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Wednesday, 22 February 2023

NATION IN PRAYER

Our country is in bad state, only God can help us - Raila

He called out Ruto, his DP for pretending to be praying for the country every Sunday.

In Summary
  • He thanked the clergy who had come to pray with them
  • Raila spoke during the Azimio prayer rally at the Jeevanjee Gardens in Nairobi, on Wednesday.
Azimio principals led by Raila Odinga at Jevanjee garden during the National Prayer Day
Azimio principals led by Raila Odinga at Jevanjee garden during the National Prayer Day
Image: ENOS TECHE

Azimio la Umoja leader Raila Odinga now says that the country under President William Ruto’s leadership is in a bad state.

According to Raila, only God can help Kenyans.

“Today is our prayer day. We agreed as Azimio that we set aside a day to meet Kenyans for prayers and to talk to God. Our country is in a bad state and that is why we are saying only God can help us,” he said.

“I want, on behalf of my fellow leaders here, to thank the clergy who have come to pray for us.”

The former Prime Minister called out President William Ruto and his deputy Rigathi Gachagua for pretending to be holding prayer rallies, yet they continue to do 'bad things'. 

"Every Sunday they go to church pretending to be praying but they do a lot of evil after that," he said.

Raila spoke during the Azimio prayer rally at the Jeevanjee Gardens in Nairobi, on Wednesday.

LINK:  https://www.the-star.co.ke/news/2023-02-22-our-country-is-in-bad-state-only-god-can-help-us-raila/

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Monday, 20 February 2023

CALLING ON GOD

Naira, Fuel Scarcity: Remain Calm, Keep Faith in God, Cleric Appeals to Nigerians

Hammed Shittu in Ilorin

The National Amir and Spiritual Leader of Daaru-r-Rahmat  (DARMAT) Islamic Society of Nigeria, Imaam Muali Musbahudeen Olawale, has appealed to Nigerians to continue  to remain calm and keep faith in God view of the current situation in the country.
Speaking with journalists in Ilorin, at the weekend, following protests that greeted some parts of the country over shortage of new naira notes and fuel scarcity, Olawale said, “though the situation was worrisome and sympathetic, but this is our country and we should avoid anything that may lead to the breaking of law and order.”


He said: “It is disheartening to note that the current situation came at the time the country is still facing economic challenges and this present situation has compounded the sufferings of the masses.
“The ugly development has caused a lot of havoc in the life of the wellbeing of the people to the extent that, meeting ends meet at this period is really unbearable.


“Many household and families have been put into serious sufferings despite the fact that they could not pay the children schools fees talk less of meeting the families’ obligations.”
Olawale added, “The current situation in our dear country has created lots of confusion, hitch, havoc, destruction of life and properties with unrest here and there.


“No doubt, everyone is under pressure and frustration just because everything is muddled. As a patriot and responsible citizen, let us keep our faith firm and always be patient while addressing an issue in the society.
“Avoid been provoked by any one because this could lead to high blood pressure and sudden attacks.
“We should love one another and praying for our leaders to get it right.”


He noted that, “The instruments of our encyclopedia (Qur’an) takes good care of everything in all our affairs as best mankind on the earth that says and very soon will your Lord give you so that you shall be well pleased (Q93:5).


“Let us believe that Allah (SWT) will surely avert all our challenges as a nation very soon.
“I’m very sure we all aware of earthquake in Turkey that claimed life of thousands people and other problem in Syria.”
Olawale, therefore prayed that, “May Allah (SWT) deliver all of us from these unbearable challenges.”

LINK:  https://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2023/02/20/naira-fuel-scarcity-remain-calm-keep-faith-in-god-cleric-appeals-to-nigerians/\

THIS DAY

 

All Woman 4 GOD

God is with us

Mair-Harris and her circle.

IN December I shared how God sent an angel to pay my $15,000 bill at the gas station when my card declined due to connectivity issues. God continues to remind me that it's not that trouble won't happen, but rather that He will be with us as we go through.

