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I came across this article, though long but thought provoking and a food for thought.
I didn't bother to check out the author but I believe it's necessary for us christains to read and act.
We need, as a church, to arise and act, maybe in some groups like hosue fellowships and other church groups.
Lets discuss, what do you think?
LET IT BEGIN FROM D CHURCHES!!
Nigeria is an incredible country.
I mean, it is one country where millions are suffering and thousands spend every weekend celebrating one thing or the other, spending millions of naira that are not available to the suffering millions. Nigeria is comparable to the United States in one aspect: we always talk "ests." I mean, we have the largest, smallest, richest, best, meanest of so many things. If we are not the happiest nation in the world, we are the nation with the most number of PhD degree holders. In Nigeria, we have some of the poorest people who have some of the biggest smile anywhere but we also have perhaps the largest untapped oil and gas reserves that have helped fueled the reign of the meanest set of rulers.
You see what I mean?
A couple of years back, Nigeria maintained she had broken world records by convening the largest gathering of Christians anywhere and also to have built the largest Church building in the world. We literally gush at such reports. As someone who was born in Nigeria, and a Pastor of a local church in the United States, the positive spins make impressive news.
However, personally, I believe that the most appropriate label for Nigeria is that she is a nation with a large Christian population, largest Church edifice, a Christian President, a huge number of big name churches and Pastors all over BUT with the least positive influence on society. I once heard what Dr. Okey Onuzo said in his address to a local congregation in Nigeria: if what we have presently in Nigeria is what we call a revival, then we are in trouble. That's right Doctor!
Of course, I am not saying the Church in Nigeria is solely responsible
for the sad state of things of Nigeria. By no means, no. I am saying
that the Church, a divine instrument of order and excellence, has not
risen up to the occasion to correct what could be corrected in the
Nigerian environment. We have hidden ourselves inside our comfortable
buildings for too long, praying "bless me" and confessing positive,
while the nation continues business as usual. You can apply my thoughts
here to the Muslims as well as adherents of other faiths in Nigeria. I
chose to address the Church not only because I am a firm believer in
Christ Jesus and in the institution of the Church but also because of
my strong conviction that the local church is the hope of the world.
Please understand that this is no mean and unjust criticism of the
Church in Nigeria. I just believe that it is time we Christians examine
ourselves and see if we have actually done enough to change the face of
our nation, Nigeria.
In the past several months, it was exciting to read in the popular
American magazine, Charisma, glowing reports of what God is doing in
Nigeria. Well, the good feeling you get from that is messed up when you
arrive in Nigeria and observe the situation of the Church yourself.
Getting to the ground itself to see what the people are doing with what
God is doing is a totally different picture. You will not see that in
Charisma. You have to go home and spend sometime to really see it. It
is not a pretty picture.
Nigerian Churches are full of people on Sundays but the influence on
the society between Monday morning and Saturday night is another story
it is almost zero. Otherwise how could one explain the pile of trash
that's been sitting next to a Church building in Mushin for so long
and church members come and go but never feel it is their
responsibility to the community to do anything about it. But then Jesus
saves! And he does. But he won't clear the thrash, repair the streets,
clean the street gutters and get rid of unwanted structures.
All through Scriptures we find that the way the Church influenced the
society was both naturally and supernaturally. The natural is what God
can do but won't do because man can make it happen. Such as feeding the
homeless and meeting the needs of widows. The supernatural is what man
would like to do but can't do because only God can make it happen. Such
as healing the sick, raising the dead and opening the eyes of the
blind. Both the supernatural acts of God and the natural acts of man
are needed to have a total impact on the community.
In Nigeria there is so much emphasis on the supernatural by every
religious freak. Most Nigerians, regardless of their religious
affiliation, talk God and some even act god, but very, very few
actually do Godly things that can result in societal change and way of
thinking. Very few Churches are influencing the Nigerian society the
natural way. I especially note the City of David, a Parish of the
Redeemed Christian Church of God pastored by Dr. Eskur. The Church of
about 3,000 members feeds about 30,000 people every Sunday mornings in
Lagos. And another Pastor whose ministry has taken my attention is Sam
Adeyemi of Daystar Christian Center who long before wearing seatbelts
became a law in Nigeria has requested members of his influential Church
to start wearing their seatbelts. These are natural things and they can
make changes in the community. If anyone knows of any other example in
other parts of Nigeria, please let me know.
Our concerns are very different. Example, some Pastors recently
cried "foul" when the Nigerian National Broadcasting Commission (NBC),
the body which regulates broadcasting, declared a ban on the
broadcasting of false miracles shown on Nigerian television. Although I
do not agree with NBC that miracles should be broadcast only when they
are verifiable, I do agree with the Commission that it is time to put a
stop to falsehood in the Church and put the miracles where they ought
to be - changing the society, bringing the church (the people) out of
the building and performing supernatural acts that influences the
nation.
In fact, when you consider how much it costs to broadcast an hour of
these miracle programs, in light of the poverty in Nigeria, it sounds
very silly and absurd. Last time I checked, it costs $10,000 an hour
for a church to broadcast a miracle service. And some churches run 20
hours weekly! Let that sink in and begin to figure it out. Begin to
figure out why a church can bring out $200,000 a week in broadcasting
hours of miracle shows but can't afford to pave the road leading to its
buildings. Perhaps I am missing something. I am open to correction.
My question is: why are not ALL churches in Nigeria getting involved
in naturally influencing their communities? It is really not that
expensive. There's too much emphasis on how God can supernaturally
prosper people financially, how he can promote people from level one to
ten without much effort, and how he can get rid of the troublesome
mother-in-law.
