I am delighted at the privilege of being asked by
the leadership of FOURSQUARE Church to deliver this Diamond Lecture in
celebration of sixtieth year of the Church in Nigeria. Let me specially
thank Reverend Felix Meduoye, The General Overseer of FOURSQUARE for the
honour he bestows on me whenever he asks me to speak to his
congregation of fellow believers in Christ and the power of the Holy
Spirit. Please accept my congratulations for the Diamond celebration
which is happening under your inspiring and visionary leadership. I wish
to also thank a dear brother, Femi Adesina who pressed on until my very
swampy schedule opened up to enable me fulfil the promise I made
several months ago when I could not be with you at a similar event in
Lagos. Speaker of our House of Representatives- Honourable Yakubu
Dogara, delighted to have you chair this event. Other distinguished
guests, ladies and gentlemen, thanks for being here today to listen to
this lecture.
The International Church of the Foursquare Gospel,
commonly referred to as the Foursquare Church, is a Pentecostal
denomination founded in 1923 by one of the historically outstanding
female preachers — Aimee Semple McPherson in Los Angeles, United States
of America. She it was who described the basis for the naming of the
Church from the revelation of Prophet Ezekiel as recorded in the Bible
depicting the four faces of God that he ( the prophet) had seen. Pastor
Aimee McPherson elaborated this even further stating that the four faces
“were like the four phases of the gospel of Jesus Christ. In the face
of the man, she saw Jesus our Saviour. In the face of the lion, she saw
Jesus the mighty Baptiser with the Holy Spirit and fire. In the face of
the ox, she saw Jesus the Great Burden-Bearer, who took our infirmities
and carried our sicknesses. In the face of the eagle, she saw Jesus the
Coming King, who will return in power and victory for the church. It was
a perfect, complete Gospel. It was a Gospel that faces squarely in
every direction; it was the “Foursquare Gospel.”
The church
propounds that its call is to preach Jesus Christ, God’s Son, as The
Savior, The Baptizer, The Healer and The Coming King. In so doing, it
seeks to glorify God, advance the Kingdom of our Lord Jesus as it
undertakes His Great Commission of preaching the gospel and making
disciples of all nations. Over the ninety two years of existence, the
Four Square has experienced successions which has helped with its growth
into a world wide church. Today, the Foursquare Church has more than
1,700 U.S. churches and more than 66,000 churches globally and meeting
places in 140 countries and territories.
Nigeria is one of those
several countries in which FourSquare has flourished since the Reverend
and Mrs. Harold Curtis first brought the message of Four Square to our
country in 1955 to three founding members Reverend James Boyejo, Rev.
Samuel Olusegun Odunaike and Rev. Friday Chinyere Osuwa. The year of the
inauguration of the first FourSquare Church is remarkable seeing that
it was just five years before Nigeria gained her independence. The
Nigerian branch of the Church has since spread in prolific growth not
just across the entire country but also across the continent of Africa.
The FourSquare Church is according to data considered one of the largest
Pentecostal churches in Nigeria.
BIBLICAL CONTEXT FOR CHURCH.
The
Bible documents the spoken words of God to His people, written to shape
the sacred beliefs of those who were first called Christians because
their observers declared that “they had been with Christ” as they
scrutinised their conducts in the city of Antioch. So, it is natural for
most people to assume that Church when defined as “organised gathering
of people as a group and under some clear leadership” is a phenomenon
only of the New Testament. The reality however, is that the Church
evolved from the Old Testament into the New Testament in the form we
know it today. It can be said that Church started in the Garden of Eden
where God used to come down to fellowship with the first man that He had
created- Adam; but that ‘gathering’ was interrupted by sin. The fall of
Adam and Eve, aborted the awesome plan of God for humanity as expressed
in Genesis. God subsequently made several other provisions, ranging
from Noah to Abraham, to Joseph, to Moses, to Joshua, to Deborah, to
Eli, to Samuel, to Elijah, Elisha and several other priests and prophets
that were to “gather” God’s people regularly in harmonious fellowship
with Him.
The New Testament church as recorded in Acts2 started at
the Pentecost in the Upper Room led by the twelve Apostles of Christ
and the many other believers in His teachings who gathered in fellowship
after His death and resurrection aptly captures this classic definition
of the Church in its characteristic attributes. Acts 2:42-47 records:
“And
they devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and the fellowship,
to the breaking of bread and the prayers. And awe came upon every soul,
and many wonders and signs were being done through the apostles. And all
who believed were together and had all things in common. And they were
selling their possessions and belongings and distributing the proceeds
to all, as any had need. And day by day, attending the temple together
and breaking bread in their homes, they received their food with glad
and generous hearts, praising God and having favor with all the people.
