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Sunday, January 11, 2015
WARNING: ROBBERS AT WORK IN THE CHURCHES
“It used to be robbers
who mugged pedestrians. Now it’s a gang of priests assaulting
worshippers” (Hosea 6:9).
A colleague of mine insists he is still looking for a Pastor with a
Centre in London. He said: “Anybody who knows where I can find him
should let me know.” “Why are you looking for him?” I wondered. “He owes
me money,” he maintained.
Money Doublers
He had attended one of the services conducted by the pastor as
guest-preacher in his church. The Pastor preached a sermon entitled:
“24-Hour Miracle.” At the climax, he asked the congregation to write
cheques for as much money as they possibly could, with the iron-clad
guarantee that it would more than double within 24 hours. In that time,
he assured them, someone would send them a ridiculously large sum by
divine ordinance. You might get a call or a visit from someone about the
miracle money, or notification that it had been deposited in your bank
account.
This gentleman was so hoodwinked by this hocus-pocus that he first wrote
a cheque for half of his entire savings. Then, on second-thoughts, he
gave the other half as well. The next day, he did not go to work,
waiting for the miracle call; but nothing happened. He thought perhaps
he had made a mistake. Perhaps the 24 hours would start counting later
than he had expected; so he waited for another day. Still nothing
happened. After two weeks, it dawned on him that he had been scammed. By
that time, the cheques had long been cashed. He went looking for the
“man of God,” but he had left the country.
Let me let you in on a secret. Pastors don’t usually do a scam of this
scale in their own churches. They do it at the invitation of another
pastor. But they have an agreement beforehand that for every naira
raised, the host pastor would give them a certain percentage as
commission. This is then done on a tit-for-tat basis. When they do the
scam in your church, you reciprocate by doing it in theirs.
Sometimes it gets really wild and this scam is done over several days.
People are told to go and bring their televisions, stereos,
fridge-freezers, cars, jewellery, money; anything and everything. Some
even bring the Certificate of Occupancy of their homes. Some give the
very suits they are wearing and go back home in their underwear,
confident that God is going to astonish them. It usually takes a while
before they realise they have been conned. But some never wake up from
the hypnosis.
Daylight robbery
Jide Ayanfalu inherited a generator from his late “guardian.” He used it
for business purposes by renting it out to people who needed it on
special occasions. It so happened that the generator in his church, Zoe
Ministries Worldwide, was stolen. The pastor insisted that
church-members should not be told about the theft; otherwise they might
conclude that God was not in the church. He asked Jide if they could use
his generator in the meantime.
Jide was agreeable to this: some of his best customers were churches.
But one week, two weeks, three weeks, one month, after the church took
his generator; Jide was not paid a dime. Two months, three months, four
months afterwards; still no payment for the use of the generator.
Finally, Jide summoned up courage to confront the pastor. If they would
not pay him for the use of his generator, at least they should give it
back to him.
The pastor was very offended. He preached a fiery sermon in which he
told the people in no uncertain terms that their destinies were tied to
his church. “Don’t you know,” he asked menacingly, “we have the power to
withhold your blessings?” The royal “we” referred to the pastor
himself. Then he button-holed Jide after the service and went for the
jugular: “Don’t you think you should give the church your generator?” he
demanded.
Jide was troubled and could not answer. He came to me to seek counsel as
to what he should do. I immediately pointed out to him that a robbery
was in progress. I said to him: “Jide, forget about having any
discussion with your pastor. Hire a van and go and remove your generator
from the church.”
Gangs of priests
In biblical days, Shechem was a “city of refuge” as well as a city of
Levites and priests. The cities of refuge were established to provide
hiding-places for the guiltless refugee on the run for his life from a
stubborn-pursuer. But the priests banded together as a gang of robbers,
and they waylaid the hapless on the way to Shechem.
In effect, those appointed to teach the people the truth of God that
they might live were the very ones who endangered their lives. Thus,
Hosea observes that: “It used to be robbers who mugged pedestrians. Now
it’s a gang of priests assaulting worshippers.” (Hosea 6:9).
Today, pastors are no longer preoccupied with the rehabilitation of
thieves. They are now single-minded in swindling members of their
congregation.
Offerings by extortion
My wife and I had gone one Sunday to worship at our local parish of the
Redeemed Christian Church of God, Lagos. But what ensued that morning
caught us off-guard. The pastor was in a nasty mood. The new church
building was not progressing at a desirable pace. Apparently, the funds
for it had dried up. So the entire service was devoted to reprimanding
church-members for not contributing enough money to the Building Fund.
Suddenly, he ordered the entire congregation to stand up. Then he asked
those prepared to contribute a very high amount of money to raise their
hands. When they did, he instructed the ushers to write down their
names. He then told them to sit down. Then he mentioned another sum a
little lower than the previous one, and went through the same process
again and again. By so doing, he was determined to extract a commitment
from everyone present by hook or crook.
We were not opposed to contributing to the Building Fund, but were
determined not to be arm-twisted. We were also opposed to the making of
public pledges. Jesus says: “When you do a charitable deed, do not let
your left hand know what your right hand is doing, that your charitable
deed may be in secret; and your Father who sees in secret will himself
reward you openly.” (Matthew 6:3-4).
So we resolved not to oblige to the pastor’s demands. He kept going one
sum lower than the next and soon, he was down to one hundred naira in
the attempt to shame those of us still on our feet. But we kept on
standing and refused to make any public commitment. Then he did
something strange. He asked an usher to give me a cordless microphone
and then he asked: “Dr. Aribisala, maybe you can tell us how we are
supposed to pay for the new building.”
The eyes of the entire church were upon me. I noticed that many were
even embarrassed for my sake. But I refused to be intimidated. So I
answered him: “Pastor, I am not qualified to answer that question. I
think we should fast and pray and ask the Lord.”
Friday, January 2, 2015
END OF YEAR PROPHECIES
Every night on New Year's Eve day, Nigerian Christians throng to
churches in their millions to pray and listen to prophecies that they
believe will guide their lives in the new year. This has become a
culture and a way of life. Needless to add that offerings and donation
are almost always collected during these church services.
Almost every other Pentecostal church leader produces an end-of-year prophecy. Sometimes, the prophecies contradict one another, causing one to wonder how the same God can say contradictory things to different pastors and prophets.
The Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) represents the largest body of Pentecostal Christians in Nigeria; so, it is apt to use Pastor Adeboye’s prophecy for 2015. This is accessible from his Facebook page but can also be found here.
At this juncture, it is pertinent to ask – have any of these pastors and prophets ever said anything of consequence for this nation in the last 10-15 years that end-of-year prophecies have been trending? Let's consider Pastor Adeboye's phopecies for 2015 as expressed on his website.
