Thursday, 2 April 2015

THE PREACHER AND POLITICS

THE PREACHER AND POLITICS

by Deji Yesufu

The common sentiment among many in this clime is that the Christian preacher should not be involved in politics. The thinking is that politics is dirty and the preacher man is supposed to be clean, therefore the two should not mix. This essay will not be concerned with proving the fallacy behind this thinking because it is clear to the well discerning that if anyone is needed at all to sanitize an unclean system, it should naturally be someone who is clean. I would rather be showing the advantages of having a Christian preacher not only involved in partisan politics but also actively taking sides on political divides. I must state however that not all preachers will see the need to be involved in politics but for those who do, particularly with pure
Buhari/Jonathan
motives, it should be clear to them that they are pursuing a mandate of heaven and they have God as their support.

The Christian Preacher is first of all a minister of the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ. The gospel of Jesus Christ is the good news of what God did in Christ in reconciling sinners to himself. The news says that every man born of a woman is born a rebel against God. As a rebel, he is destined towards earning God's wrath in eternal perdition - hell. The reason being that God is a just God and will punish every sin that man commits - big or small. The same God who set up this system of Justice then brought himself under judgment so that sinful man might not earn the judgment and wrath of God. God was in Christ when he came to the world and died for the sins of all men. So that in the same manner with which the lamb takes away the sin of a community under Moses' law, so did Jesus become the sacrificial Lamb of God that will take away the sins of the whole world. The preacher's primary duty is to point all men to the cross of Jesus Christ. With the hope that some will acknowledge the works of God in Christ on the cross, confess their sins and believe in Jesus Christ to save them from their sins. This is the good news of Jesus Christ: "Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shall be saved…" (Acts 16:31). The reality, however, is that the gospel message is to be preached to men who live in the flesh and who have needs that must be met. Men who are hungry, sick or who live in crisis ridden environment cannot hear the gospel. Thus the bible teaches: 1

 I exhort therefore, that, first of all, supplications, prayers, intercessions, and giving of thanks, be made for all men; 2 For kings, and for all that are in authority; that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and honesty. 3 For this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Saviour; 4 Who will have all men to be saved, and to come unto the knowledge of the truth - 1 Timothy 4.

Gospel acceptability is closely linked to man's social environment. Therefore, while the Christian minister must preach Jesus Christ and him crucified, he must also support any legal means that will lead people to live in an environment that is quiet, peaceable, devoid of oppression, and one where justice prevails. These was what a man like Martin Luther King Jnr understood when, as a Christian minister, he led protests against segregation until the American society set up laws that made racism illegal. Today, a black man rules the United States of America. Everyone knows that Barack Obama is simply reaping the fruit of the labor of men like Dr King.

Today, Nigeria stands on the threshold of history. Our fathers had bequeathed a society that is free from British colonial rule. So that the people of Nigeria could govern themselves and determine their own destiny by themselves, while enjoying the blessings of the resources that God had given them. This is peace and quiet. Then a time came in this nation when it was thought that the civilian public could not rule themselves, except the military, the man with the gun, helped them. God be praised that on May 29th 1999, Nigeria witnessed a transition from military rule to civilian rule. Since then we have successfully transmitted power from one civilian government to another. All of these encouraging peace and quiet in our midst.

Then suddenly it seems that a cabal had held this country hostage. A political party by the name of the People's Democratic Party (PDP) held the nation to ransom. So that for sixteen years, after military rule, this party held sway. They kept sharing the dividends of democracy mostly amongst their members while the man on the streets languished in poverty. This is what informed the preacher man to of necessity join the political discuss and support the candidacy of General Muhammadu Buhari of the All Progressive Congress to root out the PDP from power. And God be praised that the presidential election of March 28th 2015 saw the emergence of an opposition party, defeating an incumbent president. Today the future of Nigeria speaks of peace and quiet.

These are the reasons the preacher must be involved in politics. Thankfully, the running mate of General Buhari is himself a Pastor - Prof. Yemi Osinbajo. Other preachers may not branch into full time politicking like Osinbajo but all of us owe it to the people we pastor to support progressive ideologies that have within them the capacity to better the lives of the people. What is the use of a Christian minister who preaches a sound gospel to a congregation on what Christ Jesus has done on the cross while more than half of the congregation are either hungry, jobless, without education, without medical care, or without hope? He could as well be speaking to the wind.

I, as a minister of Jesus Christ, did not consider my ministry complete until I could see a government come into power that will better the lives of the people I oversea for Jesus. And I am thankful to God that most of the people who look to me for spiritual admonition canvassed actively for Gen. Muhammadu Buhari. When our story shall be told tomorrow, we would be able to say that we did not join the bandwagon of lies that taught that Buhari was coming to Islamize the Nigerian nation. We did not, for one second, believe the false prophecy of Buhari loosing this election. We studied the man Buhari beyond his tribe and religion and came to the firm conclusion that he possesses the qualities to lead this nation out of the dept of corruption and insecurity she has found herself. We saw in the APC manifesto a workable document for a better Nigeria.

The duty of Mr. Preacher is not ended.

As much as we have supported Buhari to becoming president, we shall pray and trust
The People's General
God long enough until his administration succeeds. We trust God that in the days of Buhari, Nigeria will know peace and quiet. We believe God that in his time godliness will exalt this nation and every sin that has brought reproach our way will be taken away. We trust God that the gospel we preach will begin to make sense to the world; as the world have seen a new breed of Christian ministers who love God and humanity enough to side with good even, sometimes, at great cost to their reputation. Long live the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

Long live the Gospel of Jesus Christ in the land of the living.

Praise the Lord!

Hallelujah!!

Tuesday, 24 March 2015

JONATHAN'S SIN

JONATHAN'S SIN

by Fashina George

All indications regarding the outcome of the coming presidential elections in Nigeria on Saturday, 28th March 2015, point to the fact that Nigeria is facing the first time that an incumbent president might be loosing an election in the country. This is a good thing in itself because it shows that Nigeria's democracy is growing and democratic ethos is beginning to take firm root on our shores. By the time the results of the elections are read out, many might want to ask why Goodluck Jonathan lost the election. They may want to conjecture what was the leading factor that led to his defeat by Gen Muhammadu Buhari at the 2015 presidential elections. Some will suggest his weak stance on corruption; others will explain that his wife's unbridled and uncouth utterances was his waterloo; and yet others will say that the Nigerian people truly bought into the "CHANGE" mantra of the All Progressive Congress (APC). I wish to state in this article that the leading factor in Jonathan's defeat at this year's polls was his inability to curb the violence raging in the northern part of Nigeria. Jonathan's singular sin is insecurity.

