Saturday, 19 July 2008

STILL ON LEADERSHIP


Now that is what we were saying. Neither the individual, nor the nation and those who rule her can afford to dichotomise their activities! Everything begins and ends with God. And by that I do not mean the practice of praying at the beginning of an event or meeting or project, shut Him out of things all through and then pray to Him at the end! The leadership style, the lifestyle model that we are canvassing here is one that puts God in the picture “every second of time and every inch of the way.” It is a leadership model that we think is exclusive to the clergy; but it is not! It should be the model for every one in any denomination or group, who name the name of the Lord.


We were saying the last time that there is need to ensure that everything we do is grounded in the spiritual otherwise, it would not endure. We quoted one of the founding fathers of the United States, George Washington as saying as follows: “And let us with caution indulge the supposition that morality can be maintained without religion. Whatever may be conceded to the influence of refined education on minds . . . reason and experience both forbid us to expect that national morality can prevail, in exclusion of religious principle.”

We then counselled that even in the determined effort to identify, develop, groom and mentor leaders, in a nation in desperate need of transformational leaders; a venture being boldly spearheaded by Senator (Dr) Ken Nnamani through his Ken Nnamani Centre for Leadership and Development, the place of the spiritual must be assured.

We argued that the current leadership buzz word in Nigeria, servant leadership does not have its origin in the works of some expert; it has its roots in the leadership style and teaching of the Lord Jesus Christ. We wrote about “...the original servant leader; the one who washed his disciples’ feet; the one his followers could wake up from a well deserved rest with a sharp rebuke: ‘carest thou not that we perish’, and who woke up to rebuke the storm and not those who had rudely interrupted his sleep! (see Mark 4:38-39); the leader to whom his followers can say “what kind of question is that; don’t you see the crowd? (see Mark 5:30-32). The one who said, “And whosoever will be chief among you, let him be your servant: (Matthew 20:27);” If any man desire to be first, the same shall be last of all, and servant of all (Mark 9:35); And whosoever of you will be the chiefest, shall be servant of all (Mark 10:44).”

We drew attention to the possibility that political correctness may have made an in-road into the conduct of our affairs, such that we compartmentalise events, settings etc as secular or spiritual and wondered whether that was why the speakers, including the chief host made no reference to their faith.
“No sir”, we wrote “every forum is God’s; the separation of the spiritual from the so-called lular is the mother and father of all lies! Man is first spirit before his is body! Nigeria might be a multi-religious State; it’s certainly not a secular one”.

We conclude with these words, lost to Gremlin, the infamous printer’s devil or one of his cousins, “This brings me to the following words of Howard Jeter: ‘…Nigeria’s geography has insulated it from many of the world’s most devastating natural disasters;…(the) combination of factors – size, dynamism, talented and energetic population and abundant natural resources – places Nigeria in a position to emerge as a great economic and political power, not only in Africa but in the world.’
“Now, think about that! He spoke of a “geography” that insulates from disaster and a ‘combination of factors’ that places Nigeria in a position for leadership, as if they were some accidental, fortuitous occurrence. No, they are not. Rather, they are the deliberate will of an omnipotent Creator who has a role for this great nation in His plans for His earth. Will KCNLD please factor these into its programming? A course on Spiritual Leadership Models will be a place to start.”

But since those words were written, I have had the privilege of coming across information, some new, some just being seen in a new light by me, that not only validate the points we sought to make but also confirms one of Ambassador Howard Jeter’s statements at the KNCLD launch that Nigeria need not look too far away for examples.

Incidentally, the KNCLD founder and chairman, Dr Nnamani himself fits the bill. He was a freshman senator who did his constituent, his nation and his faith proud by no displaying courage in the heat of tremendous pressure during the Third Term controversy.

I was also privileged to come across a book by a United Kingdom-based Nigerian Christian publisher, Pamela Chinekwe, titled “Ambassador Christopher Kolade in Britain.” The title tells the story of the content. The sub-title states it as “the dynamic story of how one man made the difference..” You need to get and read this book published Chosen Books in their Distinction Series to get the gist, but permit me to draw attention to Chapter Four of the book, captioned “High Commissioner Versus Man of God?”

The opening paragraph reads: “Something made me curious during the course of studying the life of His Excellency in Britain. It was the certainty and confidence in steps taken or steps about to be taken that things would work alright.”