PROPHECY FOR THE YEAR 2015 BY PASTOR ADEBOYE OF RCCG
Individual: For those who fasted for 100 days last year
1. The Lord says the harvest for the 100 days fast will be given this year.
2. Daddy says this year will be full of testimonies; those who have none before will have this year.
3. Daddy says some of you will swim in the river of abundance this year.
4. Daddy says there will be miraculous completion of projects.
5. Daddy says there will be fulfillment of dreams.
6. Daddy says there will be miraculous restoration.
7. Daddy says the song of many will be - The Lord has been good to me.
International
1. Scientific and medical breakthrough will be many, particularly in the areas of lack of sleep, dreams and brain disorder.
2. Daddy says Ebola will die out.
3. Daddy says all over the world insurgencies will be considerately weakened.
4. He asked us to pray against massive calamities.
5. He asked us to pray against massive earthquakes, strong hurricanes and typhoons.
For RCCG
1. This year all you need is to charge off your batteries by fasting for 40 days only. Those of you who want to fast continuously 20 days and 20 nights will cover the 40 days. If you miss one day, you have to cover it with two days.
Nigeria
By the end of the year - you will say all is well that ends well.
The fasting begins January 2nd 2015.
Notice how the prophecy:
a). Is non-specific with respect to who, what, when, where and how
b). Says nothing about what really matters to Nigerians i.e. national security, Boko Haram, corruption and the elections which come up in February
c). Says nothing about the whereabouts of the abducted Chibok girls
d). Implies that earthquake, typhoons and hurricane can be averted by prayers and fasting Incredible, coming from a former university Mathematics lecturer!
Nigerians pray and supplicate more than any other people I know. Either God does not care about what is important to them or these pastors just make these prophecies up. I am sure that most of you would agree that anyone, including a smart child, could come up with the prophecy above. Yet, these are the words that millions of Nigerians stay up all night to listen to and live their lives by.
To me, a prediction (or prophecy) should not only be time and place-specific but it must be consequential. For instance, it is not enough to say there would be an earthquake; we should know its estimated magnitude, where and when it is going to occur. These will determine whether or not we evacuate people to safety, an action that saves lives. I have reviewed Pastor Adeboye’s prophecies from 2012 till date; he has not said anything consequential in that period.
Before I end, let me remind Nigerians that it was Pastor Adeboye who claimed he drove from Ore to Lagos on an empty fuel tank. And I have encountered many a Nigerian intellectual who believes this story. They are not even willing to consider other possibilities such as:
1. The fuel level could have been on reserve, and the car could have had a large fuel reserve
2. The fuel gauge could have been faulty
3. The pastor could have been hallucinating or having a déjà vu experience
4. He could have been out-rightly telling lies
5. He could have been driving a top fuel-efficiency car. After all, he can afford the best out there, can't he?
And what sort of God grants such frivolous requests but watches on as millions of children die from malaria every year?!
Whilst most Nigerians may not even see anything wrong with this claim, the real problem is that these pastors have succeeded in corrupting our way of thinking and help to develop a culture where our people cannot distinguish fantasies or magical thinking from reality. Heck, even our universities have become both breeding and dumping grounds for such ideologies. Unfortunately, the world clock does not stop for us; for whilst we are engaged in magical thinking, our competitors are landing robots on comets. How are we ever going to be able to compete for the same resources as them? We should know that manna does not drop from heaven. But I am sure most Nigerians will disagree!
Like I said in my last article for Sahara reporters (bit.ly/1sZJ20V), this brand of religiosity is holding back the progress of Africans. You can be spiritual without believing and acting on these kinds of stories and prophecies. If these pastors are not going to divulge the celestial secret codes for scientific and technological innovations, or tell us something else of consequence that can move our nation forward, then why are we reliant on their proclamations and making them wealthy with our scarce resources?
It is time to begin introspection and self-examination. We are a society of very gullible and superstitious people brought up to obey, and to never question elders or those in authority. We are not critical thinkers. We scorn scepticism. Perhaps, that is why we are where we are.
I am persuaded that, now, more than ever before, is the time to start thinking and asking questions! That is how the nations which now explore outer space got to where they are. Not by wishful thinking and/or superstitions!
Ijabla Raymond is a medical doctor of Nigerian heritage, who writes in from the UK. Email: Ijabla.Raymond@facebook.com
Almost every other Pentecostal church leader produces an end-of-year prophecy. Sometimes, the prophecies contradict one another, causing one to wonder how the same God can say contradictory things to different pastors and prophets.
The Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) represents the largest body of Pentecostal Christians in Nigeria; so, it is apt to use Pastor Adeboye’s prophecy for 2015. This is accessible from his Facebook page but can also be found here.
At this juncture, it is pertinent to ask – have any of these pastors and prophets ever said anything of consequence for this nation in the last 10-15 years that end-of-year prophecies have been trending? Let's consider Pastor Adeboye's phopecies for 2015 as expressed on his website.
PROPHECY FOR THE YEAR 2015 BY PASTOR ADEBOYE OF RCCG
Individual: For those who fasted for 100 days last year
1. The Lord says the harvest for the 100 days fast will be given this year.
2. Daddy says this year will be full of testimonies; those who have none before will have this year.
3. Daddy says some of you will swim in the river of abundance this year.
4. Daddy says there will be miraculous completion of projects.
5. Daddy says there will be fulfillment of dreams.
6. Daddy says there will be miraculous restoration.
7. Daddy says the song of many will be - The Lord has been good to me.
International
1. Scientific and medical breakthrough will be many, particularly in the areas of lack of sleep, dreams and brain disorder.
2. Daddy says Ebola will die out.
3. Daddy says all over the world insurgencies will be considerately weakened.
4. He asked us to pray against massive calamities.
5. He asked us to pray against massive earthquakes, strong hurricanes and typhoons.
For RCCG
1. This year all you need is to charge off your batteries by fasting for 40 days only. Those of you who want to fast continuously 20 days and 20 nights will cover the 40 days. If you miss one day, you have to cover it with two days.
Nigeria
By the end of the year - you will say all is well that ends well.
The fasting begins January 2nd 2015.
Notice how the prophecy:
a). Is non-specific with respect to who, what, when, where and how
b). Says nothing about what really matters to Nigerians i.e. national security, Boko Haram, corruption and the elections which come up in February
c). Says nothing about the whereabouts of the abducted Chibok girls
d). Implies that earthquake, typhoons and hurricane can be averted by prayers and fasting Incredible, coming from a former university Mathematics lecturer!