President Goodluck Jonathan inherited a precarious security situation when he came to power in May 29th, 2011. Boko Haram (BH) had been attacking parts of northern Nigeria and it was the job of the newly installed chief security officer of the country to curb the violence. It didn't stop. Rather, under Jonathan, the violence perpetrated by BH only worsened - these evil people even had the effrontery of encroaching on Abuja, the nation's seat of power with bombs at the United Nation building, the Police Headquarters and the bombing of various motor parks at Yanyan. Rather than action, all that the Nigerian people got from their president was condemnation, regrets and promises to deal with the perpetrators. Promises that never found fulfillment. Then came the ignominious kidnap of more than 200 secondary school girls at their dormitory in a government secondary school in Chibok, Borno State, as they sat to write their final examination. At first, the government of Goodluck Jonathan denied that the girls were kidnapped but after weeks of inactions and more denials, they finally accepted. Those who tell the story of how these girls were kidnapped say the terrorists that took them seem to have had all the time in the world to carry out their dastardly act. They conveyed the girls in trucks into the Sambisa forest, a journey that took hours to complete. It is believed that if the Nigerian government had not been in denial, and had taken active measures to recover those girls, they would never have made it into the dungeon of the terrorist. Today, it is close to a year since the Chibok girls have been taken. The Chibok girls' kidnap has since become a worldwide phenomenon, with prominent world figures calling for Jonathan to "Bring Back our Girls". The Nigerian public was yet to recover from the shock of the Chibok girls kidnap when we began to learn of BH taking over town after town in Borno State, turning them into Islamic Caliphates. All of these along with hundreds of Nigerians killed who did not renounce their Christian faith. Then BH entered Adamawa State and ransacked Mubi, the second largest town in the state. Up till this moment, no one knows how the exact number of people that have been lost to the works of these evil animals. In both Maiduguri and Yola, refugee camps have been set up to take care of thousands of people displaced from their homes. The list is simply endless.

When the Jonathan government was requested to explain why these things were happening right under its watch, the government threw out the poser that some people were trying to make the nation ungovernable for Mr. President. Rueben Abati even took the matter further by blaming Gen. Buhari for this when he wrote in an article stating that Buhari had made the comments in the light of his loss to Jonathan in the 2011 elections. When Buhari took Abati to court on the matter, he and the Jonathan government had to settle out of court by writing an apology statement published by the Guardian Newspapers. While the government of Jonathan traded blames rather than take responsibility and carry out measures to stay the rapid intrusion of BH on the nation, BH reign of terror continued as they shifted base from Borno to Yobe, Kano, Bauchi and Adamawa States. The Nigerian armed forces too was beginning to feel the weight of the ineptitude of the government, as many soldiers refused to fight the insurgents, claiming they were ill equipped. The result was the court marshalling of a number of soldiers and officers and their being sentenced to death. As these matters went on, many soldiers were reporting through private social media accounts the gory matters going on at the war fronts. We heard stories of how funds that were meant to be used to equip the soldiers were being diverted into private pockets. Soldiers were sent to face their deaths in the hundreds as many could not refuse the orders of their superiors, despite being ill equipped. When the National Assembly instituted actions to investigate how the trillions of naira budgeted for the military to fight these insurgents seem to be going down the drain, the matter was frustrated and the investigations never took place.

Some people have suggested that a state like Borno State which has a large voters' population was not a priority for the government of Goodluck Jonathan since they had always voted en masse for Buhari, and were likely to vote for his again in 2015. They argue that allowing such a state to be plunged into a state of war might add to Jonathan's fortune at the coming poles. Some others felt that the Jonathan government just did not take the insecurity situation in North East Nigeria serious enough. They said that it did not occupy a priority for them. In all of these, nothing lends more credence to these positions than what had happened some five weeks ago since the elections were suddenly postponed. The excuse given then was that there was a need to improve on the security situation in the country before elections could proceed. Suddenly, what the Goodluck Jonathan government could not do in six years, it began to do in six weeks. We began to hear of the efforts of the Nigerian military as they recovered town after town from the BH insurgents. Many people could not but conclude that it took the fear of Jonathan loosing the coming elections for him to do what he was supposed to have done all this while. Unfortunately, the gains that the military have made in this short period of time have not improved Jonathan's rating at the poles. The President's negligence has cost the nation too much in terms of amount of lives lost; it is simply too late.

The stern truth is that Goodluck Jonathan has failed to secure this country. Too many lives have been lost for him to yet be entrusted with another four years in office. Some could even say that the blood of the dead is dripping from his hands. Whatever people say, one cannot but conclude that Jonathan singular sin was the insecurity his government failed at curtailing. The over 15,000 lives lost to the violence of BH under his watch cannot be blamed on anyone else but him. We must at this point thank him for the little he has done and show him the way home through the ballot boxes.

Fashina is a Media Consultant. He resides in Lagos. He can be reached through electronic_mails_4me@yahoo.com

Friday, 13 March 2015

THE VERDICT OF HISTORY

THE VERDICT OF HISTORY 

by Fashina George

What will tomorrow say of our actions today? Could it be that some of us act today without thinking of what verdict history shall give of our actions? Some hide behind the fact that the verdict of history will usually be the product of what the writers' of history choose to say of it. But what such people forget quickly is that regardless of the point of view of the historian, and regardless of the bias used to record an
A Historical fact
historical event, there are usually only one verdict history gives of that event. That verdict could either be good or bad. Wise men ensure that the decisions they take today, the words they speak, and the actions they carry out shall place them on the right side of history. When history shall give its verdict, it would pronounce some people good, others bad and it will describe some as ugly. I will be describing in this essay some people history is likely to place in the three aforementioned grouping and my desire for writing this is that those who might find themselves in some ignoble position in history as a result of their words and actions today could retrace their steps so that history might speak better of them tomorrow. This essay is prompted by the position of many players in the political scene as Nigeria gears up to another presidential election that is coming down to a choice between two individuals: the incumbent president, Dr Goodluck Jonathan and his biggest opponent, General Muhammadu Buhari (rtd).

I begin this discuss with a look at the bad. For me, as a supporter of Buhari in the coming elections, "the bad" are people who know for certain that Goodluck Jonathan is not competent enough to be reelected but must support him because of some pecuniary gain they stand to get. As it stands, a loss for Jonathan at the polls will be a loss to some people's source of illegal funding and corrupt enrichment. These are the people who cannot afford for an anti-corruption crusader like Buhari to be president. And they are the ones at the root of the campaign of calumny against the good General's name in numerous documentaries airing in prominent media houses around the country. These men and women are the Daniel Kanu's of our day. Daniel Kanu was the infamous gentleman who was planning to raise a million man march to campaign for Sani Abacha to transition from a military ruler to becoming a civilian president. If death had not come at the right time, Abacha was gunning for a lifetime presidency and an evil man like Daniel Kanu would have been at the root of it all. The historical account of the mid nineties in our country clearly shows that a man like Daniel Kanu was a "bad" in all sense of the word. Unfortunately, we have latter day Daniel Kanu's who would have us believe that Jonathan is the savior of Nigeria. They want us to know that what their principal could not do in six years, he plans to do in the next four. They see no problem with the insecurity in the land; they cannot understand that the death of over 15,000 men and women in north-east Nigeria at the hands of festering insurgency should be blamed on an administration that is not competent enough and on a Commander-in-chief that cannot command. These men and women are bad people because they are clearly fostering an incompetent leadership on the Nigerian people all because of what they stand to gain from it all. History will certainly give the verdict that such people were evil.