When she put the question, Dr Christopher Kolade replied in these words: “My starting point is that there is nothing I am involved in that God didn’t lead me into. I took the role as High Commissioner because God indicated to me that he wanted me to take it. He gave me that indication because He already knows me very well and knows where I am coming from and where I am likely to go. He would give me an assignment or permit me to take it because He knows I will do my best to be faithful to Him. In my day to day decision making, my day opens with the conviction that whatever opportunities come to me that day must be used to serve God.”

Continuing, he said: “I must not assume that there are certain times of the day that I work for myself or I am working for somebody else because God is interested in everything I do; He can give me an opportunity to serve Him through anything...”

Now that is what we were saying. Neither the individual, nor the nation and those who rule her can afford to dichotomise their activities! Everything begins and ends with God. And by that I do not mean the practice of praying at the beginning of an event or meeting or project, shut Him out of things all through and then pray to Him at the end! The leadership style, the lifestyle model that we are canvassing here is one that puts God in the picture “every second of time and every inch of the way.” It is a leadership model that we think is exclusive to the clergy; but it is not! It should be the model for every one in any denomination or group, who name the name of the Lord.

Talking about the clergy and leadership brings me to the other information I was privy to during the week. And it has to do with the man Archbishop (Dr) Peter Jasper Akinola, Primate of the Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion). If you are a regular reader of this column, you would have read about him a number of times before. You may recall how I had quoted the words of Pastor Rick Warren, the well known author of the prodigious book, “Purpose Driven Life” who writing for TIME magazine three or so years ago described Akinola as a “Model of Christian Leadership”. And so, I was really reluctant to “get on his case”, as it were again today. But, if you’ve been monitoring what’s going on in Jerusalem at a meeting of about 300 Primates of the worldwide Anglican Communion, known as GAFCON (Global Anglican Future Conference), you will understand why I succumbed.

Here is a meeting, put together under the leadership of about ten Anglican Primates from across the continents; he being the prime force, to contemplate the future of the second largest Christian denomination in the world against the background of satanic revisionism, compromise and relativism that seem to be getting the better of the Church. But the world knows that it had taken the courageous leadership of one man standing up for the faith; his resilience; his forthrightness to start this unstoppable movement towards changing the face of Anglicanism forever. That is leadership, at its transformative best and it is anchored on the spiritual. That is why it has endured; That is the kind of leadership that should interest KNCLD for it to make the difference in Nigeria and in Africa and become a model for even older centres to study and emulate. (Next: Gafcon & the Future of Christianity)

Friday, 18 July 2008

GAFCON & THE FUTURE OF THE CHURCH (2)


Against the background that a sizeable percentage of the bishops represented at the Global Anglican Future Conference are not at Lambeth 2008, the question remains, will whatever is achieved at be too little too late? Or will Lambeth 2008 succeed where Lambeth 1998 failed. Will Rowan Williams avert the seemingly looming fate of being the Primate who presided over the disintegration of the Anglican Communion? Or will he be remembered as the one who pulled the Communion back from the brink?


By the time you read this, Lambeth Conference 2008, the once-a-decade gathering of Anglican Bishops from across the globe would have entered its fifth day in the beautiful ambience of the University of Kent in Canterbury.

Depending on what time of day you are reading, this assortment of clergy men and their from diverse climes would have had or are about to have breakfast, a drive in coaches to the Canterbury Cathedral for the official Lambeth Conference Service; returned from the service just in time for lunch; spend a free afternoon followed by a conference session during which they are introduced to the programme of the conference as put together by the so-called Design Group; have their evening meal and relax at a concert to be given by the Korean Choir.

The atmosphere would have been largely calm and tension-free on the surface. But underlining this would be the nagging question of the effect that recent events in the communion might have on the future of Anglicanism. And that would simply be euphemism for the effect of GAFCON on the Anglican Church and, I daresay, the Church in general.

The calmness, however, though a deliberate design of the chief host of the conference, might not necessarily be a put-on. This writer recognises the place of the hand of God on matters such as this when he is given the place of primacy that rightly belongs to Him. And irrespective of anyone’s perception of the Most Rev Dr Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury and leader of the Anglican Church, he is a deeply spiritual man, who seems to have put together his first Lambeth Conference with absolutely no personal agenda. He comes across as totally and absolutely depending on the Holy Spirit to speak clearly and unequivocally on the key issues – and not just to him, but to as many of his colleagues as He might chose. These much are discernible from the structuring and programme of the conference, as well as, the rhetoric of the man.

In a video message he sent across the Anglican commonwealth in April, the archbishop revealed his heart and his expectation of the conference which opened on Thursday, the bishops having arrived the day before.