What this has done is to create an atmosphere of dependence on God even for things that man can make happen by himself.
God will not supernaturally clear the pile of trash along the
expressway where the Churches are strategically positioned. God won't
repair the bad roads leading to the mega-sized Churches and the homes
of their Pastors. God won't get rid of the ugly, dirty out-dated wall
posters and banners announcing another Church program this week.
These are things that Churches can start mobilizing their large
membership to do. Traveling through Ibadan, you'll think you are in
Trash City. I mean, Ibadan seems to have more thrash than people! And
these same people who call on God all the time will not call on
themselves to do something about the thrash that surrounds their
churches and their residences.
As I drove through Lagos, what first struck me was the contribution to
visual decay that the Church and various para-Church organizations have
created everywhere. What with the banners hanging about 15 feet above
major arterials, posters pasted on every available wall, buildings and
light poles. The hundreds of posters I saw announcing various programs
made me feel that the Church in Nigeria has enslaved the people by
keeping them locked up in programs and events rather than empowering
them for purpose. Every ministry that was a ministry had a poster
pasted somewhere strategic. They also had banners everywhere. And to my
amazement, some of the dates on the posters and banners were already
way past, like two years ago, but they were still hanging there - and
half of the people who patronize that particular street can't even
read!
Our people were eager to get people into Church to receive healing
and prosperity through creative publicility but were not willing to go
back and take down the posters and banners after their activities were
done. Perhaps God was expected to supernaturally remove them! Just may
be!
Where the successive Political Administrations have impoverished the
people, the Churches seem to have added an extra weight by enslaving
the people to religious duties. Nigerians, especiallyin southern
Nigeria, go to Church almost every day and they have no time to
demonstrate the lessons they are learning in their Churches! Think with
me for a minute:
if you spend your whole life in the Church doing this and that, when
do you begin to apply the godly principles for societal change? What am
I saying? I agree when Pastor Anselm Madubuko of New Anointing said
that the Church in Nigeria is "large but weak." No one could have said
it better. The army that troops to Church in Nigeria every weekend and
to every other Church event is certainly enviable. I wish we had such
an amount in our Churches in the western world. Well, I sure wish I
had that many in my local congregation! But the positive impact of
that army on the community is not visible. That army needs to be let
loose to change their environments. Last time I visited home (which was
just a few months ago), I left very disgusted with the boast we make of
the size of the Church when we cannot use that size to its full
strength. Why do you have such a large-sized volunteer army if they
cannot make a visible impact on the society?
It is time to change the way we think and act. It may take the
supernatural acts of God to attract people to Church but it might take
the natural acts of man in addition to what God is doing to keep the
people there.
I therefore suggest that we stop bragging about the millions of
people who come to Nigeria every December to pray and start talking
about tapping the strength of that million-member army to clear up
thrash and remove posters and banners from the streets and walls.
Perhaps just as we have that prayer-gathering of millions, we can also
have a thrash-clearing gathering of millions. Friends, if Pastor Enoch
Adeboye of the Redeemed Christian Church of God mobilizes the members
of that powerful and influential organization to come together for a
day of thrash clearing in Lagos, they will respond. I guarantee it!
Pastor Adeboye is such a man of great character and integrity that he
commands respect not only in Nigeria but worldwide. I don't belong to
the RCCG organization but even I will respond to such a call. And I
will encourage other Christians to do the same. In fact, I will travel
all the way to Nigeria to participate in it. And by the way, I know
people of other faiths who would respond to Pastor Adeboye's call to a
clean Nigeria.
It is time to stop bragging about Winners Chapel's record-breaking
Church building in Otta, Lagos and start talking about how that 50,000
plus church attendees can collect their offerings in Church on a
particular Sunday a month and dedicate it to repairing one road at a
time. On a monthly basis. Before you know it, knowing the competitive
juice in the blood of our people, other Churches would follow the
leadership of Winners Chapel. Bishop David Oyedepo is a great and
admirable man, gifted with motivation and excellence. If he asks the
people to do it, they will. Even if they don't agree with his style.
It should not always be the government efforts to initiate a street
cleaning weekends. War Against Indiscipline (WAI) of the
Buhari/Idiagbon regime should have been an initiative of the Church.
The Church must be the one to direct order and discipline in the
community. Alas, we are the breakers. If the law says get your visa
before you travel, our people will try to circumvent that by anointing
their passports with oil so a visa can suddenly appear. What kind of
thing is that? A magical occurrence is not truly an answered-prayer! If
the boss says do not visit your Church website while at work, our
people will bind him and and ask God to demote him or remove him. Shame
on Christians who do these things!
God will not do what he has given man the natural ability to make
happen. Rather, he makes opportunities available for man to make it
happen. We are wasting time if we expect God to break his own law. God
is not a Nigerian. He will not break his own principle.
I hope that some of the spiritual leaders of Nigerian Churches will
read this simple piece and get ideas. At the least, I hope that some of
the members who read this will pass it on to the leadership of the
Church in Nigeria. Perhaps I am missing something. I would like to be
educated. But from where I stand, I see no evidence of a major,
positive sociatal influence of the large-sized Church in Nigeria. I
hear the rhethorics, I read of the intra and inter-fightings among and
between Churches and leaders. But so far, all I hear is talk. I don't
see any major, wide-reaching action.
It is not enough to be known as a land of largest Churches and greatest
Preachers. We need to be known as a nation where the large Church is
using her powerful influence to meet community needs.
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