Next, we take a look at the ugly. An ugly sight is one that is not fitting to behold. The ugly in the present Nigerian electoral scenario are people blinded by ethnicity and religion in their choice in the coming election. Nigeria has the Muslim and Christian religion as the predominant religions in our society. Unfortunately the leading candidates are from these religions: Buhari a Muslim and Jonathan a Christian. Some people are ugly electorates because their choice of candidates is solely based on the religion the candidate is professing and not competence. While supporters of both Buhari and Jonathan can be guilty of this, the supporters of Jonathan are guiltier. The reason is because the lie that Buhari is seeking to Islamize Nigeria is raging more among Christians while no Muslim has ever been told that Jonathan is seeking to Christianize Nigeria, despite the fact that he is known to attend prominent Christian worship centers around the country, canvassing for votes. General Buhari has made it abundantly clear that he is seeking to preside over a secular Nigeria and that every man's religion, under his administration, shall be private. Those who investigated the manner he handled the question of Nigeria joining the Organization of Islamic
Politics beyond creed or tribe
Countries (OIC) have shown that the Buhari government of 1984 jettisoned the idea of Nigeria joining the IOC. While very few people know that Goodluck Jonathan is the only serving Nigerian head of state that has ever attended an IOC meeting. Unfortunately, the ugly would not believe this. Their manner of thinking is incredibly hard to behold and even reason with, so that sometimes the best option is to avoid these people entirely. The unfortunate part of the present political quagmire is that most Christians who appear undecided as to who to vote for in the coming elections can be found in this group. These people are certain that Jonathan is not competent enough to run a second term in office, but they cannot bring themselves to voting for a Muslim.

The other people that must be seen as ugly in my electoral grouping are those whose choice of candidature is purely based on ethnicity. Here some supporters of Buhari will appear to be guilty. But one must excuse the northerners for their tribal bias at this point. The first reason being that Goodluck Jonathan might have cheated the northerners out of their legitimate share to power. After the death of Yar'Adua in 2010, the right thing for Jonathan to have done was not to run for office. He had a wonderful opportunity to apply the recommendations of the Justice Uwais led Electoral Reform committee to changing the warped electoral process of Nigeria. He could have sat as an observer while at the same time overseeing an election that was certain to be free and fair, as an incumbent will not be running and the electoral reforms would have been adequately applied. Unfortunately, he did not. He however promised the northern people that he would be running a single term in office. This condition alone procured him support from many former head of state, prominent amongst them, Olusegun Obasanjo. Again, Jonathan reneged on this promise and is now running for a second term in office to the chagrin of his former supporter, Obasanjo, and the annoyance of the northern people. It is no surprise then that he has virtually zero support from the north, while Buhari, who already had a cult following from that region has, garnered their support. The insecurity in the north, which many believe Jonathan left to fester because he and some of his subordinates were benefitting illegally from it, has not helped him also. Quite naturally, the people of the South-south and the South-east have come to again support their own. What might differ this time in the political equation is that the All Progressive Congress(APC) has made inroads into the South-south, especially Rivers State, which has Gov' Amaech at its helm, a leading APC stalwart. There are also a number of people in the South-east who share the sentiments of the likes of Fr. Mbaka and are likely not to vote Jonathan in March 28th. And, finally, the South-south and South-east will not be able to ruse up astronomical figures for Jonathan as they successfully did in 2011 with a functional INEC card reader. In all of these we can still find an electorate that is ugly in sight because their choice of candidate is based solely on ethnic sentiments. One could excuse the northerners for their sentiments for Buhari but there is certainly no excuse for even a South-south or South-east person who votes for Jonathan; seeing that his six years in office has only recorded failures and to vote for him solely on ethnic grounds, is indeed an ugly sight to behold.

Finally, we take a look at the good. The good in this political situation are the opposite of the aforementioned in this article. Any man whose choice of candidate is not based upon what he would eat now but upon what his children's children will eat tomorrow is a good man. Any person whose choice of candidate is based on competence: on precedence; on record in public office; on the candidate's manifestos and plans for governance; is a good person. Any man or woman who chooses to vote in the coming election, not basing his choice on religion or tribe is a good person. History will speak well of these people because they are the ones who could judge the matters on ground rightly and make choices beyond primordial sentiments.

No person alive today wishes to be spoken of as an evil person in the days to come but this will be what will be said of the bad and the ugly this article has described so far. Nigeria occupies a momentous period today in her history and just as some good men and women are spoken of today as having helped deliver her from the grip of British colonial rule and years of military rule, so also will some men and women be recorded as having led the campaign to deliver her from the grip of neocolonialism - a colonial rule that has the rich and the wicked oppress the poor and the righteous. I am saying in effect that General Buhari represents the poor, suffering but righteous elements in Nigeria today and a support for him is a support for good. Those who will vote for Buhari would have transcended all these evil and ugly sentiments. These men and women shall have history declare that they were indeed good people.

Join the clamour for good in Nigeria. Vote Buhari/Osinbajo of the APC for president and vice president respectively on March 28th.

Vote for Change!

Fashina George is a media Consultant. He resides in Lagos, Nigeria.

Sunday, 1 March 2015

SELMA and the Coming Elections



"You may ask ‘when will we be free of this darkness', I say to you today my brothers and sisters: despite the pain, despite the tears, our freedom will soon be upon us" - Martin Luther King (Jnr).

When the movie SELMA, starring the Nigerian Hollywood actor, David Oyelowo, made the big screens, the producers of the movie and its star actor, Oyelowo, came to Nigeria to premier it. They made it clear that the lessons the movie taught should add to the political discussions as the elections draw near and possibly help focus it towards better outcomes. The story of SELMA tell of the activities of the great human and black rights activist, Dr. Martin Luther King (Jnr), in the town of Selma in the southern American State of Alabama in the year 1965, that spurred President Lyndon Johnson to move the United States Congress to pass a bill that struck out voting restriction in all elections in the United States. The price that was paid for this great
The Real 1965 Selma Protest
social reform to come to be, that of pain, deaths, sufferings, denials and betrayals, amongst the people of Selma, is what the movie is all about. One cannot but realize that as Nigeria faces the 2015 elections, which has the possibility of determining its future, there are similarities between the suffering black people of those days and the Nigerian masses; and thus an election year like this one can actually help us redeem ourselves from our oppressors like they did. The 1960s was the decade of social activism in the United States of America. The results are still far reaching, with a black man ruling that great nation today but the price paid was even greater. Confirming the words of the great English writer Mark Twain: "No people in the world ever did achieve their freedom by goody-goody talk and moral suasion; it being immutable law that all revolutions that will succeed must (begin) in blood, whatever may answer afterwards".