“What I would really most like to see in this year’s Lambeth Conference”, he said, “is the sense that this is essentially a spiritual encounter. A time when people are encountering God as they encounter one another, a time when people will feel that their life of prayer and witness is being deepened and their resources are being stretched. Not a time when we are being besieged by problems that need to be solved and statements that need to be finalised, but a time when people feel that they are growing in their ministry. And for that to happen once again, we are going to need the prayers and the support of so many people around the world.”

He continued: “And that is why I have encouraged people across the Communion to prepare for the Lambeth Conference not only by praying for Bishops as they gather but also by sharing some of the material that has been provided for Bible study at the Conference - sharing in reflection on St John’s Gospel - so that Bishops and their people and their clergy will in the Gospel that will lay the foundations for what we hope to achieve at the Lambeth Conference. So please pray for the Conference and please share in that process of preparation, that reflection of God’s word in the Gospel of John that will open up to us the horizons that we need in order to be better Bishops for the sake of a better Church.” months ahead be going through the same kinds of processes of thinking and praying around St John’s.

All of these explain the structure of the Conference, made up of many small group meetings or “indaba” which in the words of the archbishop, are “groups where in traditional African culture, people get together to sort out the problems that affect them all, where everyone has a voice and where there is an attempt to find a common mind or a common story that everyone is able to tell when they go away from it. This is how we approached it. This is what we heard. This is where we arrived as we prayed and thought and talked together.”

It also explains why between Thursday and Sunday, the bishops would have spent considerable time at retreats praying and worshipping and generally just seeking the face of God for direction. Of course, in spite of Dr Rowan’s position that “Lambeth” is not a legislature, the Conference won’t be shying away from taking on the key issues, namely the threatened split of the Anglican Church which GAFCON forebode.
In the same April video, which predated GAFCON, he said: “At the heart of the whole Anglican Communion is relationship. We have never been a body that is bound together by firm and precise rules and that is often, as it is at the moment, a matter of some real concern and some confusion in our life as a communion. We don’t want at the Lambeth Conference to be creating a lot of new rules but we do obviously need to strengthen our relationships and we need to put those relationships on another footing, slightly firmer footing, where we have promised to one another that this is how we will conduct our life together. And it is in that light that at this year we are discussing together the proposal for what we are calling a covenant between the Anglican Churches of the world. A covenant. A relationship of promise. We undertake that this is how we will relate to one another; that when these problems occur, that this is how we will handle them together, that this is how advice will be given and shared and that this is how decisions and discernment can be taken forward.”

Emphasising the crucial role of a covenant within the Communion and therefore how it is arrived at, the Archbishop continued: “That is a very a big part of what we will be looking at this year but it is not everything because no covenant, no arrangement of that sort is worth the paper it is written on if it doesn’t grow out of the relationships that are built as people pray together and share their lives together over tow and a half weeks. And to try and underline, we have also decided that this year we are going to begin the Lambeth Conference with a couple of days of retreat, of quiet prayer and reflection. There will be addresses. There will be a lot of open space and open time where people can just be alone with God, to think deeply about what they want from the conference and perhaps have the opportunity to talk quietly with one of two others about their hopes and fears.”

The journey to a covenant would therefore take the bishops through such routes as reflecting on themes like: God's Mission and the Bishop's discipleship; Listening to God and each other; Celebrating Common Ground; Proclaiming the Good News; and Transforming Society. Other themes are: Discerning our shared calling; Safeguarding Creation; Engaging with a Multi-Faith World; Equal in God's sight; Living under scripture; and Listening to God and each other.

Against the background that a sizeable percentage of the bishops represented at the Global Anglican Future Conference are not at Lambeth 2008, the question remains, will whatever is achieved at be too little too late? Or will Lambeth 2008 succeed where Lambeth 1998 failed. Will Rowan Williams avert the seemingly looming fate of being the Primate who presided over the disintegration of the Anglican Communion? Or will he be remembered as the one who pulled the Communion back from the brink? We shall examine all the ramifications as this serial progress next week.

GAFCON & THE FUTURE OF THE CHURCH


Yet, the coming on board of the Global Anglican Future Conference, which is what GAFCON stands for, is possibly one of the most significant issues of our time. Without exaggerating, it is of such moment as Martin Luther’s nailing of the 95 Theses to the door of the Castle Church in Wittenberg, Germany on October 31, 1517. This was what led inexorably to the Reformation of the Church and the birth of Protestantism.


