Tag: Easter

  • Easter: Police assure FCT residents of peaceful festivity

    Easter: Police assure FCT residents of peaceful festivity

    The Federal Capital Territory Police Command, says it has deployed human and material resources across its nooks and crannies to ensure that residents enjoy the Easter celebration.

    The Police Public Relations Officer, FCT Command, SP Josephine Adeh, gave this assurance in a statement on Friday in Abuja.

    Adeh said the Command deployed intelligence and tactical assets at the command’s disposal to reduce crime.

    She said the police were deployed through intelligence gathering to worship centres and social gatherings and they would also be on stop and search duty, intelligence-led raids on black spots, highway, border patrol, aggressive vehicular and foot patrol as well as surveillance, inter-agency collaboration and sundry.

    She said that with the efforts, the Commissioner of Police, FCT, AIG Sadiq Abubakar, wishes to assure the territory of the command’s unwavering commitment to ensure a safe and peaceful environment during the Easter celebration and beyond.

    The spokesperson further said the commissioner, while briefing senior officers from all units and formations of the command on the Operation Order, charged them to ensure that no stone was left unturned in the discharge of their duties in tandem with global best practices and respect for fundamental human rights.

    “He enjoined residents to embrace peace and other virtues in the spirit of the festivity as they join the Christian faithfuls across the world in the celebration.

    “He also called for vigilance and urged residents to take advantage of the Police Control Room numbers in reporting suspicious activities: 08032003913, 08061581938, 07057337653, and 08028940883,” she said.

  • Own your Easter – By Francis Ewherido

    Own your Easter – By Francis Ewherido

    Last Sunday was Palm Sunday. Yesterday was Good Friday. Today is Holy Saturday and tomorrow is Easter Sunday. The season of lent with the Holy Week officially ends today. Beyond the significance of the Holy Week, it reminds us of various aspects of our lives: our triumphs, sacrifices, self-denials, delayed gratifications, stooping to conquer, achieving goals and the fulfilment that comes with achieving these goals, and wearing the crown of victory at the end of the race. 

    Many of us have had times in our lives when we were celebrated. Some held positions which enabled them to dispense favours. At festive times like this, gifts and goodwill messages come in torrents; hampers and greeting cards would be everywhere. 

    Our phones are permanently busy when holding high positions. Our waiting rooms in the office are filled from morning until close of work. During our birthdays, birthday adverts would flood the newspapers. This goes on and on until we leave our positions. Then the triumphal entry jubilations and the hosanna come to an end as it did for Jesus after the triumphant entry. That is the fate that awaits some governors and some others holding political positions after May 29. In some government houses, the number of visitors and favour-seekers has started reducing. On their next birthday, the only birthday adverts you will see are from family members and grateful beneficiaries of the man’s goodwill while in office. The majority of those who benefited simply move on just as some of the Jews moved on. 

    It happens to people in the private sector too. Some of the celebrated CEOs of big companies in the past now live lonely lives. A few have even cried out aloud in newspapers of being abandoned by friends. Not to worry, Jesus was denied and abandoned at a critical time. People taste this bitter pill in varying degrees at some point in life.

    Before you get to a position where you would be celebrated, you would have made sacrifices and stooped conquer, just as Jesus did. At some points in life, you suffer rejection and get humiliated. You are forced to eat humble pies and do so many things you would ordinarily not do just to achieve your goals. Marketers and insurance agents are very familiar with what I am talking about. Basically, no pain, no gain. Jesus exemplified this by dying on the cross to save mankind. But if he had not risen on the third day, his sufferings and death would have amounted to nothing. Jesus arose from the dead and that is the monumental event we shall celebrate tomorrow. After our toils, sufferings, humiliation, let us also experience our own Easter. Own your Easter so that your joy would be complete.

    NUDE PREGNANT WOMEN  

    The first time I saw it, I was thrown off balance. I had never seen anything like it and I did not even know how to react. A pregnant married Nigerian woman posing nude for the whole world to see? Where are her in-laws? What about her family? Where is her husband? Why am I asking? I have seen photos with the husbands, also naked or partly naked on social media. Who took photos alongside their pregnant spouses? They were probably taken by professional photographers because many of them were taken in the studio and look like a pro job.  The women use their hands to cover their privates to confer modesty on full blown nudity. That is unnecessary. Your bulging tummy has already covered your privates.