Buhari
Nigeria has also had it own fair share of social reforms that have come through blood stained activism. One of them is the democracy we practice today. What we however see today is that at every juncture in our present history, this democracy stands on the peril of being truncated. This is because our democracy does not have a sound foundation. A constitution inherited from the military combined with an echelon of corrupt and undisciplined politicians have continued to make our democratic walk wobbly through the years. We find, however, an opportunity to get things right via the presidential candidature of Gen. Muhammadu Buhari of the All Progressive Congress. Buhari has been accused of truncating a democratically elected government of Shehu Shagarin in 1983. What his accusers never mention is that the government of Shagari was either going to truncate the future of Nigeria through brazen and galloping corruption, or it stood to be truncated. We are thankful to God that the latter happened. Buhari, either in or out of power, has succeeded in every public office assignment given to him. The consequence has always been that the General came out of each of such assignments even poorer than he went in. As chairman of the NNPC and someone who oversaw the construction of all existing refineries in the country today, Buhari never enriched himself illegally, neither does he own an oil block. His party, the APC, carried out a credible and transparent presidential primary in November 2014 that led to his emergence as the party presidential flag bearer. These are the revolution that the Nigerian political experiment has been witnessing in the past one year. The similarity with the story of SELMA is that the same way the black community stood oppressed by the whites in 1960 Americas, so also do the poor and ordinary Nigerian stand oppressed by a rich and corrupt political class. In Buhari, the ordinary Nigerian finds a representative because, although Buhari had had more than enough opportunity to enrich himself and join the corrupt political class, his high sense of integrity combined with his
Selma: The Movie
disciplined mien, has kept him from such. So that today, his leading credential is his integrity; a fact that his worst critic has not been able to dispute. Buhari represents the poor and oppressed Nigerian people, many of whom have decided to support him by purchasing the N100 "Buhari Support Organization" cards to lend their widow's mite for him. And in a dramatic sense, the biblical story of the widow played itself out in one of Buhari's campaign in Sokoto, when an eighty year old woman gave the General a million naira to support his campaign. It was a reluctant and tears filled Buhari that collected the money.

The 1965 Assault on Protesters
SELMA tells the story that non violence can overcome the most oppressive regime. Some have called for a revolution in this country. What they do not know is that most revolutions that turn violent usually have a beginning but no one can tell its end. In a democracy, the most effective revolution is a people coming out en-masse to vote out incompetent leadership. SELMA left a legacy of voting rights for all oppressed people around the world. Now that we can vote, we must come out and carry out our franchise in a manner that favors the ordinary man. Martin Luther King Jnr. Is the epitome of non violent protests for obtaining human rights and liberties. One of the protests that were carried out in those days, as depicted by the movie, went awry with local policemen beating and battering the protesters. In the process one Jimmy Lee Jackson was shot and killed. At the funeral of the young man, Dr. King said these words: "We will vote. We will put these men out of office. We will take their power. We will win what you were slaughtered for!" That is revolution. That is the power of what a voting public can do. If Nigerians are convinced that they could have a better deal, then they should heed the words of the late activists and come out and vote and take power from wicked men. If however they believe that this is the best life they could have and that Nigeria needs no change, they can continue with the status quo.
Oyelowo/King: Striking Resemblance

As for me and my house, we say "CHANGE!"

Pictures from Google.

Friday, 13 February 2015

OPEN LETTER TO PROF YEMI OSINBAJO

OPEN LETTER TO PROF YEMI OSINBAJO

by Deji Yesufu

I greet you sir in the name of our blessed Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.

Prof. Yemi Osinbajo
I trust God that it is well with you and all of yours. I, along with other Nigerians, came into this new week - a week preceding the coming election - with the news that the leadership of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), along with prominent members of the Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria (PFN), held a meeting at the Redeemed Camp along Lagos-Ibadan Expressway over the weekend, with you present, where it was said that the candidacy of Goodluck Jonathan was endorsed over Gen. Buhari for the coming elections1. I wish to state categorically in this letter that CAN has not expressed the general opinion of Nigerian Christians. I want to encourage your spirit by saying that even if leading Pastors in this country have chosen Jonathan ahead of Buhari, your principal in the coming elections; there are some Nigerian Christians who disagree with this position. And I want to apologize to you for the trauma that you must have endured this last weekend as you watched men in the same work of Christ along with you, reject you for whatever reasons best known to them. I will start my letter to you by briefly telling you the story of my conversion to Buharism. Then I will try to locate the underlying motive behind the decision of these pastors in rejecting you. Finally, I would encourage you to focus on the task ahead of not just winning this election but also helping to salvage Nigeria from the grip of the lawlessness ones.

My Conversion to Buharism

As a Christian minister, there is an incidence in the bible that I am sure you are familiar with. It is one that involved the bible character Joshua. It reads: "13 And it came to pass, when Joshua was by Jericho, that he lifted up his eyes and looked, and, behold, there stood a man over against him with his sword drawn in his hand: and Joshua went unto him, and said unto him, Art thou for us, or for our adversaries? 14 And he said, Nay; but as captain of the host of the LORD am I now come. And Joshua fell on his face to the earth, and did worship, and said unto him, What saith my lord unto his servant? 15 And the captain of the LORD'S host said unto Joshua, Loose thy shoe from off thy foot; for the place whereon thou standest is holy. And Joshua did so."2 Many bible scholars agree that this story is one of many incidences where the Lord Jesus Christ appeared in his pre-incarnate form in the Old Testament. Here our Lord gives a relevant instruction to both Joshua and all of us Christians as you face probably the biggest warfare of your life. Joshua waned to know whether Jesus was for Israel or for the enemies. Jesus announces to him that he was for neither. In the process Joshua discovers something that causes him to worship God. I believe what Joshua discovered was that at the point of life's greatest wars, God never appears to take side with any group; rather he stands on the path of truth, verity and justice. And God will side with any group that has these elements present in their make up. I wish to state that God is neither for a Christian candidate in the election nor for a Muslim candidate; he neither for CAN or for a Muslim group; rather God is siding with any group or party that espouses the principles of truth, justice and
Gen. Muhammadu Buhari
development this country desperately needs at these times. Any other group that might mouth these tenets but deny them in practice will not have the support of the Almighty God.

These are essentially the sentiments that I came to grasp with when I converted to Buharism. Following Pastor Tunde Bakare and the Save Nigeria Group's endorsement of the candidacy of Gen. Buhari in December 2010, I gave the GMB option a thorough study and came to the conclusion that he was a better presidential candiditate in the 2011 elections. What solidified my position further was the attitude and sentiments expressed by fellow Christians to this decision of mine. It was clear to me that unlike our Lord and Savior who will side only with truth, Christians very readily threw away the Buhari option merely because he was a Muslim. The lie that he would Islamize Nigeria also did not help. On becoming a Buharist, I sat down to understudy the whole foundation of my faith in Christ and I discovered that many of it was faulty. Since then I have had to discard many cherished practices in the Christian faith and even leave the local assembly I had worshipped with for eight years. At the close of the day, Buharism brought me into a firmer and clearer grasp of the person of Jesus Christ. And I am sure anyone will agree that this is spiritual growth indeed. Buharism showed me that Christianity is not a mere religion but sincere love for human beings, regardless of the faith they profess. It showed me that truth and justice are the foundation on which God's throne was founded. It showed me that a person need not profess Christ to be used by him to better society. It showed me that God could still replay the story of Cyrus in rebuilding a fallen nation of Israel in our present political history. Despite my conversion to Buharism, I remain a Christian. But a Christian with a clearer grasp of the person of Jesus Christ. I am now a Christian that is not bound by mere religious sentiments or parochial mindsets. This is what I believe a lot of Christians become when they come to know and support the candidacy of Gen. Buhari.