Recently I was heading out to church on the north-south leg of Highway 2000, on a clear and sunny Sunday morning with my precious daughters, when my front left tyre exploded, ripping to shreds, or as some would say, it blew out.

The car lost control and swerved, exacerbated by the angle of the descent along with the speed at which we were driving. But interestingly, a second or two after I also felt like I was given control. I felt an unusual ability to navigate, miraculously avoid the concrete median, apply the brake without flipping over, slowly and calmly 'rimming it' towards the soft shoulder. The whole experience may have lasted 10 to 20 seconds but in a way, it felt like we were in slow motion.

A few seconds in, I felt prompted to speak or pronounce words of calm to my daughters in the back. "We are okay. We are slowing down. We will not collide. We will take our time to pull over." That was the grace of God overshadowing me in the face of an unexpected crisis.

We did experience the words I spoke รข€” we slowed down and pulled over and we were okay. Safe on the soft shoulder we jumped out to look at the tyre. It was nothing short of God's grace that guided us during that frightening experience. It has become yet another metaphor for how challenges can confront or beset you from out of nowhere, yet God's providence and grace are sufficient.

I am grateful that in that moment when the tyre crumbled, no cars were close behind us or approaching. I'm also grateful that we had a safe soft shoulder at the section of the highway where the incident happened. If there was no soft shoulder, where would I have been able to steer the car to?

I also extremely thankful for my beloved big brother who, as always, quickly came to my rescue with wisdom, know-how, and a smile. I'm thankful for my Christian brothers who, upon hearing, left church to take the long trek on the toll and were the first on the scene to comfort and start the process to change the tyre. I'm also thankful for my pastor and church family who took a moment to pray for us when they heard.

God is indeed with us. I'm reminded that He is with us by His spirit that gives us unusual peace and abilities in times of crisis. He is also with us through the presence of beautiful people, who are his hands, feet and broad shoulder in times like these.

As we navigate life this year let us remember to count our blessings and place our trust in our Immanuel God. And let us be the people carrying His love, His help, and His presence to others in times of trouble.

Passionate about faith and women's empowerment, Shelly-Ann Mair-Harris is the author of several publications including God's Woman and The Goodies on Her Tray. A woman of faith for several years, she is the creator of Family and Faith Magazine and Women & Faith. She is also a podcaster, an award-winning playwright and poet, as well as a trained and experienced media, marketing, employee engagement, change management and strategic communications professional. Send comments to womenandfaithcommunity@gmail.com.

The busted tyre. 
 
LINK:  https://www.jamaicaobserver.com/all-woman/god-is-with-us/

 

Friday, 17 February 2023

GOD IS EVERYWHERE

What a ministry for people with disabilities taught me about the problem of evil—and God’s response to it

 
Sam Sawyer, S.J. February 16, 2023

Image via Mustard Seed.

“He is here” and “Thank you, Lord.” It is the second day of our visit, and we have seen these words at least 10 times already on the walls of chapels and near the entrances of other apostolates we have toured.

These phrases are painted on either side of the gate of a place named Jacob’s Ladder, about an hour outside of Kingston, Jamaica, run by a ministry called Mustard Seed Communities. The organization was founded in 1978, the same year I was born. I had encountered it briefly more than 20 years ago, during a service immersion trip to Kingston during my undergraduate years, but I am back now because of a colleague. Traug Keller, who became president of America Media at the same time as I started as editor in chief, has been involved with Mustard Seed and served on its board for years, and he invited a group of us to go to Jamaica and see its work. We made the trip at the end of January.

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Mustard Seed Communities began as a response to the needs of abandoned and disabled children in Jamaica. As those children have grown, so has Mustard Seed, to continue to care for their needs and offer them a dignified place to live. It has expanded as well, to serve other needs in Jamaica and in places as far away as Zimbabwe.

Not just in slogans, but in the evident joy of a deep friendship: “He is here” and “Thank you, Lord.”