    Make no mistake about it, these women are not trying to bring back those days when our forebears wore just enough to cover their privates. This trend is an imported culture. Here you know we import foreign cultures wholesale; the good, the bad and the very ugly. I noticed nude pregnant photos first with foreign celebrities. The first recorded celebrity to pose nude while pregnant is Demi Moore. Others like Mariah Carey, Serena Williams and not surprising Kourtney Kardashian of the Kardashian Clan have posed nude while pregnant. They were paid huge fees or they wanted the world to know that they are carrying the pregnancy, not going into motherhood through surrogate mothers. You know anything celebrities touch spreads like harmattan fire. Before long, it became a fashion trend. That is what some pregnant women in Nigeria are currently copying. 

    But do they need to prove that they are pregnant by going nude? I don’t think so. An aunt of mine, my father’s cousin, got pregnant at 48years when the world had given up on her. She travelled all the way from Warri to Ozoro, where we were living then, lifted her blouse to show my mother the good news and that it was real, not clothes stuffed around her body to make her look pregnant. The wife of my mother’s cousin also did the same thing. She had also been written off as barren. She wanted my mother to be an “oseri” (witness) just in case a Doubting Thomas arose. That was how women proved in my time that they were pregnant, not nudity.

    Beyond herd mentality, maybe they want people feel they are stunning while pregnant. They are always well groomed and their skins glow. They probably also want to change the mind-set of some people that the only beautiful thing about a pregnant woman is the baby growing in her womb. I had that mind-set too, but before you crucify me here me out. In those days of communal life, there were women who looked terrible during pregnancy. They were dishevelled and spat all over the area where they sat or laid down. Some of them had difficult pregnancies though. 

    Before then, I had bad experiences with pregnant women. When I was under five years old (I am very sure because I had not started primary school), what can be termed child abuse in today’s world happened a few times. When my mother was not around, one pregnant neighbour took me to her house and locked the door for what seemed like eternity then. She said that she wanted the unborn baby to look like me. How? My DNA dey there? Another pregnant woman would deliberately stretch out her legs for me to walk across them when I am passing. We were brought up to believe that it is a taboo and must be undone by walking across the outstretched legs again in the opposite direction. When I tried to do that, she would refuse. Breaking a taboo was very distressing for my young mind. So I grew up suspicious of pregnant women. I considered them ugly, unkempt and wicked. Never mind it did not apply to my mother because she was different. In truth, I was anxious when I was preparing to get married. I wondered if I would be able to love my wife when she is pregnant. After six pregnancies (we lost one) it’s much ado about nothing. 

    Back to the nude pregnant women. I am old fashioned. I will never get used to it. But in a world where relativism reigns, does it really matter what my opinion is? Enjoy the Easter celebration and holiday.

  • Easter: Why Holy Communion is compulsory for all Christians – Cleric

    Easter: Why Holy Communion is compulsory for all Christians – Cleric

    Pastor Timothy Bakare, the Superintendent for Christ Apostolic Church, Iloro District Coordinating Council (DCC), has stressed that Holy Communion is compulsory for all Christians.

    Bakare stated this on Thursday, during the Holy Communion Service at Christ Apostolic Church, Iloro District Coordinating Council (DCC), Pedro Street, Iloro Area, Ile-Ife.

    He said “whenever we are observing this service, we are using it to proclaim the gospel of Christ and win souls for Him.”

    According to him, anyone taking the bread and drinking the wine unworthy, would fall sick spiritually and physically.

    He explained that Christians are swallowing Christ when taking Holy Communion, for Christ is the living bread. There is no assurance of eternity for any Christians that didn’t take Holy Communion.

    “Bread is Heavenly food once sanctified, for Christ Himself is the Heavenly food.

    “For he is the bread which came down from heaven, he that eats of this bread shall live forever.