The Motive of these Pastors in Rejecting You

About two weeks ago, a news items surfaced from one of the many online news agencies in our country. It said, among other things, that a certain individual had been given large sums of money from the presidency of Nigeria to distribute to leading pastors in this country to garner their support towards the coming presidential elections3. While the veracity of this news item can be disputed, it is yet to be refuted by the individual who was clearly named by the news agency. I hope to show here that the motive in rejecting you at that meeting last weekend may not be too far from this incidence. Jesus taught us that there are two gods men worship: mammon or God4. There are no other options. This challenge is bedeviling the Christian faith at the moment and the end result is that the motives that underlie people's actions generally in life might either be for gain or for God. It is not news anymore that Nigerian Christianity is becoming the leading harbinger of a money gospel that many have very appropriately labeled the prosperity gospel. Neither is it surprising that majority of the men who rejected you in that meeting are the leading propagators of the prosperity message in our country. While the prosperity message has many tenets that one cannot explore at the moment, the key point of it all is money: how to get it and how to retain it. Thus the harbingers of this message follow the gangster rapper's philosophy of life: "Get Money or Die Trying"5. This philosophy stands in stark contrast to that of our Lord that instructed us not to make money our god or that of the apostle Paul that taught that if we have food and clothing we should be content6.

Nigerian Pentecostal Pastors
Therefore, when these pastors who espouse a money gospel came face to face with deciding on who to support in the forthcoming elections, it was not difficult for them to decide against a sound and properly laid out manifesto of the APC; neither did they have any qualms in discarding brilliant minds in the person of yourself and other leading APC stalwarts; they could not see any virtue in a leader that has no trace of corruption in his record of public service in the person of Buhari; neither did they see the new opportunity for change that the APC offers. These pastors very easily chose what has from the foundation of their ministries informed every other decision they have made in the past: they simply chose what will bring them money, advantage, acceptance with the powers that be; they fell to the god of mammon and gain that they have all along worshipped.

The Road Ahead

I was part of the people who met with you at the "I Have Decided" rally held at Teslim Balogun Stadium two weekends ago. I had received an email requesting my presence and had to travel from Ibadan on short notice that weekend to see you enumerate in fifteen minutes the vision of the APC for the coming political dispensation. That vision is what I wish you will focus on now because we shall reach that goal as a nation by the help of God. At that meeting, you taught us, Christians and Muslims alike, to join forces together to deliver our streets, neighborhoods and offices to Gen. Muhammadu Buhari in the forthcoming elections. The "Change" fever has since caught everyone and most people I know are ready to vote anything but this present contraption we call a government. I receive calls for money and aids from Pastors in Maiduguri and I realize that what I could actually give them to help salvage that besieged Nigerian city is a new government of Buhari who is known to have tackled insurgency in the past and can do it again.

The road ahead will include a preparedness to enter into the greatest assignment of your life so far, which is to lead the largest black nation on earth. A nation that has been bastardized by years of harlot leaders but which now has the opportunity to have a scion of the late Obafemi Awolowo lead her and help introduce and implement the hundreds of laudable ideas that late sage had written in his books. You have a great opportunity to do well for Nigeria in the coming years. The road ahead will also include forgiveness and a reevaluation of your faith in Christ. When you come to power, like Joseph did, you must forgive your brethren who are at the moment selling you away for a pot of red porridge. You are coming to power to help save Nigeria from imminent doom and this is the path that God has chosen for you. These men, who have rejected you now, will face their shame in the days to come. But it is your duty and mine to forgive them and help them realize the folly of their action. To employ the words of the sitting president when he came to power in 2011, General Buhari and yourself "must hit the ground running" from May 29th onwards.

There is so much to do. There is a nation to save and rebuild. There are insurgent elements all around the country that must be silenced. There is an economy to revamp. There is a nation to help place in the map of advancing countries in the world of science and technology. There is a sea of human capitals among Nigerians youths waiting to be harnessed to turn this nation into a developed country. There is an African continent waiting for Nigeria to offer the lead to development and progress. The list is endless. In short, Nigeria is waiting for the manifestation of a son of God7.

Conclusion

It is my sincere hope that the aim of this letter, which is to uphold your hand in the events of the coming elections, has been achieved.

I had argued in previous essays that Christians were not participating enough in
#IHaveDecided
partisan politics. I envisioned that a day will arise when a position shall be left in public office that a Christian alone could fill and there would hardly be anyone around to fill it. I am happy to see that when that situation arose in the APC, the leadership of the party found an experienced individual in your person to fill the gap. Despite your rejection by an arm of Christian leaders in the country, please be informed that a host of others support you. And more than anything else, the God of heaven is with you8.

Be rest assured that the prayers of God's people are with you and you have our unalloyed support in this mission. The duty of nation building is undoubtedly prominently connected with our responsibility to make disciples of all nations. If Nigeria, our Jerusalem, knows peace and progress; our calling to reach the world with the gospel of Christ will only be made a lot easier. Go forth and make history.

God bless you.

References

1. www.pmnewsnigeria.com/2015/02/02/bakare-blasts-can-pfn-for-endorsing-jonathan/www.pmnewsnigeria.com/2015/02/02/bakare-blasts-can-pfn-for-endorsing-jonathan/
2. Joshua 5:13-15
3. www.saharareporters.com/2015/01/29/kennedy-okpara-distributing-jonathan’s-bribes-pastors
4. Matthew 6:24
5."Get Money or Die Trying" is the name of the hit album by American Gangster Rapper 50cents. One finds that the Prosperity Preachers share similar philosophy with Rappers.
6. 1 Timothy 6:6
7. Romans 8:19
8. Hebrew 13:5

WHAT IS GOD SAYING?

WHAT IS GOD SAYING ABOUT WHO BECOMES NIGERIA'S NEXT PRESIDENT?

Revelation  1:15 And his feet like unto fine brass, as if they burned in a furnace; and his voice as the sound of many waters.

On the morning of the last Presidential election in 2011 that had president Jonathan pitted against Gen. Buhari, I had a strange experience. I am certain I heard no voice but I suddenly became aware that Buhari would loose the elections. Having put in so much effort in convincing friends about him, I was naturally disappointed but the "word" I received that morning was one of consolation because the conclusion seem to me then to be this: though Buhari will loose, time will show the Nigerian electorate that they made a mistake in rejecting him. Is February 14th 2015 the day Nigeria will rectify her mistake? I don't know. But I wish to say a thing about what God may possibly be saying about who becomes the next President of Nigeria.

We are in desperate times and with the advent of Pentecostal Christianity, many have simply given up the hard duty of faith and hope in God concerning issues of life, and simply turned to overnight prophets to tell them what the future holds. They thereafter pattern all their lives after these prophecies, many times to their own hurt. The coming elections have not been without its own share of prophecies. What gives me consolation is that the folly of the prophecies lie in the fact that God seem to be saying different things. The same God that prophecies continuity in one prophet, speak of change in another. Should it not be clear to us all that these prophets are hearing their own lusts?

On the other hand, their is a school of Christian thoughts that teach that God never speaks. This is an unhealthy extreme. How can we say the same God that made the mouth and ears, cannot speak? Sure he speaks in his word, the bible and he tells us that "my sheep hear my voice..." So God speaks and if we are not hearing him, we should return to him, possibly in repentance.