Jacob’s Ladder, which we visited on our second day in Jamaica, is built on land that used to be a bauxite mine, carpeted in the brilliant green that covers the mountains that we drove through to get there. It is not a building but a village, or actually a set of small villages: not only homes, but a community for the people who are at the heart of Mustard Seed Communities. More than one hundred people living with disabilities make their homes there, sharing the space with the staff of caregivers, cooks and farm workers who keep the place running. In addition to the small residential villages, each with seven or eight homes circling a small green, there are fields and greenhouses, providing food for Jacob’s Ladder and other Mustard Seed sites as well.

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One of the women we met there came to Jacob’s Ladder when a state-run home shut down, and she has been there almost since its start 15 years ago. She shares her home with friends with whom she has been together for more than a decade. Her disability leaves her unable to walk easily, but she gestures at one of her friends, who is blind and mostly does not speak, and says, “She’s my legs. I’m her eyes.”

Not just in slogans, but in the evident joy of a deep friendship: “He is here” and “Thank you, Lord.”

Rather than delivering an answer to us, God instead invites us into the one that is being given and will not be fully complete until all things are made new.
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There were more challenging sights during our visit, as well. Children at the central Mustard Seed apostolate, called My Father’s House, who lived with feeding tubes, whose limbs were twisted with cerebral palsy or heads enlarged by hydrocephalus—loved profoundly and cared for well, but whose needs will always require more intensive assistance. But there were also other joys, such as seeing a toddler who had recently learned to walk, albeit with a posture different from the norm, determined to lead her caregivers on a chase.

Any priest, and most likely anyone who has been willing to share their faith with others, has been asked about the problem of evil. Why does an all-good and all-powerful God allow suffering? How can the pain of a child be compatible with a God who loves us?

I have learned, over 18 years as a Jesuit and eight as a priest, to stop trying to answer that question with any kind of an explanation. Because it is not a question looking for a reason; the point is exactly that no reason could possibly be a justifiable answer.

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But what I sometimes suggest instead—with fear and trembling, when I can say it without sounding too sure about it and it seems that hearts are vulnerable and brave enough to hear it—is that Christianity itself is God’s response to that question, not first as a doctrine but as an offering. That the life, death and resurrection of Jesus and the community of the church that is his body are what God is doing in response to evil and suffering in the world. Rather than delivering an answer to us, God instead invites us into the one that is being given and will not be fully complete until all things are made new.

“He is here” does not just mean that Christ can be found in the face of any human being and especially in those most in need, though that claim is both true and beautiful. “He is here” also means that God has chosen solidarity with humanity, both with human suffering and with human love. And that solidarity, God’s with us and ours with each other, is the shape of salvation itself.

For that, thank you, Lord.

NIGERIA VOTES

2023: Atiku’s problem is greed, he can contest against God – Catholic priest, Fr Kelvin

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A Nigerian Catholic priest serving in Gambia, Rev Fr Kelvin Ugwu has described the presidential flagbearer of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Atiku Abubakar as a greedy man who can contest a position with God.

In a post on his verified Facebook page on Thursday, the clergyman, who is a staunch supporter of the Labour Party presidential candidate, Peter Obi, cited greed as one of the reasons he cannot support Atiku.

Lamenting how the former vice president continued to run for the nation’s top job despite failing several times, Fr Kelvin recounted how Atiku has moved from one political party to the other.

“Even to become governor of his State in Adamawa, Atiku contested four good times before he finally won in 1999.

“Then surprisingly, Obasanjo picked him as vice president, one would have thought he will stay in his State and do all he has been voted for, after all, he has been campaigning for many years to be governor… but as greedy as he is always, he ditched the governorship position, he did not even wait to be inaugurated, he ran to Aso Rock to become vice president.

“Even as vice president, he could not do his work, because he wanted the position of his boss, the president.

“Atiku’s biggest problem is greed. If Atiku is allowed to context against God, he will”, he added.