It is one of the ironies of today’s living and lifestyle that the mundane gets maximum attention, while the important, the fundamental are relegated to the back burner. That is why the on-going developments in the worldwide Anglican Communion have yet to find space, to my knowledge, on the front page of any newspaper or magazine. That is therefore why, dear reader, you can be forgiven if your reaction upon reading the headline is this piece is ga-what?

Yet, the coming on board of the Global Anglican Future Conference, which is what GAFCON stands for, is possibly one of the most significant issues of our time. Without exaggerating, it is of such moment as Martin Luther’s nailing of the 95 Theses to the door of the Castle Church in Wittenberg, Germany on October 31, 1517. This was what led inexorably to the Reformation of the Church and the birth of Protestantism.

To understand this comparison, it is necessary to understand the import of the 95 Theses, its essence and its aftermath. Church History has it that Martin Luther, a Professor of theology at Wittenberg University who doubles as the priest at the town’s City Church therefore responsible for the salvation of the parish made one significant observation. He noticed that fewer and fewer members of the congregation were coming to him for confession. His investigation revealed that the people were going to neighbouring towns to buy what is known as Indulgences, particularly, the Peter's Indulgence.
What are indulgences, you may wonder. According to Wikipedia, Indulgences had a firm root in Roman Catholic theology which posits that “faith alone, whether fiduciary or dogmatic, cannot justify man; and that only such faith as is active in charity and good works can justify man. These good works could be obtained by donating money to the church.” In operating this theological concept, the Church even had a Papal commissioner for indulgences.
It was recorded that the from about 1508, trade in Indulgences rose very sharply because both the Papal Court and Bishop Albrecht von Brandenburg Germany's representative for the sale of indulgence were in great financial trouble.
This was the setting when a Dominican Friar, Johann Tetzel, was appointed commissioner for indulgences and sent to Germany, to sell indulgences to raise money to rebuild St Peter's Basilica in Rome. This was in the period 1516-1517.
It is this practice that had virtually become a substitute for confession, thus seemingly allowing people to “buy” their salvation. This was completely repulsive to Luther, who strongly believed that to receive the grace of God; you had to live a life of humility.
Tetzel’s ostentatious style of selling the indulgences in the region around Luther’s Wittenberg territory did not help matters. It was said that stories started making the rounds that “Tetzel could redeem the sins of the deceased.” He was also famously quoted as declaring that: “When the money clangs in the box, the souls spring up to heaven.".
Luther would have none of that! So, on October 31, 1517, he wrote to Albrecht, Archbishop of Mainz and Magdeburg, to protest the sale of indulgences enclosing in his letter a copy of his "Disputation of Martin Luther on the Power and Efficacy of Indulgences," which was to become known as The 95 Theses.

Those who know would testify that since Luther saw his disputation as a scholarly objection to church practices rather than an attempt to confront the church the tone of his writing was largely mild, or Hans Hillerbrand put it, “searching rather than doctrinaire.” Which probably explained the covering note to the theses which reads: “Out of love for the truth and from desire to elucidate it, the Reverend Father Martin Luther, Master of Arts and Sacred Theology, and ordinary lecturer therein at Wittenberg, intends to defend the following statements and to dispute on them in that place. Therefore he asks that those who cannot be present and dispute with him orally shall do so in their absence by letter. In the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, Amen.”