I believe that God has already spoken about who should be the next president of Nigeria. The question is not what he is saying but what are we hearing. The above scripture describes Jesus as one who speaks with a voice of many waters. Waters in scriptures denotes people. Christ speaks through his Word, people (good or bad), circumstances, etc. A truly spiritual man hears God everywhere because God has designed the whole world to proclaim himself. So that beholding the sunrise, nature, animals, etc, we can see God's love and providence. In life circumstances we can hear God's counsel concerning life issues. And concerning Nigeria, God has spoken.

God would have every Nigerian electorate to judge the candidates projecting themselves for President and conclude which of them from their precedence should be president. We have a sitting president who has spent six years in power. Has he done well enough to continue? What he claims to have not been able to do in six years, can he do it in another four years? Has he kept his promises? Is Nigeria safer under him? Are the corruption index lesser under him? Does he have what it takes to truly lead? Beyond religious sentiments, does Jonathan have a justification to seek another four years in office?

What about his leading contender at the poles? Does Buhari have what it takes to lead Nigeria? Has he succeeded in leadership responsibilities in the past? Beyond religion, what is his record on the matter of integrity and corruption? Does he possess a team that can revamp Nigeria? What is he promising to do? Are they practical? Does Nigeria deserve to continue in the same direction or do we deserve another try in another direction? What are Buhari's credentials regarding combating terrorists? Has he done it before; can he do it again? What about corruption: does Buhari possess a body language that supports corruption?

These are what God is saying. God has not told anyone who will become the next Nigerian of president. Whoever said he had such is "prophelying". God is speaking through the "many waters" of the Nigerian situation and asking the Nigerian electorate to judge for themselves and decide by themselves who they feel is most competent to rule this country. Indeed God's voice is intertwined with the voice of the Nigerian people. Whoever we vote into power is God's will for us.

That, ladies and Gentlemen, is what God is saying to the Nigerian nation.

Thursday, 15 January 2015

BUHARI AND THE RELIGION FACTOR


Buhari
No matter how we look at it, the two leading factors that will determine the manner with which people will vote in the coming presidential elections are religion and ethnicity. In my previous essay, I had come down hard on Christians for their inability to objectively weigh the candidature of Gen. Muhammadu “Okechuckwu” Buhari beyond the mere fact that he was a Muslim. But if I must be honest with myself, I will admit that the majority of those voting for Buhari  are doing so because they are of the same relgion with him or they are from the northern of Nigeria. So the Christians should not be blamed too much. Following the dismal performance of President Goodluck Jonathan in office this past six years, Muslims in the south-west are generally rooting for Buhari. Christians are largely divided over voting for Goodluck Jonathan. Many Christians agree that Jonathan has not performed well in office these six years but they still cannot fathom the thought of voting in a Muslim into office – especially one that they allege to be a fundamentalist. As we face the 2015 elections, the ethnic factor will yet play a deciding role on who becomes president too. It can be taken for granted that the core north will be voting overwhelmingly for Buhari, while the South-south and the South-east (in spite of the public denunciation of Jonathan by Fr. Mbaka) will vote largely for Jonathan. The South-West will be the deciding factor for the coming elections and the All Progressive Congress (APC) in choosing a South-western Christian as Vice-Presidential Candidate, may actually have thrown in the joker that will cause for the elections to favor Buhari in “FeBUHARI”14th.

In this essay I hope to analyze the religious aspect of the coming elections and come to conclusions that would favor Buhari in the coming elections. Despite being a professing Christian, I think that religion can have a negative consequence on the manner people handle issues of life. That is why any true Christian with knowledge
of scriptures will agree that religion is an antithesis of what Jesus Christ advocated. In fact I could argue further that it was religion, helped by the political powers of that time, which crucified Jesus on the cross. So when he rose again and bequeathed Christianity to us, he certainly was not giving us mere religious duties to observe. Our Lord bequeathed a way of life that will transcend religion in all aspects. When the ordinary man looks at the true Christian, he might conclude that he is a man of religion but the Christian knows that what he practices goes beyond religion. So despite the fact that the coming elections will be determined by whether  the leading candidates are either Christians or Muslims, I am particularly interested in expressing the views of some folks like myself who are not blindly led by religion in their decision making. These men and women are not religious in the strict sense of the word and so can judge the candidates objectively. I hope that my conclusions will help other people roped into viewing the candidates from a religious prism alone cease from doing this. As a Christian, my essay is directed to other Christian. I am arguing basically that even if the Muslim decides to vote Buhari on mere religious sentiments alone, the true Christian, not bound by the blind folding nature of religion, should not be voting Jonathan on religious sentiments too.

Sunday Adelaja
Pastor Sunday Adelaja is a charismatic pastor of the Pentecostal type and leads one of the largest churches in Europe. In a six part paper series the cleric lent his voice to the candidature of Gen. Buhari. He explained in his papers that he was not initially decided on who to vote for until the APC picked Prof. Osibanjo as Buhari’s running mate. Knowing Osibanjo well, it was not difficult for him to pitch his tent with the team Buhari. Following this development, he took his time to research the man Buhari and he published his discoveries in his papers. This man’s Damascus-like conversion to Buharism reminds me of how I also became a Buharist. I had been a long time enthusiast of Pastor Tunde Bakare. One day in December 2010, a friend of mine approached me in church and told me that the Save Nigeria Group, the civil society group Bakare leads, has thrown in their support for Buhari. I couldn’t believe it, “Buhari ke” I said in Yoruba vernacular. Days after that time I took my time to research the person of Buhari and came to same conclusions that Pastor Adelaja enumerated in his papers. What was the challenge initially was that I could not think of voting Buhari before this time in December 2010 because I was largely ignorant of his person and was falsely informed by the information his enemies had sold out on him. The truth was that Buhari was not even among my first three candidates at that time. Unfortunately majority of Christians who cannot fathom themselves voting for Buhari today were like me in 2010: bound by religious and ethnic prejudice, and largely ignorant or misinformed on the person of Buhari. You may look up the essay of Pastor Adelaja to see some of the things about Buhari that he enumerated there but I will just pick on a few and discuss them here.

One thing the Pastor discussed about that I wish to shed light on was the manner with which Christians were failing to obey the Golden Rule Jesus Christ gave to us. The Golden Rule simply states that every man should treat other men the way and manner they themselves wish to be treated (Matthew 7:12). Pastor Adelaja explained that if Buhari had been associating with Muslim clerics in the same manner and frequency that Jonathan does with Christian leaders, he would have been called something worse than the Muslim fundamentalist that he is being alleged to be today. The Pastor wonders why no one calls Jonathan a Christian fundamentalist. He even goes further to explain that the Muslim community in Nigeria has been more tolerant of Christians than Christians have been of their Muslim counterpart and I
Religious Harmony
think this is a great indictment on the church. Incidentally, the occasion that led many Christians to conclude that Buhari is a Muslim fundamentalist was the one occasion in 2001 where he chaired an Islamic program that was discussing the shariah. His statements in that program were misconstrued to mean he was advocating shariah for the nation and it was also published in ThisDay Newspaper. Buhari has since explained his true position on the matter(), but the Christian inquisitionists have refused to hear and have run to town with their own version of the story. It is not enough for them when they are told that as paramount ruler of this country in 1984/85, Buhari did not Islamize Nigeria, rather Christians were predominant on his cabinet. Many have explained how Buhari’s close associates in his private life are Christians and the fact that in all his four times running for President, he has only had Christian running mates. No one has been able to provide a verifiable document for the lie that Buhari sought to bring Nigeria into the IOC when he was head of state. All that the Christian needs to do at this moment is to judge Buhari in the same manner with which he himself wishes to be judged.