Nigerians pray and supplicate more than any other people I know. Either God does not care about what is important to them or these pastors just make these prophecies up. I am sure that most of you would agree that anyone, including a smart child, could come up with the prophecy above. Yet, these are the words that millions of Nigerians stay up all night to listen to and live their lives by.
To me, a prediction (or prophecy) should not only be time and place-specific but it must be consequential. For instance, it is not enough to say there would be an earthquake; we should know its estimated magnitude, where and when it is going to occur. These will determine whether or not we evacuate people to safety, an action that saves lives. I have reviewed Pastor Adeboye’s prophecies from 2012 till date; he has not said anything consequential in that period.
Before I end, let me remind Nigerians that it was Pastor Adeboye who claimed he drove from Ore to Lagos on an empty fuel tank. And I have encountered many a Nigerian intellectual who believes this story. They are not even willing to consider other possibilities such as:
1. The fuel level could have been on reserve, and the car could have had a large fuel reserve
2. The fuel gauge could have been faulty
3. The pastor could have been hallucinating or having a déjà vu experience
4. He could have been out-rightly telling lies
5. He could have been driving a top fuel-efficiency car. After all, he can afford the best out there, can't he?
And what sort of God grants such frivolous requests but watches on as millions of children die from malaria every year?!
Whilst most Nigerians may not even see anything wrong with this claim, the real problem is that these pastors have succeeded in corrupting our way of thinking and help to develop a culture where our people cannot distinguish fantasies or magical thinking from reality. Heck, even our universities have become both breeding and dumping grounds for such ideologies. Unfortunately, the world clock does not stop for us; for whilst we are engaged in magical thinking, our competitors are landing robots on comets. How are we ever going to be able to compete for the same resources as them? We should know that manna does not drop from heaven. But I am sure most Nigerians will disagree!
Like I said in my last article for Sahara reporters (bit.ly/1sZJ20V), this brand of religiosity is holding back the progress of Africans. You can be spiritual without believing and acting on these kinds of stories and prophecies. If these pastors are not going to divulge the celestial secret codes for scientific and technological innovations, or tell us something else of consequence that can move our nation forward, then why are we reliant on their proclamations and making them wealthy with our scarce resources?
It is time to begin introspection and self-examination. We are a society of very gullible and superstitious people brought up to obey, and to never question elders or those in authority. We are not critical thinkers. We scorn scepticism. Perhaps, that is why we are where we are.
I am persuaded that, now, more than ever before, is the time to start thinking and asking questions! That is how the nations which now explore outer space got to where they are. Not by wishful thinking and/or superstitions!
Ijabla Raymond is a medical doctor of Nigerian heritage, who writes in from the UK. Email: Ijabla.Raymond@facebook.com
Thursday, December 25, 2014
HEAVEN CAN WAIT
I believe in heaven. And I bet you do.
Heaven is located somewhere across the bridge of life. It is a place devoid of the iniquities of this life. In heaven, tranquility abounds. It is a treasure trove where God keeps the best of everything.
All our pursuits in life can be divided into two: the pursuit of heaven and the pursuit of happiness.
Heaven is the only place where happiness is guaranteed. But for some reason, we are determined to pursue happiness here on earth when it has been proven that such is an impossible goal.
We dream of heaven when we face the travails of life on earth. We remember heaven when we lose someone we love. We embrace heaven when we face our own mortality.
Though the vision of heaven varies depending on our religious and cultural upbringing, the central ideas are the same. Heaven is a good place for good people who have a good report card from their stay on earth. We are expected to make sacrifices here on earth in order to get to heaven.
I recently lost a distant cousin. He died a heart-breaking death at a young age. He was such a nice guy that tributes came from far and wide. Everyone agreed he had gone to the bosom of the Lord to rest. One grief-sicken mourner wrote on Facebook, “Stay thee with the Lord, Tony, until we meet again – though not so soon.”
Yeah, even an assurance of a place in the bosom of the Lord will not make us leave, so soon, this world that we know.
I’m not a pastor. I do not play one in Nollywood. But I can use one simple example in the Christian religion to illustrate what I mean when I say that for us all, heaven can wait.
The Bible is ambiguous about who goes to heaven. It says that it is not those who cry my Lord, my Lord that will make it to heaven; but those who do what God wants. What does God want? Apart from the obedience to the commandments, what does God want?
Well, His son, Jesus Christ, in the only prayer He taught says, He wants us to forgive others. “Forgive us our trespasses,” he says, “as we forgive those who trespass against us.”
I consider that a very dangerous prayer. By saying it, you are agreeing to be forgiven of your trespasses only when you forgive those who trespass against you.
So if you do not forgive those who trespass against you, there is no forgiveness for you.
You would think that with that, Christians would have forgiving hearts. But churches are full of men and women who carry decade old grudges yet, are hoping for forgiveness.
As if to buttress that point, the Christ stated that if you were at the door of the church with your thanksgiving offering and remember that you have not forgiven your brother or sister, you should drop your offering by the door. Christ asked that you should go and forgive your fellow human before you come to offer your thanks. If not your offerings will be a waste.
Pretty serious stuff, if you ask me.
We know all this. But we just cannot help it. Deep inside us, heaven can wait.
The call to be human is one heck of a call. We answer the call without a clear understanding of where we came from and where we are headed.
What am I saying? We are going to heaven.
To be exact, we hope to go to heaven. After all, heaven is not just God’s abode. It is a place where comfort is assured after the troubles of this life.
Because of that, a great many ideals of this life are designed to get us to heaven. Laws about goodness and evil are designed to take us to the place where good people go as a reward.
We do not know when we shall be called to heaven. Whenever it happens, there is no way of knowing for sure that we shall be worthy of heaven. Only by His grace, the holy book says.
I, therefore, presume that the first question you will be asked in heaven is, did you ever live as if heaven can wait?
The only reason we do not commit every day of our lives to the pursuit of heaven is because of the other competing goal – the pursuit of happiness.
“We are all prompted by the same motives,” Samuel Johnson, the English writer noted. “All deceived by the same fallacies, all animated by hope, obstructed by danger, entangled by desire and seduced by pleasure.”
After looking at man and his environment, Thomas Jefferson, concluded that man has these inalienable rights- the right to life, liberty and pursuit of happiness. Together, the pursuit of these rights has overshadowed the pursuit of heaven.
Our attitude seems to be; let us enjoy ourselves now. Let us take care of this business of life first. Let us secure our life, liberty and happiness.
We pretend that heaven can wait, even when we know that it cannot.
Merry Christmas.