    “Whosoever eats my flesh and drinks my Blood have eternal life and I will raise him up at the last day,”  the Cleric expressed.

    Pastor Bakare stated that there’ll be two ressurections – those that believed and take Holy Communion to eternal life and others to eternal doom.

    The Superintendent charged all Christians to always ask for help from above to assure their living in Christ.

    Quoting from the bible, he said Jesus instructed “He that eats my flesh and drink my blood dwells in me, and I in him; abide in me and I in you, as the branch cannot bear fruit on itself, except it abides in the vine, no more can he, except he abide in me.

    “I am the vine, ye are the branches: He that abides in me; and I in Him, the same bring forthmuch fruit; for without me, ye can do nothing,” he quoted Jesus as saying.

    The Cleric admonished Chrisitians to eschew all immoralities, for sinners are taking it to death, but saint into everlasting life.

  • Spotify reveals top 10 Nigerian Easter gospel songs

    Spotify reveals top 10 Nigerian Easter gospel songs

    Spotify, a global online streaming platform, has revealed the top ten Nigerian Easter favourite gospel music.

    Victor Okpala, Artist and Label Partnerships Manager, West Africa for Spotify, in a statement on Thursday said that data from the platform showed listenership trends around gospel music from Nigeria during Easter paint an interesting picture.

    He said the songs were: Worthy of My Soul (Worthy of It All) by Chandler Moore; Maverick City Gospel Choir;  Maverick City Music and Phil Wickman.

    Others are Adom Grace by Diana Hamilton; Onaga (It’s Working) by JJ Hairston, Tim Godfrey and Youthful Praise; You Waited by Travis Greene; For Your Glory (Live) by Tasha Cobbs Leonard; King of Kings by Chandler Moore; Be Lifted (Live) by MOGMusic; You Know My Name by Jimi Cravity and Tasha Cobbs Leonard; Your Spirit by Kierra Sheard and Tasha Cobbs Leonard and Won’t Let Go by Travis Greene.

    According to him, Nigerian artistes’ music has travelled far and wide, and as Easter comes nearer, becomes a source of upliftment to fans in multiple territories.

    “Spotify data shows that Nigerians listen to more gospel music during the Easter period.

    “Data from Spotify reveals that certain songs strike a chord among listeners uniquely during the Easter period, leading to massive spikes in listenership during the holiday.

    “Of the Easter favorites among Nigerians, Chandler Moore’s Worthy of My Song (Worthy of It All) saw a 43 per cent  increase in streams during the Easter season in past years.

    “It is followed by Diana Hamilton’s Adom Grace which inspired a 30 per cent spike during Easter,” he  said.

    Okpala also listed the top ten Nigerian gospel exports in the last one year.

    He said these included: Kumama Papa by Grace Lokwa; Moses Bliss and Prinx Emmanuel; Nara by Tim Godfrey, and Travis Greene.

    Okpala said others were: God Turned It Around by Nathaniel Bassey; Tim Bowman Jr and Tim Godfrey; His Words by Grace Tena; Mighty God (Remix) by Joe Praize and Soweto Gospel Choir; Dansaki by Lara George; I’m Good by Sal Ly; Most Beautiful by Grace Tena; My God by Grace Lokwa and Moses Bliss and Evidence by Tim Godfrey.

    “Nigerian gospel is a very special offering that combines local sensibilities with the exalting message and belief of a global faith.

    “We are excited to deliver those songs alongside Gospel essentials from the world over as part of this unique experience to inspire the faithful during this important celebration.

    “Nigerian music is one of the country’s most popular exports, even more so during the streaming era.

    “In keeping with this trend, some of our favorite local gospel songs have also found massive global audiences outside Nigeria, and become big music exports enjoyed by Christians around the world.

    “Kumama Papa by Grace Lokwa, Moses Bliss and Prinx Emmanuel is the most exported of the bunch.

    ”According to Spotify data, more than half of its streams come from the UK, United States, Ghana, France, Canada and Kenya,” he said.

  • Easter: Osun Govt offers indigenes free train ride from Lagos

    Easter: Osun Govt offers indigenes free train ride from Lagos

    The Osun Government on Wednesday announced a free train ride for its indigenes willing to travel from Lagos to Osogbo during the Easter.