All available evidence shows that Buhari is a true Muslim. A man of religion who religious persuasions have informed his manner of life both in private and public. Very few people know that despite the liberty that his religion permits him in regards to the numbers of wives he could marry, Buhari had only always been married to one wife at a time. His first wife had four girls for him and this did not push him to marry another wife so as to give him a male child. Buhari’s leading problem might be his inability to trumpet himself – the very mark of a man of integrity. The Babangida government that slammed him in jail for three years after he was removed from office could not find one evidence of corruption against him. The Obasanjo government that proscribed the PTF that he chaired could not find one evidence of corruption against him. He remains the only former head of State that does not have a foreign account. He remains the only former chairman of NNPC that owns no oil rig. Following the 2011 elections, he had to move out of the apartment he rented in Abuja because he could not afford to pay the rent. At the moment he still owes his party, the APC, N21.5 Million on the presidential form that he bought, which he
The People’s General
insists on paying for himself. He is said to collect only 10% of the monthly allowance that the government pays past heads of state. He wrote a letter to the ministry of finance explaining that the money that was supposedly meant for him was too much and will amount to corruption if he accepts it. Buhari built only one house for himself in Kaduna and inherited another from his father in Daura, Katsina State. Every function he has undertaken to carry for Nigeria following his retirement from the military has always been for free as he insists that the government was already paying his pension allowance. It is not for nothing that the northern people call his “mai gaskiya”. Buhari, over the years, has shown himself to be a man of integrity and one that is committed to truth. It was his penchant for sticking to what is right that led to his government being overthrown in 1985, as corrupt elements in the military were becoming increasingly threatened by his upright manner of life and saw to it that he was gotten rid of. Prof Pious Adesanmi, in a recent debate on the coming election, argued that the only problem with the Nigeria system was the lack of integrity found in virtually all of its institutions. He then proposed that it makes abundant sense to elect a man like Buhari with integrity to lead this country in a time like this. Hopefully, his life of integrity will rub off Nigeria and all that is our problem will begin to find solution.

I wish to remind my Christian brethren who are still not settled on the candidature of Buhari to look up the life and words of our Lord Jesus Christ. Christ never advocated any religion. In fact many believe that Jesus was not even a Christian – he would more accurately be called a Judaist. Jesus however taught a basic principle and that is that the true godly man was the man who does what is right not just the man who professes what is right (Matthew 7:21). We have all sort of leaders in this country, including the present that professes Christianity but is alleged to have a “body language” that supports corruption. None of these leaders have measured up to Buhari in integrity. In the same manner that he towers over all past leaders in physical height, so also does he lead them in integrity and manner of life. Nigeria is in desperate times again and in the same manner that Buhari and his colleagues helped save Nigeria from collapse in the second republic, Providence may have returned him again to help deliver this nation now. I call on my Christian brethren to vote beyond religious sentiments; to look up the lives of the candidates presenting themselves for president; and to vote based on the conclusions they find. The conclusion that I have found on Gen. Buhari based on the information I have on him is that this man is a man of integrity and a man that possesses the requisite qualities to lead Nigeria in these times.

BUHARI AND THE BORN AGAIN CHRISTIAN



As we draw near to the 2015 General Elections, it is important that all vital questions are answered; especially the ones regarding the candidature of Gen. Muhammadu Buhari. As a Buhari supporter and also a born again Christian, I encounter questions from fellow believers that range from “should a Christian vote for a Muslim, since we are taught in scriptures not to be unequally yoked with unbelievers?” to “how does a Christian vote for a Muslim, seeing that Muslims are one of the goals in our evangelistic efforts?” The answers to these questions are not easy ones but we must provide them or we run the risk of losing a large section of the electorate to the “other side” or to indifference which is making some people decide to stay home rather than vote for either of the two leading candidates.

The born-again Christian community in the Nigerian political space has since become a force to reckon with since the advent of steady democratic process in 1999. In 2011, Gen. Buhari recognized this and adopted Pastor Tunde Bakare of the Latter Rain Assembly, Lagos, as his running mate. In the same period the two of them went and court the blessing of Pastor E.A. Adeboye of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, a leading Pentecostal minister in the country. In like manner, President Goodluck Jonathan attended the Redeemed Church Annual Holy Ghost Convention and that picture of the president kneeling before a towering and praying Adeboye might have single handedly handed over the 2011 elections to Jonathan. Though Adeboye never made his preferred candidate known publicly, most born-again Christians concluded from that picture that Jonathan was “Baba’s” preferred candidate and like they say, the rest is history today. It is no longer news that Buhari has since settled again for another born-again individual, in the person of Prof. Osibanjo, as his running mate for the 2015 elections. Osibanjo happens to also be a Redeemed Pastor. Quite naturally the born-again Christian is not fooled by these political maneuvering. He still has questions in his heart. He still wants to understand whether it is right, in a moral sense, to cast his vote for a Muslim. He want to understand whether he is not being unequally yoked with an unbeliever for choosing to support Buhari.

To answer these questions we as born-again Christians must first understand that voting and being voted for is a civic responsibility that we are enjoined on by scriptures to carry out. Romans 13:1 says “Let every soul be subject unto the higher powers. For there is no power but of God: the powers that be are ordained of God…” God is the author of ordered society. And it happens that in our time, the monarchical system of government that was prevalent in bible times has given way to democracy. And democracy consist of the populace voting in its leaders so that the individual that carries the most vote becomes the ruler. Therefore, part of being "subject to higher powers" will be to partake actively in the process in which these powers are elected. It is important to know that Romans 13:1ff did not give some conditions for Christians to be subject to the rulers. It didn't say "be subject only if the rulers are good rulers"; neither did it say "be subject only if the rulers are born again or professing Christians". It simply commanded us to be subject to all authority, as rulers are of God. Submitting to civil authorities and its processes is therefore submission to God. So it is safe to say that the basis of choosing a ruler cannot be based on the individual's religious persuasion but on his competence. For this election, the born again Christian has essentially two people before him: he must choose between them both based on their record of performance in public office and not just their religious profession.

The precedence of Buhari in public office is clear for all to see. The records of his performance in the military, as Chairman of the NNPC, as head of state and as chairman of the petroleum trust fund (PTF) are a testimony to excellent service to ones fatherland. The records of Goodluck Jonathan are also clear to all, especially his six year in office so far. So born again Christian, judge their performance in public office and vote rightly.