By Rudolf Ogoo Okonkwo OF Sahara Reporters
Heaven is located somewhere across the bridge of life. It is a place devoid of the iniquities of this life. In heaven, tranquility abounds. It is a treasure trove where God keeps the best of everything.
All our pursuits in life can be divided into two: the pursuit of heaven and the pursuit of happiness.
Heaven is the only place where happiness is guaranteed. But for some reason, we are determined to pursue happiness here on earth when it has been proven that such is an impossible goal.
We dream of heaven when we face the travails of life on earth. We remember heaven when we lose someone we love. We embrace heaven when we face our own mortality.
Though the vision of heaven varies depending on our religious and cultural upbringing, the central ideas are the same. Heaven is a good place for good people who have a good report card from their stay on earth. We are expected to make sacrifices here on earth in order to get to heaven.
I recently lost a distant cousin. He died a heart-breaking death at a young age. He was such a nice guy that tributes came from far and wide. Everyone agreed he had gone to the bosom of the Lord to rest. One grief-sicken mourner wrote on Facebook, “Stay thee with the Lord, Tony, until we meet again – though not so soon.”
Yeah, even an assurance of a place in the bosom of the Lord will not make us leave, so soon, this world that we know.
I’m not a pastor. I do not play one in Nollywood. But I can use one simple example in the Christian religion to illustrate what I mean when I say that for us all, heaven can wait.
The Bible is ambiguous about who goes to heaven. It says that it is not those who cry my Lord, my Lord that will make it to heaven; but those who do what God wants. What does God want? Apart from the obedience to the commandments, what does God want?
Well, His son, Jesus Christ, in the only prayer He taught says, He wants us to forgive others. “Forgive us our trespasses,” he says, “as we forgive those who trespass against us.”
I consider that a very dangerous prayer. By saying it, you are agreeing to be forgiven of your trespasses only when you forgive those who trespass against you.
So if you do not forgive those who trespass against you, there is no forgiveness for you.
You would think that with that, Christians would have forgiving hearts. But churches are full of men and women who carry decade old grudges yet, are hoping for forgiveness.
As if to buttress that point, the Christ stated that if you were at the door of the church with your thanksgiving offering and remember that you have not forgiven your brother or sister, you should drop your offering by the door. Christ asked that you should go and forgive your fellow human before you come to offer your thanks. If not your offerings will be a waste.
Pretty serious stuff, if you ask me.
We know all this. But we just cannot help it. Deep inside us, heaven can wait.
The call to be human is one heck of a call. We answer the call without a clear understanding of where we came from and where we are headed.
What am I saying? We are going to heaven.
To be exact, we hope to go to heaven. After all, heaven is not just God’s abode. It is a place where comfort is assured after the troubles of this life.
Because of that, a great many ideals of this life are designed to get us to heaven. Laws about goodness and evil are designed to take us to the place where good people go as a reward.
We do not know when we shall be called to heaven. Whenever it happens, there is no way of knowing for sure that we shall be worthy of heaven. Only by His grace, the holy book says.
I, therefore, presume that the first question you will be asked in heaven is, did you ever live as if heaven can wait?
The only reason we do not commit every day of our lives to the pursuit of heaven is because of the other competing goal – the pursuit of happiness.
“We are all prompted by the same motives,” Samuel Johnson, the English writer noted. “All deceived by the same fallacies, all animated by hope, obstructed by danger, entangled by desire and seduced by pleasure.”
After looking at man and his environment, Thomas Jefferson, concluded that man has these inalienable rights- the right to life, liberty and pursuit of happiness. Together, the pursuit of these rights has overshadowed the pursuit of heaven.
Our attitude seems to be; let us enjoy ourselves now. Let us take care of this business of life first. Let us secure our life, liberty and happiness.
We pretend that heaven can wait, even when we know that it cannot.
Merry Christmas.
By Rudolf Ogoo Okonkwo OF Sahara Reporters
Wednesday, December 24, 2014
SUPERSTITIONS AND THE SORRY STATE OF TERTIARY EDUCATION IN NIGERIA
Only last month, Western scientists
successfully landed a robot on a comet. This feat was accomplished after
25 years of careful planning. The robot traveled 6.4 billion
kilometers and took 10 years to reach the comet, which itself was moving
at a speed of 56,000 km/hr (or 18km/s).
This is coming at a time when Nigerians are exporting religion and superstitions to the rest of the world; when our so called "men of God" assert that the cures for diseases are to be found in prayer houses rather than laboratories; when our universities have become the birthing places of pastors and imams; when we have become accustomed to pastors making extraordinary claims such as driving cars on empty tanks and resurrecting the dead; when the medieval belief in witchcraft and the practice of witch-hunting are ever so pervasive; when jihadists are engaged in a campaign of terror to spread sharia. I can go on and on.
A university is a place of enquiry and enlightenment but every year, impressionable young minds arrive on our university campuses hoping to be nurtured in the art and science of enquiry, the tool by which all progressive societies have advanced themselves; but instead, a great percentage of their university time is taken up by religious activities such as prayer meetings, night vigils, evangelism and so on, the result of which is that our universities have effectively become places for nurturing religious beliefs, superstitions and other fantastical ideas.
Every year, our universities graduate people who teach and/or think that prayers can cure diseases, move the economy forward, fix our bad roads, choose good leaders etc. Rather than spend money on laboratories and research, our governments, persuaded by the belief in the efficacy of prayers, choose to build mosques and churches, and sponsor pilgrimages to Mecca and Jerusalem. The cure for malaria is in the laboratory, not mosques or churches. Some of our best minds abandon their original degrees and become peddlers of false hope, enriching themselves in the process.
If they lived up to their purpose, by now, one would expect our universities would have churned out generations of youth who are skeptics and critical thinkers. Sadly, that is not the case. Instead, we have science graduates who believe that cars can run on empty tanks (recall Pastor Adeboye and his famed journey from Ore to Lagos on an empty tank); that prayers routinely cure patients of diseases such as cancer, stroke, diabetes, Ebola, HIV/AIDS; that prayers can even resurrect the dead; that university examinations can be passed by anointing books, pencils, pens and other study materials with holy water, olive oil or handkerchiefs. These pastors (and imams) have corrupted our way of thinking.
Does anyone still doubt, then, that superstitions and religion are the reins that hold back the progress of Nigeria, and the rest of Africa? No society with such deeply entrenched beliefs can expect to find cures for HIV, Malaria, Ebola, or to land robots on comets. It is this type of societies that habitually rely on foreign aid. Such societies do not innovate - at best, they borrow or pay for technology.
I think that universities should be somewhere that people go, to not only acquire job skills but to also acquire the facility for critical and analytical thinking, and skepticism. By the time people have graduated from university, they should have shed off a considerable burden of ignorance and superstitions.