And the Lord added to their number day by day those who were being
saved.”
The definition of Church as an “assembled group of people
who met regularly under an organised leadership” places the emphasis on
the human beings and why they gather much more than the building in
which they do so. It is perhaps for this reason that Apostle Paul
counsels the Hebrews to “not forsake the assembly of the brethren”
making it all about relationship rather than a visit to a location. It
is the people in fellowship with God and among themselves more than
where they gather that makes a gathering of faithful followers of
Christ, a Church of the modern ages. The Early Church of the Acts of
Apostles still remains the model by which any gathering of people as
Church is measured in terms of their relationship with God and with
fellow believers.
When we read and observe the journey of the
children of Israel as the ” The Old Testament Church” making their way
to the the Promise Land, we are awed at the similarity their gathering
has with the New Testament church. Reviewing both the old and New
testaments of the Bible to understand the concept of Church better, one
cannot but remember the roles of certain prophets of God as they led the
children of God to the land of promise. The priests and the prophets
who ministered in the temple were no different from our Pastors in
churches today with a congregation of human beings that are no different
from the flawed men and women of that era; who were beneficiaries of
God’s grace.
In effect, church may have evolved from Old Testament
tents of meeting, to temples and synagogues into the Upper House,
peoples’ houses and then elegant church buildings; but the unchanging
Owner of the Purpose of every gathering of His people remains steadfast
in what He wants from His people. Even as they journeyed through the
wilderness as His “…… treasured possession out of all the peoples” what
He expected was that they “. . . shall be for me a priestly kingdom and a
holy nation.” With the favoured admission of those who were formerly
Gentiles through redemptive grace of Christ, Apostle Peter still
declares in striking continuity in the New Testament: ” But you are a
chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for his own
possession, that you may proclaim the excellencies of him who called you
out of darkness into his marvellous light.” The people of God are
created to be exemplary to all others. Simple.
In the Old
Testament, Micah 6: 8 the prophet Micah asks, “What does the Lord
require of you?” And answers, “To do justice, love kindness, and walk
humbly with God.” Apostle Paul speaks similarly in the New Testament in
Ephesians 4: 1 says “To the church at Ephesus Paul writes, “I beg you to
lead a life worthy of your calling.” Whatever may be the purpose that
the people of God gather; if they be followers of the God of Abraham,
Isaac and Jacob and the Father of our Lord, Jesus Christ; who believe in
the power of the Holy Spirit; there is but one common denominator for
both the Old Testament and the New Testament congregations. It is
Holiness. There cannot be a “gathering” or “fellowship” of the people of
God with God, without Holiness. In Leviticus 19v1-2, He repeated that
same charge of Holiness which He had made to Abraham when He promised to
make him “blessed to be a blessing” in Genesis. Without Holiness, God
cannot be in the midst of those who have gathered to qualify it for His
own definition of the Church that “the gate of hell cannot prevail
against”.
The manifestation of the working of the Holy Spirit in
the New Testament Church differentiates it from the Old Testament
church. The Spirit of God brought great liberty to the individual who
having confessed Jesus Christ as Lord is spoken of our Lord as “being
greater than the Great John the Baptist even if such a one were the
least in the kingdom. The importance of this is best appreciated as one
reads the assessment that God made of the Churches in Revelations2-3
where it is the Spirit of God that is expressly talking to the Church
via the revelation experience of John the Beloved an Apostle of Christ.
This is unlike in the days of old when God would speak to the Prophet or
Priest who would in turn carry the message to the rest of the people.
HISTORY OF THE CHURCH IN NIGERIA
History
records that the Church in Nigeria is some 172 years old having started
with the Catholic priests who were part of the Portuguese trade
incursion into the coastlands of Nigeria. It was only after some hiatus,
that there was the arrival of a more sustained missionary exploits of
the Methodist Missionary Society in 1842 pioneered by the works of
Thomas Birch Freeman. The Christian Missionary Society followed suit
later that same year with the visit of Henry Townsend from Sierra Leone.
Some years later the Catholic Irish missionaries arrived and much later
down the line, Nigerians saw the emergence of indigenous churches that
interpreted the Christian experience to have local relevance. Churches
such as the Aladura movement in Western Nigeria, the Apostolic movement,
the Evangelical, Charismatic and Pentecostal movements were founded and
thus the Church in Nigeria was fully formed as an organizational
concept coincident with the era of independence. For example, the
Redeemed Christian Church of God a mission in which my husband and I
have the privilege of having joined in the early 90s from our
Anglican/Catholic backgrounds, is an indigenous Pentecostal/Evangelical
church founded by Pa. Josiah Akindayomi sixty three years ago.