    This is contained in a statement by Malam Olawale Rasheed, the Spokesperson to Gov. Ademola Adeleke, on Wednesday in Osogbo.

    The state government said that the free train service will depart the Iddo-Terminus in Lagos on Thursday by 10am, with stop-overs at designated train stations in Ogun and Oyo States to pick passengers.

    It said the train is expected to arrive at the Nelson Mandela Park Train Station at Osogbo by 6p.m, while the return trip from Osogbo to Lagos will be on Monday by 10a.m.

    The Imole Free Train Service, the government said, is designed to provide relief to citizens of the state travelling home to celebrate with their loved ones.

    The state government enjoined citizens to maximise the advantage the free train ride offers them to visit home and enjoy the celebration.

  • BREAKING: FG announces public holidays for Easter

    BREAKING: FG announces public holidays for Easter

    The Federal Government has declared Friday, April 7 and Monday, April 10 as public holidays for the 2023 Easter celebration.

    This is contained in a statement on Wednesday in Abuja, by the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Intrerior, Dr Shuaib Belgore.

    Belgore said that the Minister of Interior, Rauf Aregbesola, made the declaration on behalf of the federal government.

    Aregbesola urged Christian faithful to emulate the virtues of sacrifice, togetherness, forgiveness, Kindness love peace and patience which were attributes and practices of Jesus Christ, as exemplified by His ministry on the earth.

    He also called on Nigerians to use the occasion to pray for an end to the security challenges in some parts of the country, adding that security was everybody’s business.

    He also enjoined them to love their neighbours through acts of kindness and generosity of spirit, with the well to do sharing their substance with the less privileged around them.

    He urged Nigerians and foreigners resident in the country to display high sense of citizenship and public spiritedness by supporting the efforts of the security agencies.

    This the minister said was with a view to ensure peace and security of lives and property of Nigerians.

    He said that the federal government was doing all that was necessary in ensuring a peaceful transition of government following the peaceful conduct of the 2023 general elections.

    “The nation is persistently on the part to greatness and I urge all Nigerians to positively deploy their creative energy to the full realisation of the coming prosperity, as there is surely light at the end of the tunnel,” he said.

    The minister wished all Christian faithful a most blissful celebration and all Nigerians a happy holiday.

  • Sterling Bank faces sanction over distasteful Easter message

    Sterling Bank faces sanction over distasteful Easter message

    The Advertising Practitioners Council of Nigeria (APCON) has said it will sanction Sterling Bank Plc for a distasteful message the bank shared to commemorate 2022 Easter celebrations.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Dr. Olalekan Fadolapo, Registrar/Chief Executive of APCON made this known in a statement on Monday.

    Easter went sour for Sterling Bank after the bank posted on it’s social media pages an Easter message with the writing “Like Agege Bread, He Rose”.

    APCON stated that the advertisement, described as distasteful, was neither submitted nor approved for exposure by the statutory panel charged with the responsibility of ensuring that advertisements conform with the prevailing laws.

    The statement reads: “The Advertising Practitioners Council of Nigeria (APCON] has observed with displeasure the insensitive and provocative Easter celebration advertisement by Sterling Bank Plc which compared the resurrection of Christ with Agege Bread.

    “The distasteful advertisement was neither submitted nor approved for exposure by the Advertising Standards Panel (ASP), the statutory Panel charged with the responsibility of ensuring that advertisements conform with the prevailing laws of the federation as well as the code of ethics of Advertising in Nigeria.

    “APCON will take necessary actions to ensure that Sterling Bank is sanctioned for the exposure of such offensive advertisement according to law and that no religious belief or faith is ridiculed or any blasphemous advertisement exposed in any guise”.

  • 2022 Easter message by Bishop Matthew Kukah

    2022 Easter message by Bishop Matthew Kukah

    The Catholic Bishop of Sokoto Diocese, Matthew Kukah, did not mince words during his Easter message as he lampooned President Muhammadu Buhari administration of having shown far greater commitment to integrating so-called repentant terrorists than getting school children and thousands of others back from kidnappers or keeping Nigerian universities open.