If we were to ever land robots on comets, then we must start with a change of mindset and attitudes. Superstitions will never get us anywhere productive. The current methods of instruction in our universities are no longer fit for purpose. Frankly, I have more faith in the social media as an instrument of change than in them. And make no mistakes, it will take a while until this damage is reversed because even university lecturers hold these preposterous beliefs and have no qualms in openly declaring them.
Elections are right round the corner but I have heard very little said on education. The recurrent strikes are an issue, but they are only superficial. The rot is much deeper. It is in our minds and attitudes!
This is coming at a time when Nigerians are exporting religion and superstitions to the rest of the world; when our so called "men of God" assert that the cures for diseases are to be found in prayer houses rather than laboratories; when our universities have become the birthing places of pastors and imams; when we have become accustomed to pastors making extraordinary claims such as driving cars on empty tanks and resurrecting the dead; when the medieval belief in witchcraft and the practice of witch-hunting are ever so pervasive; when jihadists are engaged in a campaign of terror to spread sharia. I can go on and on.
A university is a place of enquiry and enlightenment but every year, impressionable young minds arrive on our university campuses hoping to be nurtured in the art and science of enquiry, the tool by which all progressive societies have advanced themselves; but instead, a great percentage of their university time is taken up by religious activities such as prayer meetings, night vigils, evangelism and so on, the result of which is that our universities have effectively become places for nurturing religious beliefs, superstitions and other fantastical ideas.
Every year, our universities graduate people who teach and/or think that prayers can cure diseases, move the economy forward, fix our bad roads, choose good leaders etc. Rather than spend money on laboratories and research, our governments, persuaded by the belief in the efficacy of prayers, choose to build mosques and churches, and sponsor pilgrimages to Mecca and Jerusalem. The cure for malaria is in the laboratory, not mosques or churches. Some of our best minds abandon their original degrees and become peddlers of false hope, enriching themselves in the process.
If they lived up to their purpose, by now, one would expect our universities would have churned out generations of youth who are skeptics and critical thinkers. Sadly, that is not the case. Instead, we have science graduates who believe that cars can run on empty tanks (recall Pastor Adeboye and his famed journey from Ore to Lagos on an empty tank); that prayers routinely cure patients of diseases such as cancer, stroke, diabetes, Ebola, HIV/AIDS; that prayers can even resurrect the dead; that university examinations can be passed by anointing books, pencils, pens and other study materials with holy water, olive oil or handkerchiefs. These pastors (and imams) have corrupted our way of thinking.
Does anyone still doubt, then, that superstitions and religion are the reins that hold back the progress of Nigeria, and the rest of Africa? No society with such deeply entrenched beliefs can expect to find cures for HIV, Malaria, Ebola, or to land robots on comets. It is this type of societies that habitually rely on foreign aid. Such societies do not innovate - at best, they borrow or pay for technology.
I think that universities should be somewhere that people go, to not only acquire job skills but to also acquire the facility for critical and analytical thinking, and skepticism. By the time people have graduated from university, they should have shed off a considerable burden of ignorance and superstitions.
If we were to ever land robots on comets, then we must start with a change of mindset and attitudes. Superstitions will never get us anywhere productive. The current methods of instruction in our universities are no longer fit for purpose. Frankly, I have more faith in the social media as an instrument of change than in them. And make no mistakes, it will take a while until this damage is reversed because even university lecturers hold these preposterous beliefs and have no qualms in openly declaring them.
Elections are right round the corner but I have heard very little said on education. The recurrent strikes are an issue, but they are only superficial. The rot is much deeper. It is in our minds and attitudes!
By Dr. Ijabla Raymond
Monday, November 24, 2014
THE CHRISTIANITY OF FALSE HOPE
When you make God out to be different from who he actually is,
he is bound to disappoint. Christians are losing faith in God every day
because preachers are misrepresenting him. And God is not obligated to
live up to the expectations that preachers have set him up to. That’s
why many churches and preachers and theologians have been inadvertent
agents of the devil; not because they necessarily planned for it that
way but because they have presented their distorted version of who God
is to Christians.
Some prominent preachers I know will call Christians, traitors or weaklings, who have been disappointed by God not living up to their expectations (expectations often set by these same charismatic, tongue-talking, sleek used car salesman type pastors). As a result, people begin to doubt themselves and their faith because they don’t get the same results that these men of God claimed that God would give them.
Misdirection is the central secret of all magic. It is a form of deception in which the attention of an audience is focused on one thing in order to distract its attention from another. When preachers teach you that a particular way is the will of God while they take advantage of you in some form, you have fallen victim to misdirection. Let us examine this thesis further. Have you come across Christian programs like "Give me a husband or I die” or “Anointing for Financial Breakthrough”. There are a plethora of conferences, seminars and books that present topics like these daily, in one form or the other and in your face all across Nigeria. Making christians feel like they are somehow inadequate because they are not married or that they must not have faith because they are not rich is creating a lot of problems and breeding unrealistic expectations from the God of the Bible. Jesus talked about those who were born Eunuchs, those who were made Eunuchs and those who chose to live their lives like Eunuchs for the sake of the Kingdom. Paul suggested that Christians should be unmarried like him. Christians marrying out of church pressure are a major contribution to the growing dissatisfaction, separation and divorce in Christian marriages. Concerning money, Jesus said, “Be careful to guard against all forms of greed, because even if someone is rich, his life does not consist in what he owns.” Apostle Paul said, “I know what it is to be in need, and I know what it is to have plenty. I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation, whether well fed or hungry, whether living in plenty or in want”. These are outdated messages in the church that have been updated by new ostensibly biblical doctrines.
These seemly innocent doctrines work to the advantage of preachers by creating an itch that only they are positioned to scratch. So they make Christians believe that God wants them to be instant millionaires or that He will make them an instant success in their field or some other blessing. So by taping into their listener's greed and showing that God will satisfy it, pastors make themselves the “drug-dealers" of God’s blessing. So when asked to give sacrificially, church people give but not for the sake of the Kingdom. How many modern day Nigerian Pentecostal Charismatic Christians would give sacrificially if the only reward was that someone else would give their lives to Christ. Few really care about other people getting saved anymore, but they give so that God can bless them. Some Christians will go as far as to borrow to give while being egged on by their preacher, brainwashed that somehow if the man of God has spoken the blessing, God has spoken it. Cultivating unrealistic expectations and inspiring false hope through testimonies while fleecing the congregation on a weekly basis in the name of God, preachers have enriched themselves immensely. The New Pentecostal Charismatic christian is no less brainwashed than a Boko Haram terrorist who believes he’s going to get 70 virgins in heaven after taking theirs and other innocent lives.
