher.
It was during this period that her life began to take a different direction.
While working there, she joined a Free Evangelical Church. It was here that she encountered a message that would redefine her understanding of faith.
“The pastor preached about accepting Jesus as your Lord and Saviour,” she recalls. “He said even if you think you are a good person and go to church every day, without a personal relationship with Jesus, you will not benefit from the things of God.” Those words struck a chord. In October 2003, Simelane made a life-altering decision.
“That is where I accepted Jesus Christ as my Lord and Saviour,” she says.
From that moment, everything changed.
Just two months later, in December of the same year, another breakthrough followed.
Her pastor, A.M. Shabangu, together with his late wife, stepped in and adopted her.
They took her back to school and supported her through her educational journey.
“They took care of me until I went to tertiary level. I stayed with them until I got married,” she says with gratitude.
Her story did not just transform her own life, it marked a significant turning point for her entire family.
“At home, I was the first to get married, the first to graduate and the first to have a formal traditional marriage process (lobola),” she shares.
These milestones, she believes, were not by chance, generational curses were broken. Today, she reflects on her journey with deep conviction and faith.
“My whole life is a testimony that God exists and He is alive,” she says. Despite life’s ups and downs, her faith has remained her anchor. “Even today, I am still holding on to God.
“It has been an awesome journey and it still is,” she added.
Her story stands as a powerful testimony that faith goes beyond routine, it is rooted in a personal relationship, one that can transform not only an individual life, but generations to come.

Nelile Simelane, a woman of unwavering faith grounded in grace, guided by God and glowing with quiet strength. ( Courtesy pic)
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