    Homes are broken. Churches, Mosques, and infrastructure are broken. Our educational system is broken. Our children’s lives and future are broken. Our politics is broken. Our economy is broken. Our energy system is broken. Our security system is broken. Our Roads and Rails are broken. Only corruption is alive and well

     

    His message, where he accused the President of having broken every aspect of Nigerians’ lives, was entitled, “To MEND A BROKEN NATION: THE EASTER METAPHOR.” It was dated April 17.

     

    It reads in full:

    Hello brothers and sisters in Christ, men and women of goodwill everywhere, I send you hearty greetings and felicitations as we celebrate the risen Christ. Easter is here again. For all Christians, Easter is a metaphor for our lives as individuals, families, communities or nations.

     

    Easter is a metaphor for how shame, scandal, powerlessness, weakness, and opprobrium suddenly transform into glory, honour, pre-eminence, laudation and applause.

    The real challenge before us now is to look beyond politics and face the challenge of forming character and faith in our country

    It is a fulfillment of what the Master himself had foretold when He said, ‘Unless a grain of wheat falls on the ground and dies, it remains only a single grain, but if it dies, it bears much fruit’ (Jn. 12: 24). And the Psalmist had said, ‘Those who sow in tears will sing when they reap.’ (Ps. 126:5).

     

    The crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus are central to the Christian faith and yet, as St Paul said, ‘We preach Christ crucified, a scandal to the Jews and nonsense to the Gentiles’ (1 Cor. 1: 23). St Paul continues: ‘What seems to be God’s foolishness is wiser than human wisdom and God’s weakness is stronger than human strength’ (1 Cor. 1:25).

     

    Without the claims of the resurrection of Jesus Christ, millions of people would be Christian today. As with the times of Jesus, the very idea is preposterous and incomprehensible yet St. Paul still insists that ‘If Christ has not been raised, then our faith is a delusion and we are still in our sins’ (1 Cor. 15:17). It is faith in the resurrection of Christ that inspires us Christians to hold firmly to the fact that, like the people of Israel, our dry bones shall rise again (Ez. 37: 11).

    As a priest, I cannot be against a repentant sinner or criminals changing their ways

    Our dear country, Nigeria, still totters and wobbles as we screech towards a dangerous and avoidable canyon of dry bones. Nonetheless, we still cling to hope, a hope in the resurrected Christ, knowing as St. Paul said, ‘this hope does not disappoint us’ (Rm.5:5).

     

    Nigerians can no longer recognise their country which has been battered and buffeted by men and women from the dark womb of time. It is no longer necessary to ask how we got here. The real challenge is how to find the slippery rungs on the ladder of ascent so we can climb out. Yet, we ask, ascend to where? For us as Christians, ascent is to the loving embrace of the resurrected Christ who is Lord of history.

    It is hard to know whether the problem is that those in power do not hear, see, feel, know, or just don’t care

    One would be tempted to ask, what is there to say about our tragic situation today that has not been said? Who is there to speak that has not spoken? Like the friends of Job, we stare at an imponderable tragedy as the nation unravels from all sides. The government has slid into hibernation mode.

     

    It is hard to know whether the problem is that those in power do not hear, see, feel, know, or just don’t care. Either way, from this crossroad, we must make a choice, to go forward, turn left or right or return home. None of these choices are easy, yet, guided by the light of the risen Christ, we can reclaim our country from its impending slide to anarchy.

     

    The greatest challenge now is how to begin a process of reconstructing our nation hoping that we can hang on and survive the 2023 elections. The real challenge before us now is to look beyond politics and face the challenge of forming character and faith in our country.

    The greatest challenge for Nigeria is not even the 2023 elections

    Here, leaders of religion, Christianity and Islam, need to truthfully face the role of religion in the survival of our country. The Nigerian Constitution has very clearly delineated the fine boundaries between religion and politics. Yet many politicians continue to behave as if they are presiding over both the political and the spiritual realms in their states rather than governing in a Democracy.