Christianity today is so much about personal desire. And when God doesn’t answer the prayers of brainwashed church goers, they resort to lying, stealing and cheating to look the part, living hypocritical lives so that they appear like they are living up to the expectations taught by their pastors. Pastors and born again christians in Nigeria have become some of the worst people to do business with. After scamming you, they would come to Church to give testimonies. True story: a friend of mine, Benjamin, was at a church convention in Enugu. There, Benjamin and his wife saw their friend go up stage to give a testimony about how God had blessed her with a N163million government contract after sowing a sacrificial seed of N1million into the ministry the previous year. Benjamin and his wife met up with their friend after service and congratulated her heartily for such a great breakthrough. A few months later, he found that his friend, the woman that gave the testimony, had impersonated his company to get the contract she testified about and now the FIRS is asking him to pay N8million in taxes; taxes for a contract he did not execute. Two years going, with millions of naira spent on legal fees and sundry, Benjamin is still fighting for his innocence. Sometimes I feel there’s going to be a special kind of hell for many of today’s Christians and pastors. God have mercy on us all.
Preachers now teach Christians different formulas to receive from God: 5 steps to walking in your divine inheritance; 7 Mysteries for getting God to answer your prayers and so on. It is weird because these are not the examples Jesus gave us, neither are they the examples shown to us by the Apostles of God in the Bible. It's as if God is a genie in the lamp and His sole purpose of existence to grant us our wishes. Contrary to this, Jesus was actually setup by God to be tempted of the devil in the wilderness (Matthew 4:1). After being hungry for 40 days and nights, his first temptation was to turn stone to bread. Apparently, having the spirit without measure, he could do this but did not. He did not let his appetite get the better of him. And even though he had the power to change his situation, he was not going to be led by the devil but by God. The Spirit of God does not always lead you into financial breakthrough or plenty, preachers who tell you otherwise are charlatans.
Some clever theologians who have re-framed the gospel make it difficult for people to argue against them. This, because they use the claim to the blessings of God as the basis of fleecing their audience. Because they are specially anointed to heal, bless, prophecy etc, if you give them an offering, God will release the blessings in his hands for you. Thief! To argue against them like I have done would seem to suggest that God cannot or does not heal, or cannot or does not provide, or cannot or does not bless. And these will be untrue, because God does heal, provide and protect, gives spouses and a whole range of other blessings. However, the level of importance or sometimes relevance of these blessings is highly misplaced. We have put the cart before the horse and have begun seeking blessings before the Kingdom of God, with many churches foolishly ratifying this un-Christlike approach. Furthermore, the ways in which many popular preachers say God blesses and many of the methods by which they say he does it are unbiblical at least and sometimes downright diabolical. On one end of the spectrum you have the really prideful preacher who speaks with an outstanding level of cockiness which he calls boldness. His words are law; God spoke it himself and therefore cannot be refuted. On the other end, there’s the soft spoken but equally dangerous preacher who convinces you by his seeming humility. Selling poison loudly or softly doesn’t make it less poisonous is all I’m saying. "Godliness with contentment is great gain" has been changed to “pride and financial success is great gain". Church is also where you get the “Do you know who I am ?" syndrome. I am Bishop so and so. I am deaconess so and so. I am chief so and so. God spoke to me in an 18-hour long vision, therefore I am something special. What remarkable humility? What outstanding meekness, right?
Unfortunately, Pentecostal Charismatic preachers are the biggest quasi-legal scammers I know. These days, I am personally wary of any person who introduces himself to me by any Christian title such as Deacon, Deaconess, Pastor, Bishop, Prophet etc, especially among the Nigerian community in America. Immediately my mind thinks thief and untrustworthy. Sadly, I have been proven right too many times. I have stories and I know that I am not the only one but I gain nothing by publicly discrediting these people. There are obviously good, honest and godly Christian leaders out there too but all I am saying is, be alert.
A successful pastor in the capital city of Nigeria once wrote me and said, it’s church people that are forcing pastors to act like big men because if they don’t behave like that, church members will disrespect them and grace will not flow. First of all, that’s a load of bull. This puts those pastors in the company of King Saul, who disobeyed God and blamed it on the people, and Adam who ate the forbidden fruit and blamed it on the woman. This is not good company to be categorized with. I implore preachers to go back to the Bible, to first of all live by it and then preach what it actually says and stop this gospel that makes them out to be superstar celebrities of some sort. They should stop setting God up to disappoint his people because in many cases, he is not who, what or how they say he is.
Everyone who wishes to serve God and is not benefitting from the on-going global scam of false christianity should go and read their Bibles, especially the New Testament as it pertains to the followers of Christ. Some of you are swayed by my argument but I hope rather that many more of you will be skeptical. Because if you are, it should make you search out the truth from the Bible by yourself and then you’ll know the truth for yourself and not some misguided misinterpretation. If you don’t, somebody else, most probably the preacher who is currently scamming you in your church is going to give you another seemingly sound argument. This may cause you to be confused or fall into their deception all over again. There are no spiritual grandchildren in Christ Jesus, we all are joint heirs in Christ and have direct access to God. Don’t believe me? Read your Bible.
I believe in Christ and I believe there is a real God of the Bible; He has just stopped attending church service because many of the people who claim to represent Him have replaced Him with themselves.
By Adetoye Oremosu
Some prominent preachers I know will call Christians, traitors or weaklings, who have been disappointed by God not living up to their expectations (expectations often set by these same charismatic, tongue-talking, sleek used car salesman type pastors). As a result, people begin to doubt themselves and their faith because they don’t get the same results that these men of God claimed that God would give them.
Misdirection is the central secret of all magic. It is a form of deception in which the attention of an audience is focused on one thing in order to distract its attention from another. When preachers teach you that a particular way is the will of God while they take advantage of you in some form, you have fallen victim to misdirection. Let us examine this thesis further. Have you come across Christian programs like "Give me a husband or I die” or “Anointing for Financial Breakthrough”. There are a plethora of conferences, seminars and books that present topics like these daily, in one form or the other and in your face all across Nigeria. Making christians feel like they are somehow inadequate because they are not married or that they must not have faith because they are not rich is creating a lot of problems and breeding unrealistic expectations from the God of the Bible. Jesus talked about those who were born Eunuchs, those who were made Eunuchs and those who chose to live their lives like Eunuchs for the sake of the Kingdom. Paul suggested that Christians should be unmarried like him. Christians marrying out of church pressure are a major contribution to the growing dissatisfaction, separation and divorce in Christian marriages. Concerning money, Jesus said, “Be careful to guard against all forms of greed, because even if someone is rich, his life does not consist in what he owns.” Apostle Paul said, “I know what it is to be in need, and I know what it is to have plenty. I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation, whether well fed or hungry, whether living in plenty or in want”. These are outdated messages in the church that have been updated by new ostensibly biblical doctrines.