A perusal of the theses, however, would reveal that some of the theses did have an undercurrent of challenge. Thesis 89, for instance, pointedly asked: “Why does the pope, whose wealth today is greater than the wealth of the richest Crassus, build the basilica of St. Peter with the money of poor believers rather than with his own money?”
Church fathers took Luther’s concerns tardily, indeed with considerable levity. The man to whom the letter was addressed, Cardinal Albrecht of Hohenzollern, Archbishop of Mainz and Magdeburg, had personal reasons for ignoring Luther. Pope Leo X had given his consent to the archbishop to use part of the indulgence income to pay certain personal debts of his. So he didn’t as much as formally acknowledge the letter, even when its contents were circulating like wild fire. His tentative reaction was to set up a panel of experts to scrutinize the letter for heresy and then forwarded it to Rome.
Pope Leo was to respond over the next three years, with what he described as “great care as is proper." He deployed a series of papal theologians and envoys against Luther probably hoping the matter would die down of its own accord. This attitude was discernible from the fact that sometimes in 1518 he was quoted as dismissing Luther as, "a drunken German" who "when sober will change his mind".
While Rome fiddled, Luther's writings were circulating widely abroad. By 1519, he had garnered audience for his viewpoints in France, England, and Italy. As a result, students thronged to Wittenberg to hear him speak. His creative juice was flowing too. Three of his best known works, To the Christian Nobility of the German Nation; On the Babylonian Captivity of the Church; and Christian were published in 1520:
Church history has it that the Pope finally reacted on May 30th in 1519 by formally demanding an explanation from Luther who wasted no time in writing a summary and explanation of his theses to the Pope. Predictably, although the Pope was believed to have conceded some of the points to Luther, he simply could not accept the challenge to his authority implied by Luther’s exertions. He summoned Luther to Rome to on this score. Intervention came from Frederick the Wise, the Saxon Elector, who did not want one of his subjects to be sent to Rome to be judged by Italians. He prevailed on the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V who needed his support to arrange a compromise.
By the arrangement that resulted, the summons to Rome was cancelled, and instead Luther went to Augsburg in October 1518 to meet the papal legate, Cardinal Thomas Cajetan. In spite of long hours of debates and arguments, still nothing was resolved. While Cajetan held on to the opinion that the practice of indulgences had to be right, otherwise, God Himself would have revealed the fraud, Luther stood his ground rejecting what he saw as the ‘sanctification of history.”
As a result, the Pope formally warned Luther through an edict, called the papal bull asking him to recant 41 sentences extracted from his writings, including the 95 Theses, within 60 days or risk excommunication.
Although other attempts were made at resolution of the crisis, Luther was excommunicated by Pope Leo X on January 3, 1521, about three weeks after he made a bonfire of the papal bull and other related documents in a public show of defiance on December 10, 1520. Of course that wasn’t the end of the story. One thing led to the other and the reformation resulted.
Now, I have taken you through this excursion into the life and times of Dr Martin Luther and the eventual birth of Protestantism, because of the parallels between what happened then and what has been happening in the Anglican Church in the last one decade or so which culminated in Jerusalem 2008, the Global Anglican Future Conference. (Continues Next Week)
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FANIKAYODE, BLOOD-SUCKING DEMONS AND ALL THAT

The devil makes his home in any environment where justice and equity are aliens; he thrives in the bitterness that oppression brings out of the oppressed; he is lord where the poor are trampled upon and the rich are not averse to sustaining their wealth and privileges through unjust means. We should thank God that more of our citizens are running to the Churches, to the Lord Jesus Christ, for succour; but we must not underestimate the number rushing to the occult, to satan for help. That is the source of the kind of thing that Fani-Kayode spoke about.


These are truly interesting times in the life of our nation. For interesting, some might want to read trying or testy, or whatever else is their perception on the state of affairs in the largest black nation in the world.

As I write this, most, some say all, of Lagos, where I live and work, has been in complete darkness for about a week. To my knowledge, nobody has told us why; and when we shall have the privilege of having the occasional flicker we’ve become accustomed to back. As a result, we’ve had to spend some more on fuel for generators, drink tonnes more of fumes per day to supplement the “poor” water that have become considerably poorer and food that have become dearer.

No, I am not complaining; not one little bit. That is because, I’ve always known and stated it here that the flood of righteousness will come, some day soon; sooner than most of us are willing to allow for. That is why I disagree with respected journalist and one time ‘action Governor” of Lagos State, Alhaji Lateef Jakande who said recently that all probes are useless. You see, previous probes may have been so, but the current ones are certainly going to bear bountiful fruits. These are no man-orchestrated moves; these are the moves of God in His wisdom, to fulfil His promise in the Bible that there is nothing hidden that shall not be exposed (see Matthew 10:26). Incidentally, Atiku Abubakar, Action Congress presidential contender in last year’s election had to admit that there is a higher power involved in what is going on at the moment!

The other aspect of the goings-on that many of us are missing is that the speed with which these exposes are coming on, within the first half of Yar’Adua’s disputed four-year term is also prophetic. When a people’s conscience becomes dead, as in unable to respond to stimuli, they take the word and the ways of God with levity. The Bible’s book of Ezekiel recorded God’s reaction to such temerity when He found it among the children of Israel:

"Son of man, what's this proverb making the rounds in the land of Israel that says, 'Everything goes on the same as ever; all the prophetic warnings are false alarms'? "Tell them, 'GOD, the Master, says, This proverb's going to have a short life!' "Tell them, 'Time's about up. Every warning is about to come true. False alarms and easygoing preaching are a thing of the past in the life of Israel. I, GOD, am doing the speaking. What I say happens. None of what I say is on hold. What I say, I'll do--and soon, you rebels!' Decree of God the Master“ (Ezekiel 12: 22-25).