     

    This conflict between Caesar and God is inbuilt in faith and is part of world history. Many religious leaders often measure their power by how close they are to Caesar, yet Caesar’s embrace is often full of thorns. The challenge is for the religious leader to know that both Caesar and those he represents are answerable to God who created them.

     

    The welfare of citizens constitutes the cornerstone for measuring the legitimacy of any political leader. As such, religious leaders must focus more on the issues of welfare, safety and security of ordinary citizens. They must raise their voice when these rights are being trampled upon. A leader must know when to call Caesar a fox and not a horse (Lk. 13:32).

    We cannot continue to pretend that there are no religious undertones to the violence

    The greatest challenge for Nigeria is not even the 2023 elections. It is the prospect for the reconciliation of our people. Here, the Buhari administration sadly has divided our people on the basis of ethnicity, religion, and region, in a way that we have never witnessed in our history.

     

    This carefully choreographed agenda has made Nigerians vulnerable and ignited the most divisive form of identity consciousness among our people. Years of friendships, cultural exchange, and collaboration built over time have now come under serious pressure from stereotyping. Notwithstanding these challenges, religious leaders must recover and deploy their moral authority and avoid falling victim to the schemes of politicians and their material enticements.

     

    Today, the values of Interfaith dialogue have come under severe strain and pressure with extremists from both sides of our faiths denigrating the idea of dialogue with their counterparts of other faiths. Ignorance and miseducation have combined with prejudice to create the falsehood that somehow, one religion is superior to the others. With so many ill equipped fraudsters posing as religious leaders, there is an obsession with defaming others and widening our differences.

     

    Religious leaders must face the reality that here in Nigeria and elsewhere around the world, millions of people are leaving Christianity and Islam. While we are busy building walls of division with the blocks of prejudice, our members are becoming atheists but we prefer to pretend that we do not see this. We cannot pretend not to hear the footsteps of our faithful who are marching away into atheism and secularism. No threats can stop this, but dialogue can open our hearts.

     

    Thank God, in the last few years, we have had some good news from outside the shores of Nigeria. The most noteworthy is the initiative undertaken by both Pope Francis and the Grand Imam of Al-Azhar Mosque, Egypt, Shaikh Mohammed Al-Tayeb in 2019, when both of them met and signed the Document on Human Fraternity.

    It seems that the federal government has shown far greater commitment to integrating so called repentant terrorists than getting our children back from kidnappers or keeping our universities open

    Pope Francis followed up with the publication of an Encyclical titled, Fratelli Tutti, We are all Brothers, in 2020. The following year, the United Nations’ General Assembly declared February 4, World Day of Fraternity. Both leaders agreed that: ‘We need to develop the awareness that nowadays, we are either all saved together or no one is saved. Poverty, decadence, and suffering in one part of the earth are a silent breeding ground for problems that will end up affecting our entire planet.’

     

    We need to start thinking of a Nigeria beyond banditry and kidnapping and the endless circles of violence that have engulfed our communities and nation. We cannot continue to pretend that there are no religious undertones to the violence in the name of God that has given our religions a bad name.

     

    The way out is for the state to enforce the secular status of the Nigerian state so as to give citizens the necessary freedoms from the shackles of semi-feudal confusion over the status of religion and the state in a plural Democracy. We must be ready to embrace modernity and work out how to preserve our religions and cultures without turning religion into a tool for tyranny, exclusion, and oppression.

    It speaks volumes when the President and his military hierarchy choose to believe these young men who took up arms

    In finding our way forward, the President must concede that it is within his powers to decide how we are going to end the war that has engulfed and is tearing down our nation. It seems that the federal government has shown far greater commitment to integrating so called repentant terrorists than getting our children back from kidnappers or keeping our universities open.

     

    Earlier last month, Operation Safe Corridor announced that it had graduated 599 members of various terrorist groups who have acquired new skills and are now ready to be integrated into society.

     

    The total comes to over a thousand now. It is plausible to note that the programme involves psycho-social support, rehabilitation, vocational training, skill acquisition and start-ups. Despite all this, the larger issue is that their various communities have expressed their reluctance to receive their erring sons back.