 DAILY POST

Thursday, 16 February 2023

SO LONG! AFRICAN QUEEN

TRIBUTE: Ogechikamma, it’s God’s time that is best

TRIBUTE: Ogechikamma, it’s God’s time that is best
 
February 16
 
07:53 2023
 

BY TETSEKELA ANYIAM-OSIGWE

During this difficult time in our lives, we are involuntarily called, once again, to examine life in all its complexity. This moment implores us to remember that we are not all-knowing. It reminds us of the deep uncertainty that God tells us that we must confront on our early sojourns while having an unshakable faith in Him and the mystery of our existence: the uncertainty of who we are and what we are, of what we know and what we do not know, of why we are here and what we are here for; the uncertainty of what we leave behind and why we leave those things behind.

Two things were deemed the most important to Peace Marie Ogechi Anyiam-Osigwe (PMO) and she would tell anyone this freely: family and being the undiluted creative pushing for Africa to be fully recognised in the global film industry. Both saw her give more than herself, even and especially at the expense of herself. She leaves both behind, perhaps with the knowledge that only God and now she has, of God’s own plan for the manifestation of His glory within those she loved and the legacy she so earnestly and faithfully crafted.

For her, family was and remains her father’s greatest legacy to her. In a predominantly patriarchal society, Papa made her believe it was not about gender but about personality and carriage. Even in the midst of seven older brothers, she found herself standing on an equal footing. She never felt small or inferior. If anything, she was rightly emboldened to cement her place as an irreplaceable member of the family, becoming a mother, an aunt and a positive change agent cultivating a deeper sense of togetherness.

The only thing that equalled her commitment to family was her passion for the film industry. More than anyone else, she promoted the creative industry not only in Nigeria but also in Africa. Last year, she celebrated nearly four decades within this industry. She remained at the forefront of the process of expanding the business of film in Africa and making the industry a major contributor to the national economies of African countries and a global player on the world stage. As one of the African film industry’s leading lights, she cultivated the next generation of African filmmakers while rewarding the current generation of filmmakers across the country, the continent and the diaspora, who, in many ways, had started this journey with her. Several national and pan-continental programs and initiatives were created with her at the helm; consciously, productively and constructively bridging the divide between African filmmaking communities and the rest of the global marketplace.


She did not just do one thing but did it all: CEO and founder of the African Movie Academy Awards (AMAA), founder and chair of the African Film Academy (AFA), president of the Association of Movie Producers of Nigeria, a Nigerian national honour recipient as a Member of the Order of the Federal Republic (MFR), a former financial director of the Filmmakers Cooperative of Nigeria (FCON), a past vice-president of the Association of Movie Producers of Nigeria, a TED Fellow, a jury member of international film festivals, a former creative director and co-founder of the Africa International Film Festival, a published poet with three books to her name, a former television talk show host, the owner of a publishing company, the owner of a film studio, and a producer and a director of multiple Nollywood films.

Despite everything she had going on personally that could and would have stopped any other person, she relentlessly maintained her unyielding commitment to the creative industry. In a given year, she might have had to be in Berlin, then would go on to receive an award in California, then make a speech in Washington D.C, fly to Kigali to make yet another speech before finding herself on a flight back to Lagos to meet with her home-based team. This was, in many ways, her breakdown point, but she wanted to, and she did, continue. She often said she could not stop; that the work was not complete. Indeed, she was the personification of resilience. Perhaps most importantly, she simply wanted to do it for African cinema. It was not about her individually. It was not even about the money. It was about the passion to promote and celebrate creative excellence in Africa. At every opportunity, she was speaking to anyone who would listen about the potential for African cinema to be a creative heavyweight in the world.

She never knew, until she began this journey, that her body could generate a much-needed extra supply of energy as far as she was doing exactly what she was passionate about. This is why we cannot even begin the process of fully comprehending her immense contribution to her community, the country, the continent, and the world at large, which produced an unrivalled legacy of accomplishments globally and within the creative industry for nearly four decades.