These seemly innocent doctrines work to the advantage of preachers by creating an itch that only they are positioned to scratch. So they make Christians believe that God wants them to be instant millionaires or that He will make them an instant success in their field or some other blessing. So by taping into their listener's greed and showing that God will satisfy it, pastors make themselves the “drug-dealers" of God’s blessing. So when asked to give sacrificially, church people give but not for the sake of the Kingdom. How many modern day Nigerian Pentecostal Charismatic Christians would give sacrificially if the only reward was that someone else would give their lives to Christ. Few really care about other people getting saved anymore, but they give so that God can bless them. Some Christians will go as far as to borrow to give while being egged on by their preacher, brainwashed that somehow if the man of God has spoken the blessing, God has spoken it. Cultivating unrealistic expectations and inspiring false hope through testimonies while fleecing the congregation on a weekly basis in the name of God, preachers have enriched themselves immensely. The New Pentecostal Charismatic christian is no less brainwashed than a Boko Haram terrorist who believes he’s going to get 70 virgins in heaven after taking theirs and other innocent lives.
Christianity today is so much about personal desire. And when God doesn’t answer the prayers of brainwashed church goers, they resort to lying, stealing and cheating to look the part, living hypocritical lives so that they appear like they are living up to the expectations taught by their pastors. Pastors and born again christians in Nigeria have become some of the worst people to do business with. After scamming you, they would come to Church to give testimonies. True story: a friend of mine, Benjamin, was at a church convention in Enugu. There, Benjamin and his wife saw their friend go up stage to give a testimony about how God had blessed her with a N163million government contract after sowing a sacrificial seed of N1million into the ministry the previous year. Benjamin and his wife met up with their friend after service and congratulated her heartily for such a great breakthrough. A few months later, he found that his friend, the woman that gave the testimony, had impersonated his company to get the contract she testified about and now the FIRS is asking him to pay N8million in taxes; taxes for a contract he did not execute. Two years going, with millions of naira spent on legal fees and sundry, Benjamin is still fighting for his innocence. Sometimes I feel there’s going to be a special kind of hell for many of today’s Christians and pastors. God have mercy on us all.
Preachers now teach Christians different formulas to receive from God: 5 steps to walking in your divine inheritance; 7 Mysteries for getting God to answer your prayers and so on. It is weird because these are not the examples Jesus gave us, neither are they the examples shown to us by the Apostles of God in the Bible. It's as if God is a genie in the lamp and His sole purpose of existence to grant us our wishes. Contrary to this, Jesus was actually setup by God to be tempted of the devil in the wilderness (Matthew 4:1). After being hungry for 40 days and nights, his first temptation was to turn stone to bread. Apparently, having the spirit without measure, he could do this but did not. He did not let his appetite get the better of him. And even though he had the power to change his situation, he was not going to be led by the devil but by God. The Spirit of God does not always lead you into financial breakthrough or plenty, preachers who tell you otherwise are charlatans.
Some clever theologians who have re-framed the gospel make it difficult for people to argue against them. This, because they use the claim to the blessings of God as the basis of fleecing their audience. Because they are specially anointed to heal, bless, prophecy etc, if you give them an offering, God will release the blessings in his hands for you. Thief! To argue against them like I have done would seem to suggest that God cannot or does not heal, or cannot or does not provide, or cannot or does not bless. And these will be untrue, because God does heal, provide and protect, gives spouses and a whole range of other blessings. However, the level of importance or sometimes relevance of these blessings is highly misplaced. We have put the cart before the horse and have begun seeking blessings before the Kingdom of God, with many churches foolishly ratifying this un-Christlike approach. Furthermore, the ways in which many popular preachers say God blesses and many of the methods by which they say he does it are unbiblical at least and sometimes downright diabolical. On one end of the spectrum you have the really prideful preacher who speaks with an outstanding level of cockiness which he calls boldness. His words are law; God spoke it himself and therefore cannot be refuted. On the other end, there’s the soft spoken but equally dangerous preacher who convinces you by his seeming humility. Selling poison loudly or softly doesn’t make it less poisonous is all I’m saying. "Godliness with contentment is great gain" has been changed to “pride and financial success is great gain". Church is also where you get the “Do you know who I am ?" syndrome. I am Bishop so and so. I am deaconess so and so. I am chief so and so. God spoke to me in an 18-hour long vision, therefore I am something special. What remarkable humility? What outstanding meekness, right?
Unfortunately, Pentecostal Charismatic preachers are the biggest quasi-legal scammers I know. These days, I am personally wary of any person who introduces himself to me by any Christian title such as Deacon, Deaconess, Pastor, Bishop, Prophet etc, especially among the Nigerian community in America. Immediately my mind thinks thief and untrustworthy. Sadly, I have been proven right too many times. I have stories and I know that I am not the only one but I gain nothing by publicly discrediting these people. There are obviously good, honest and godly Christian leaders out there too but all I am saying is, be alert.
A successful pastor in the capital city of Nigeria once wrote me and said, it’s church people that are forcing pastors to act like big men because if they don’t behave like that, church members will disrespect them and grace will not flow. First of all, that’s a load of bull. This puts those pastors in the company of King Saul, who disobeyed God and blamed it on the people, and Adam who ate the forbidden fruit and blamed it on the woman. This is not good company to be categorized with. I implore preachers to go back to the Bible, to first of all live by it and then preach what it actually says and stop this gospel that makes them out to be superstar celebrities of some sort. They should stop setting God up to disappoint his people because in many cases, he is not who, what or how they say he is.
Everyone who wishes to serve God and is not benefitting from the on-going global scam of false christianity should go and read their Bibles, especially the New Testament as it pertains to the followers of Christ. Some of you are swayed by my argument but I hope rather that many more of you will be skeptical. Because if you are, it should make you search out the truth from the Bible by yourself and then you’ll know the truth for yourself and not some misguided misinterpretation. If you don’t, somebody else, most probably the preacher who is currently scamming you in your church is going to give you another seemingly sound argument. This may cause you to be confused or fall into their deception all over again. There are no spiritual grandchildren in Christ Jesus, we all are joint heirs in Christ and have direct access to God. Don’t believe me? Read your Bible.
I believe in Christ and I believe there is a real God of the Bible; He has just stopped attending church service because many of the people who claim to represent Him have replaced Him with themselves.