     

    Nigerians have no access to the transcripts of the texts of the confessions of these terrorists not to talk of evidence of their commitment to not sin again. We have only the words of the terrorists and the same military that they have been fighting a war with.

    Are we to assume that they (terrorists) have become acknowledged models for Nigerian youth?

    It speaks volumes when the President and his military hierarchy choose to believe these young men who took up arms and for years waged war against their country, killed, maimed and wasted thousands of lives, destroyed entire communities and now, they are being housed, fed, clothed with public funds. All this while their victims have been forced to make the various IDP camps their new homes! Where is the justice for the victims and the rest of the country they have destroyed?

     

    As a priest, I cannot be against a repentant sinner or criminals changing their ways. After all, the doors of forgiveness must always remain open. However, in this case, Nigerians have very little information as to the entire rehabilitation processes. Have these terrorists felt the heat or have they seen the light or, is their repentance a mere strategic and tactical repositioning? So far, we have no evidence that these terrorists have been able to confront their victims not to talk of seeking forgiveness from them.

     

    Something is wrong. We see these terrorists adorned in our national colours in their green and white kaftans, trousers, and looking like heroes of the state! Are we to assume that they have become acknowledged models for Nigerian youth? Perhaps the next graduating set might be treated to Presidential handshakes, receptions at the villa with full national colours!

     

    Only last week, as if in delayed solidarity, the Jama’atu Nasril Islam, JNI, in a Statement stated that: ‘It appears that the continuous callous acts of mayhem, killings and arson happening almost on daily or weekly bases around us; either within communities or on the roads we ply, has automatically reset our human psyche that we now have accepted such dastardly acts as part of our lives, to the extent that we no longer feel it.

    Our humanity is being eroded and that erosion is becoming a new normal

    Any government that is incapable of protecting the lives of its citizens has lost the moral justification of being there in the first place. Our humanity is being eroded and that erosion is becoming a new normal. Similarly, the Northern Elders Forum, NEF, and the House of Representatives have finally called on the President to resign since, in their view, it is now clear that he cannot protect his citizens. This has come three years after the Catholic Bishops’ Statement issued on April 26th, 2018 made the same call that was greeted with cynicism.

     

    The challenge of fixing this broken nation is enormous and, as I have said, requires joint efforts. With everything literally broken down, our country has become one big emergency national hospital with full occupancy. Our individual hearts are broken. Our family dreams are broken.

    The next President of Nigeria must be a man or woman with a heart, a sense of empathy and a soul on fire

    Homes are broken. Churches, Mosques, and infrastructure are broken. Our educational system is broken. Our children’s lives and future are broken. Our politics is broken. Our economy is broken. Our energy system is broken. Our security system is broken. Our Roads and Rails are broken. Only corruption is alive and well. So, we ask with the Psalmist, We look up to the hills, from where shall come our help? Our help shall come from the name of the Lord (Ps. 121:2).

     

    2023 beckons and the stage is set. The challenge is whether we have learnt any lessons from the tragedy that has afflicted us in the last few years. The Presidency of Nigeria is not a human right based on ethnic, religious or regional sentiments.

     

    The next President of Nigeria must be a man or woman with a heart, a sense of empathy and a soul on fire that can set limits to what human indignities visited on citizens that he or she can tolerate. We have no need for any further empty messianic rhetoric laced with deceitful and grandiose religiosity. We need someone who can fix our broken nation, rid our people of the looming dangers of hunger and destitution.

     

    Our Presidential aspirants must show evidence from their legacies and antecedents that they know the country well enough and its severe wounds. Whoever wants to govern us must illustrate that he or she understands what has turned our nation into a national hospital and show us plans for our discharge from this horror. Support for INEC and its infrastructure is fundamental to a free and fair election and we condemn in very strong terms all those criminals who continue to threaten the society with violence. They should meet the full force of the law.

     

    I thank the President for accepting the report of the Committee on the Prerogative of Mercy and granting pardon to over 150 Nigerians serving various terms of imprisonment. The more serious challenge is to immediately free all innocent Nigerians who are held captive and whose only crime is that they are living in Nigerians.