The Christian cannot also be said to be unequally yoked with an unbeliever for choosing to support and vote another person from another faith or religion. When scripture speaks of being unequally yoked with unbelievers in 2 Corinthians 6:14, it was talking about not partaking in the evil deeds that non Christians partake of. 2 Corinthians 6 was speaking about the need to walk in holiness as Christians and be separated from evil. It is interesting to note that Buhari, despite being Muslim, is the one out of the two leading candidates that has a public record of incorruptibility and uprightness. While President Jonathan had once being quoted as saying "corruption is not stealing". It makes a lot of sense that the Christian community will vote for a candidate who by his lifestyle and record in public office is known to be upright. This is what the bible will have us to be associated or yoked with! There is a lot of problem with an individual professing to be Christian in one hand and not living up to the tenets of the faith in another hand. This is certainly not one we should be yoked with. Islam and Christianity have diverse point of view on religion but they share some basic rules on morality. There is nothing wrong with associating with a Muslim who lives in a morally upright manner.

Lastly, voting in a Muslim does not compromise our evangelistic duty to Muslims or people of other faiths. Born again Christians must beware of one thing: we must not turn evangelism to a means of conquest. The very nature of our witnessing allows the individuals we witness to the freedom to accept or reject our views. Christian evangelism should not be reduced to the sort of Jihadism that Boko Haram and other extremist groups are championing. Our calling is not a political takeover of a society but a spiritual one. A situation where the Christian is known more for his fruit than just mere talk. The Christian greatest voice of evangelism is his lifestyle. The Christian also accentuates this with his preaching of the gospel where occasion demands it. When he preaches Christ, he is not meant to impose Christ. God by his Holy Spirit then uses the Christian's life and words to brings the Muslim and others to faith. So the manner in which we handle this political situation would go a long way in witnessing to the world. If others are voting on mere religious sentiments, the born again Christian should not be found doing the same.

There is a lie that is being sold that voting in Buhari is voting in someone who will Islamize Nigeria. If Buhari did not Islamize this country as paramount military ruler some thirty years ago when he had all the machinery of government to do it; if he crushed the very first Boko Haram menace, the Maitescine group, in one fell sweep; he will not islamize Nigeria under a democratic rule. Rather he would allow for religious freedom and help crush Boko Haram as he did in 1983/84. No one can Christianize or Islamize Nigeria. This country is a secular state run by a secular constitution. What Christians should fear is a party whose chairman helped implement sharia when he was state governor. And whose presidential candidate has not been able to solve the Boko Haram menace six years since assuming office.

Brother or Sister Born Again Christian, you do not need to fear voting Buhari as President. By doing this, you will be carrying out your civic duty in a manner that will receive the blessing of God and also secure a future for our unborn children.

Wednesday, 31 December 2014

APC AND PDP: SPOT THE DIFFERENCE

by Deji Yesufu

As we draw close to another general elections in Nigeria, we encounter a large section of the electorate affirming that there is essentially no difference between the ruling part, the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), and their biggest opposition, the All Progressive Congress (APC). Their reaction to this quagmire is one of two things:
some have resorted to staying with the devil they know than plunge into the deep blue sea. Others have simply made up their minds not to vote at all. This kind of mindset for a nation's electorate heading for a crucial election that might determine the future existence of that nation is not good at all and I shall be endeavoring to sway such individuals reading this article to take a firm position and that that position should be to vote for the Presidential candidate of the APC, Gen. Buhari and his deputy Prof. Osibanjo. To do this I will try to enumerate major differences between these two leading parties.

The first major difference is the attitude of the two parties to the concept of democracy. Since the advent of democratic rule in this country in 1999, the main complaint that Nigerians have had has been that we have not been able to practice true democracy. From rigged election, to trumped up primaries, coupled with a litany of election cases in couts, Nigerians have become acustomed to a kwashiokor kind of democracy. This remained until the APC organized and cocluded its presidential primaries that produced Gen. Buhari as their presidential candidate. In an
unprecedented manner, we saw votes casted transparently, votes counted and right before the eyes of everyone, the winner declared. In another unprecedented manner, the loosers congratulated the winner right there, accepting the outcome of the elections and pledging their commitment to the overall interest of the party. Contrast this with the PDP "primaries" that had president Goodluck Jonathan as sole candidate. And he was sole candidate because the largest party in Africa printed only one presidential nomination form. No opportunity was given for any other candidate to express interest to run. Jonathan was overwhelmingly selected as the PDP presidential candidate for the February 2015 elections.

Another clear distinction between the APC and the PDP is the manner their
presidential aspirants have sought to fund their various campaign programmes. While Gen. Buhari of the APC has declared that his campaign funds will come from donations made to him by ordinary Nigerians, the PDP on the other hand got business men, government agencies, state Governors and other financial heavy weights to come for Jonathan’s reelection campaign where a whooping sum of N22 Billion was raised. Three state governors that had not paid salaries to their workers in three months donated N1 Billion between them. Buhari and his team, on the other hand, declared they had raised N58 Million so far and were very grateful to all Nigerians who sent in funds. Even in this matter, it has become incredibly difficult for the PDP to publish the names of her fund donors but the APC plans to publish periodical statement on its campaign funds. It is very easy to know which party, from the forgoing, will come to power with a sense of indebtedness to the ordinary people with a commitment to serving them. While it is clear what party will continue the as usual manner of government Nigeria has been plagued with, that seeks to serve a few rich goons in a self enriching manner.

The antecedents of the two leading individuals running for the most exalted public office is another difference that is clear as noon day between them. Buhari led a Government for only eighteen months in 1983/84 and still has many testifying to the national transformation his economic and social programmes brought. Jonathan has been in power for six years and many of his leading supporters find it an herculean task to state his achievements. Buhari has a no tolerance attitude to corruption,while Jonathan has been said to have a body language that encourages corruption. Buhari put out the first Boko Haram menace, the Maitatsine, we had in this nation in a few months of their inception. Jonathan’s government has no answer to Boko Haram except for the no less than 3,000 military and civilian casualities. Buhari had a sound
ecomic policy that laughed at World Bank experimental policies, which Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, presently emir of Kano, once called Buharinomics. An economic policy that thrived despite western powers effort to furstrate it. Jonathan administration, on the othe hand, has enjoyed the highest foreign exchanges on oil, until recently, but has little to show for it except a depleted foreign reserve. Buhari's high moral and discipline mein has not been tainted one bit despite countless number religious mudslinging at him. On the hand the hundred of religious pontiffs that are known to associate with Jonathan both in public and private have not been able to bestow an ounce of sainthood on him.

The allegations that the APC and PDP are one and the same is an intellectually lazy position because it is one that comes from individuals who choose not to make a little effort to study the two parties. If the uneducated or half baked graduates push such position one can understand but it becomes criminal when supposedly enlightened fellows make such conclusions. Any elementary school pupil can play the "spot the difference" game in newspapers. These things were not designed for mere entertainment. They were made to help us in times like these. That two situations can look incredibly similar but a little effort can help bring out the differences between them. I encourage my readers to continue to spot the difference between the APC and PDP and to vote in the coming elections based on their discoveries. I can assure you that there is a world of difference between the APC and the PDP and voting for the APC, especially Muhammadu Buhari, its presidential candidate, will not be a waste.