That is why those who thought they were going to have a breathing space; that before anything untoward happens they would have had time to cover their tracks, must be wondering what hit them. I’ve said it many times before and I am going to say it again, things are not ever going to be the same again in our land. God is on our case, and it therefore CANNOT be business as usual. And it applies as much to those in government (every tier and branch of it), as it does to those in business, in academia, in sports, every other area of our national life including, most crucially of all, the Church.

It must also be stated that, because God is in it, true justice will be done eventually in all cases. It doesn’t matter how much people, who have smelt blood and would want to go for the kill, clamour for some heads, the innocent will not be punished. Yes, there would be trials for some, here and there, but those who have not soiled there hands will not need bleach. If you think that is prophetic, it is.

I say this because, as I write this, Mrs Diezani Allison Madueke, Minister of Transportation was being tarred with the brush taking out of the Professor Grange/Obasanjo-Bello paint bucket. And I know that many can’t wait to hear that she’s been asked to resign and docked by EFCC like the crowd from the Ministry of Health (corrected). But, unless the investigations reveal other things from what we already know, this is simply a tea-pot storm.

One, the money said to have been withdrawn were for projects already approved, and which had gone through due process. Two, there are no evidences yet that the minister or any one else benefited personally from the steps taken. Three, even if she were to be in disobedience of the Executive Order that unspent funds be returned to the Treasury, she would only have violated the letter rather than the spirit of that presidential directive. After all wasn’t the directive issued to forestall fraud? But, this is not a defence of the minister, it is simply a declaration that, as things stand today, there is no comparison yet between what happened at the Ministry of Health (corrected) and that of the Ministry of Transportation. And even the courts are yet to rule in the Health (corrected) case.

Incidentally, two erstwhile Ministers in that ministry responsible for Aviation were also in the news during the week. You already know the story. Dr Babalola Borisade, the one we call “Boris” and Deacon Femi Fani-Kayode honoured the invitation of the Senate Committee investigating the transportation ministry. They were specifically asked to account for how the so-called Aviation Intervention Fund was spent and somehow they couldn’t agree on the arithmetic!

This is surprising, to say the least. I had the opportunity of interacting with “Boris” early in the life of the Obasanjo government. He was then a Senior Special Assistant and had led a small team to design the National Poverty Eradication Programme, NAPEP. (In retrospect, the nation would most certainly have benefited immensely had he been left to execute the programme). Back then, I found him quite a thorough person; with a knack for knit-picking in his attention to details. It is therefore not in his character not to be able to account for anything.

Femi Fani-Kayode, on the other hand, may be guilty of brashness and of being a trifle bit uncivil in the execution of his assignments, his forthrightness cannot be in doubt. For instance, till tomorrow, I believe that he was one of two or three people in the Obasanjo State House who did not know about their bosses’ third-term ambition until towards the end of the project! And the Deacon wore his faith on his sleeves, as it were, although his stay in government. Did he get his numbers mixed up?

I have stated all of these to make the point that whatever the case; no matter how susceptible many of us may have become to the revenge instinct, we must remain on the side of justice; God’s kind of justice.

Incidentally Fani-Kayode also got into the news for declaring that there was demonic involvement in the spate of air disasters that claimed many lives in this country before he got into office. Many have found that laughable. Many members of Moyo Oyatogun’s people’s parliament, Talk Back on Star FM radio, for instance, were very uncharitable in their reaction to the statement. And I am laughing. I am laughing at the ignorance of those who think life consists only of the things they can relate to by their senses. I am laughing at the suggestion that a “well-educated” man like Fani-Kayode should know better than to acknowledge the existence of the spiritual, including the satanic.

Fortunately one of the “parliamentarians”, as Moyo likes to address them, was “uneducated” enough to admit that the problems of this nation are spiritual. The earlier we face this truth the better. The devil makes his home in any environment where justice and equity are aliens; he thrives in the bitterness that oppression brings out of the oppressed; he is lord where the poor are trampled upon and the rich are not averse to sustaining their wealth and privileges through unjust means. We should thank God that more of our citizens are running to the Churches, to the lord Jesus Christ, for succour; but we must not underestimate the number rushing to the occult, to satan for help. That is the source of the kind of thing that Fani-Kayode spoke about. And he should know! He is a member of one of the most effective deliverance ministries in the land. (Apologies: GAFCON and the future of the Church will come later)