    We Christians believe that to redeem the world, Christ allowed His body to be broken. We know He can heal our broken nation

    With the news of the purchase of new sophisticated weapons, we hope that the President and the military will quickly roll out a strategy for routing this cancer that has afflicted our country. The general feeling is that the military has the capacity to end this tragedy. In reality, the military cannot fire beyond the radar set by their commander-in-chief. If the President can end this tragedy, he will immediately get the support of all citizens and hopefully leave office with his head held high.

     

    We cannot end this Message without sparing a thought for the untold sufferings being experienced by the people of Ukraine as a result of the invasion of their country by Russia. We turn in prayer to the Lord to touch the hearts and minds of those in power and in position to reverse this avoidable loss of human lives. May the spirit of the resurrected Christ and the appeals of all men and women of good will help to bring an end to this human tragedy.

     

    Finally, in the last few years, my Messages have been borne out of a sense of moral revulsion over how life has been destroyed in my country. No country anywhere in the world is undergoing these self-inflicted wounds, citizens randomly murdering innocent citizens and getting away with it. For me as a Christian, there is a minimum threshold of human indignity that I can live with because the reason why Jesus came is so that all of us will have life and have it to the full (Jn. 10:10).

     

    We must shout at what diminishes any and every life in our society. Once human dignity is respected and restored, we will change our tone, but for now, our voice must have a sense of urgency. We Christians believe that to redeem the world, Christ allowed His body to be broken. We know He can heal our broken nation. May the light of His resurrection scatter the clouds and rout the men of evil, inspire a new birth in our dear nation and restore us to wholeness. A happy Easter to you all.

  • Don’t bring your ill-gotten money to my church – Pastor Muoka

    Don’t bring your ill-gotten money to my church – Pastor Muoka

    General Overseer (GO), The Lord’s Chosen Revival Ministry, Pastor Lazarus Muoka, on Sunday warned his congregants not to bring ill-gotten money to the Church as offerings. He warned that proceeds from fraud and other corrupt practices should not be used as offering to God in the church.

    Speaking at the church’s two-day Easter Retreat, themed: ”Covenant and Blesings” in Lagos, Pastor Muoka said such offerings defile the church and that God does not recognise it.

    Mouka decried corruption in high places, especially in government circles, saying that the problem had affected the country’s development.

    He said it was wrong for people to rob the country and bring the same money to the house of God as gift for blessing.

    “By the time churches and other worship centres begin to preach against such act and decline such, it will send warning signal to perpetrators of such evil.

    “As a people, once we begin to condenm evil no matter how little, things will begin to change for the better.

    “The society is drifting and its reform should begin from the church as custodian of moral standards,” he said.

    Mouka charged Christian faithful to live in love of one another and purity of heart,enjoining them not to be associated with ill-gotten money.

    He said that people should identify those in the society,whose sources of wealth were questionable and distance themselves from them in order not to be corrupted.

  • Easter: Leaders should make sacrifice, initiate policies – Anglican Primate

    Easter: Leaders should make sacrifice, initiate policies – Anglican Primate

    The Primate, Church of Nigeria, Anglican communion, Most Rev. Henry Ndukuba, has urged leaders to make sacrifice and initiate policies that will address challenges in the country.

    Ndukuba , during an Easter message at the Cathedral Church of Advent, Life Camp Abuja on Sunday, said that the country would experience great transformation when leaders at all levels submit themselves to divine authority .

    According to him, the leaders should be ready to place national interest above personal ambition, as the resurrection of Jesus Christ has brought hope to mankind.

    He expressed optimism that the country would rise again and the mercy of God would reign supreme.

    “Nigerians should not allow the present situation affect their positive contributions to nation building,’’ he said.

    On ASUU strike, the clergyman appealed to the Federal Government to resolve the issues amicably with labour leaders for students to return to school for academic activities.

    He advised electorates on the need to vote credible candidates into office in 2023, pointing out that only leaders with the fear of God and love for humanity should be allowed to win the election.

    He said that only leaders that would ensure even distribution of wealth and address youth unemployment should be allowed to win in 2023.