By Adetoye Oremosu
Sunday, November 23, 2014
WHICH GOD IS THE FATHER OF JESUS?
The
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ does not send people to steal, kill and
destroy. Is the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ behind the wars, massacres and
genocide of the Jews in the Old Testament? Certainly not! God says “love your
enemies;” he does not say annihilate them. Jesus’ Father is merciful; and “he
does not change like shifting shadows.” (James 1:17). As a matter of fact, “his
mercy endures forever.” (Psalm 106:1). Solomon says: “the path of the just is
like the shining sun that shines ever brighter unto the perfect day” (Proverbs
4:18). Even so, the bible provides progressive revelations of the character of
God. However, in the person of Jesus, we finally have the true full expression.
Jesus says: “Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father… The words I say to you
are not just my own. Rather, it is the Father, living in me, who is doing his
work. Believe me when I say that I am in the Father and the Father is in me.”
(John 14:9-11).
Prince
of peace
The
psalmist says: “Praise be to the LORD my Rock, who trains my hands for war, my
fingers for battle.” (Psalm 144:1). But this is contrary to the Lord revealed
in Jesus. Jesus insists citizens of the kingdom of God do not fight. He says:
“My kingdom is not of this world. If it were, my servants would fight to
prevent my arrest by the Jews.” (John 18:36). Children of God do not even
resist evil people. (Matthew 5:39).
God
did not intend the Israelites to have an army or to stockpile weapons. Israel’s
king was forbidden from amassing horses; required in those days for going into
battle. (Deuteronomy 17:16). Moses told the Israelites initially: “The LORD
will fight for you; you need only to be still.” (Exodus 14:14). But soon, they
were the ones fighting for the Lord. Nevertheless, the position of God remained
constant: “I will destroy your horses from among you and demolish your
chariots.”(Micah 5:10).
This
is the word of the Lord to Zerubbabel: “Not by might nor by power, but by my
Spirit.” (Zechariah 4:6). Accordingly, God’s plan was to give the Promised Land
to Israel without a fight. He said: “I will send my terror ahead of you and
throw into confusion every nation you encounter. I will make all your enemies
turn their backs and run. I will send the hornet ahead of you to drive the
Hivites, Canaanites and Hittites out of your way.” (Exodus 23:27-28). But the
Israelites preferred to be war-mongers like other nations. Therefore, they
pursued their own military agenda. This meant fighting wars. Judges says: “When
they chose new gods, war came to the city gates.” (Judges 5:8).
Jewish
fables
Paul
said to Titus: “Pay no attention to Jewish myths.” (Titus 1:14). Indeed, many
biblical stories of Jewish conquests are fictitious. Victims of Jewish genocide
did not stay in the grave. Moses allegedly exterminated the Midianites: “They
fought against Midian, as the LORD commanded Moses, and killed every
man.”(Numbers 31:7). But the Midianites later resurrected as rulers of the
Israelites: “Again the Israelites did evil in the eyes of the LORD, and for
seven years he gave them into the hands of the Midianites.” (Judges 6:1). The
Amalekites were “terminators;” destroyed again and again. When Joshua overcame
them, the Lord allegedly said to Moses: “I will completely blot out the memory
of Amalek from under heaven.” (Exodus 17:13-14). However, every time they were
“annihilated,” they would mysteriously later come back to life: “David and his
men arrived back at Ziklag. The Amalekites had raided southern Judah and
attacked Ziklag.” (1 Samuel 30:1). Furthermore, the ruthless ethnic-cleansing
of Canaan turned out to be no more than Jewish fables. Wars said to have been
successfully concluded under Joshua only started after his death. (Judges
1:1-2). In most cases, the Israelites could not dislodge the original
inhabitants of the land. (Judges 1:19-36).
Thieves
and robbers
The
prophets were against Jewish glorification of blood-letting. Habakkuk declares
woe on those “who builds a city with bloodshed and establishes a town by
crime!” (Habakkuk 2:12). Isaiah maintains: “The indignation of the LORD is
against all nations, and his fury against all their armies.” (Isaiah 34:2). It
is the blind who lead the blind to war. When the earth is finally full of the
knowledge of God; Isaiah predicts: “They will beat their swords into plowshares
and their spears into pruning hooks. Nation will not take up sword against
nation, nor will they train for war anymore.” (Isaiah 2:4).
Moses’
wife was a Midianite. Nevertheless, he said the Lord told him to tell the
Israelites: “Treat the Midianites as enemies and kill them.” (Numbers 25:16).
However, Jesus contradicts Moses by saying: “love your enemies, bless those who
curse you, do good to those who hate you, and pray for those who spitefully use
you and persecute you, that you may be sons of your Father in heaven.” (Matthew
5:44-45). This shows Moses did not really know the Father in heaven and his
directives did not come from God. Jesus repudiates Moses’ doctrine of
retributive justice. He says: “You have heard that it was said, ‘eye for eye,
and tooth for tooth.’ But I tell you, do not resist an evil person. If someone
strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also.” (Matthew 5:38-39).
He says furthermore: “Moses did not give you the bread from heaven, but my
Father gives you the true bread from heaven. For the bread of God is he who
comes down from heaven and gives life to the world.” (John 6:32-33).
Jesus
confounds the whole biblical folklore of Jewish massacres and
land-expropriation. He says: “All who ever came before me were thieves and
robbers, but the sheep did not listen to them.” (John 10:7-8). According to
Jesus, God does not send people to steal, kill and destroy. (John 10:10). On
the contrary: he is the resurrection and the giver of life. (John 11:25). When
James and John wanted to command fire from heaven like Elijah to consume a
Samaritan village that denied them free passage, Jesus rebuked them. He said to
them: “You do not know what manner of spirit you are of. For the Son of Man did
not come to destroy men’s lives but to save them.” (Luke 9:55-56).
True bread
Some
Israelites thought they were sons of Abraham, but Jesus told them the devil was
actually their father. (John 8:44). Before Jesus came, men essentially
second-guessed God and created him in their own image. Therefore, only after
Jesus’ faithful witness could we come to the true knowledge of God.
Accordingly, Jesus maintains: “No one really knows the Father except the Son
and those to whom the Son chooses to reveal him.” (Luke 10:22). The Father of
Jesus is not a Jewish tribal God: “’The LORD, the God of the Hebrews. (Exodus
3:18). He is: “The LORD, the God of all mankind.” (Jeremiah 32:27). Indeed,
Jesus says: “Many will come from east and west, and sit down with Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven. But the sons of the kingdom will be
cast out into outer darkness. There will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.”
(Matthew 8:11-12).
By
Femi Aribisala
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