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One might never know what she was going through internally because her strength knew no possible bounds. In many ways, this is why her transcendence is too difficult to understand, but perhaps this is also why, as difficult as it may be, she would implore us to try to accept the unthinkable. Perhaps there are some things, the knowledge of which is reserved for those blessed and privileged enough to attain perfect alignment with the Chi and ultimately reach a divine and conscious unity with God.

Therefore, it is the case that we must be resolved, and never resigned, armed with the belief that earthly life in all its perplexity will always be a complex phenomenon in which the puzzle is never meant to be solved by those left behind. Yet, to the degree that we are assured in the divine knowledge that there is indeed a Supreme Being who governs the universe, we should remain hopeful in the knowledge that “Ogechikamma,” it is God’s time that is the best.

When I had to give her an answer about life over ten years ago at such a naive age, I said this in part: Life is a string of moments. Actions define moments. Decisions define actions. Character defines decisions. Personality defines character. And death is outlived by personality. It is not until now that I am realising why she told me that she held onto that so deeply. She willingly surrendered to God’s will in everything, letting Him drive her moments, mediate her actions, guide her decisions, shape her character, and direct her personality. When the time came for Him to decide to bring back his daughter into His heavenly presence, she knew that those she was going to leave behind will eventually understand that as far as God remained at the wheel of earthly life, death was only transitory. It was another moment, orchestrated by God, in the long string of moments that define life. Indeed, Ogechikamma, it is God’s time that is the best.

She fiercely believed that there was a Chi in everyone – that God manifests Himself within man, so that man was blessed with the presence of God within himself. She believed that the Chi brings hope and that the Chi controls human destiny. She said it was evident even in her name, “Ogechi.” So, even if we might like to have things done on our own time, even if we do not understand our present reality, even if we struggle to comprehend the ‘why’ and we fail to make sense of the ‘how,’ we must be reminded that it is always subject to the will of each individual’s Chi.

And, in our asking God of the why, in our need to understand this ultimate test from the Chi of the universe, perhaps the answer is not for us to know exactly. Even if it is hard, we cannot question anymore. In her own words, the Chi never promised an easy ride. The Chi never said to us that life is going to be easy; what the Chi did say to us was that this is what we have at the moment. Deal with it, cope with it, and in time, we will come to understand it, knowing full well that Ogechikamma, it is God’s time that is the best.

May the Chi be with her as she begins her eternal journey, shining always in the light of God’s everlasting presence. May God, in this everlasting presence, hold her closely as she dwells forever in His heavenly place. May God, in His infinite mercy and bountiful love, also give us all – her children, her family, her friends, and her colleagues – the strength we need during this very difficult period. Beyond it, may He find us worthy enough to receive the blessing of the divine knowledge and complete acceptance that truly Ogechikamma, it is God’s time that is the best.


Tetsekela Michael Anyiam-Osigwe is a PhD student at Princeton University in United States

GOD FIRST

God is angry, I’ll never support wicked man to be Nigerian President – Oyedepo vows

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Bishop David Oyedepo of Living Faith Church has vowed never to render his support to any wicked politician who is nursing the ambition of ruling the country.

Oyedepo, who spoke while leading his congregation on prayer for the nation particularly for the February and March general elections, said God is angry with the wicked leaders.

Speaking on alleged practice of nepotism by the Nigerian leaders, Oyedepo asserted that there are no tribes without citizens capable of leading the country.

He said, “There are no tribes and regions without competent men with the character and capacity to lead Nigeria and there are no tribes and regions without incompetent people. More often than not, it is incompetent people who get there.

“There are no tribes and regions in Nigeria without competent men with the character and capacity to lead Nigeria. The day I will support a wicked to reign in Nigeria will not meet me here. I am on God’s side.

“God is angry with the wicked every day, I can’t be in love with the wicked. If you are in love with the wicked, you are a hater of God. You hate God with passion”.

DAILY POST