Each
denomination of the Church in Nigeria flourished in numerical growth
and in an environment of relative religious freedom and constitutionally
guaranteed secularity of governance, they individually carried on with
their respective missions without the need for any structured collective
structure. However, when during the military rule of General Ibrahim
Babaginda, the Church in Nigeria collectively felt the threat resulting
from that government signing up Nigeria as a member of the Organisation
of Islamic Countries they came together under the umbrella of the
Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) in 1976. Today, CAN is
constituted by Churches under five groupings that are the Catholic
Secretariat of Nigeria, The Christian Council of Nigeria, the Christian
Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria/Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria, the
Organisation of African Independent Churches and Tarrayar Ekelesioyoyin
Kristi. The Christian Association of Nigeria enunciates the following
objectives: to serve as a basis of [action for] the unity of the Church,
especially as [intended] in our Lord’s pastoral prayer: ‘That they all
may be one’to act as a liaison committee, by means of which its member
churches can consult together and, when necessary, make common
statements and take common action to be a watch-dog of the spiritual and
moral welfare [of] the nation to propagate the Gospel to promote
understanding among the various people and strata of society in Nigeria.
A
critical analysis of the role that the Church has played in the nation
along the lines of living up to its objectives of Unity of faith and
collective action; its spiritual and moral watchdog of the nation
objective; its promotion of understanding and peaceful relationship
objective; is highly recommended for not just CAN but for all church
leaders and their denominations. Any such objective assessment will
reveal the deficit in acting to realize these lofty vision of CAN.
Whereas it has done relatively well in some aspects of its vision, the
association of Christians has a long journey to being the mega rallying
point of Christians as the light of the Nigerian society that we are
called to be.
WHAT IS NATION BUILDING?
Nation building in
its simple definition refers to the use of the power of the state to
construct or structure a national identity. Nation building is
especially used in relation to countries in Africa and Central Europe
where territorial habitation of people forces disparate nationalities to
belong to a country and yet feel no common sense of shared identity
among themselves. So, in basic terms, one could say that nation building
aims to unify diverse people of ethnic, religious and other pluralities
who have found themselves living together in a globally recognised
entity known as a United Nations member country. The process of
attempting to unify the diverse nationalities within a territorial
construction to make it politically stable and viable, is something that
would resonate for all Nigerians-North, South, East and West- seeing
how so much it describes our story in the 101 years of amalgamation and
54 years of independence of our country.
“Today is Independence
Day. The first of October 1960 is a date to which for two years, Nigeria
has been eagerly looking forward. At last, our great day has arrived,
and Nigeria is now indeed an independent Sovereign nation. Words cannot
adequately express my joy and pride at being the Nigerian citizen
privileged to accept from Her Royal Highness these Constitutional
Instruments which are the symbols of Nigeria’s Independence. It is a
unique privilege which I shall remember forever, and it gives me
strength and courage as I dedicate my life to the service of our
country. This is a wonderful day, and it is all the more wonderful
because we have awaited it with increasing impatience, compelled to
watch one country after another overtaking us on the road when we had so
nearly reached our goal. But now, we have acquired our rightful status,
and I feel sure that history will show that the building of our nation
proceeded at the wisest pace: it has been thorough, and Nigeria now
stands well-built upon firm foundations.”
These were the very
gushing and giddy words of the first Prime Minister of Nigeria Alhaji
Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa on October 1, 1960.
Sadly, the reality
of our trajectory as a country is that we never transited from country
to nation contrary to the poetic declarations of our first leader. To
call a spade a spade, our nation building process has been extremely
dismal in outcome and so fifty four years after, we are at the Diamond
event of FourSquare Church which is five years older than independent
Nigeria; still discussing matters of “Nation Building.” Our Founding
Nationalists, simply equated our becoming a country with attaining
nationhood. Our founding leaders forgot that a State- i.e. A country- is
not always a Nation . True, Nigeria became a self-governing political
entity that negotiated a federal structure in cognizance of the near
autonomy of each of its constituent ethnic nationalities. The painful
fact however is that our independent Nigeria does not yet act like a
Nation after five decades. The inability to achieve the consensus
necessary for nation building has robbed us of the fundamentals of
shared identity, vision and values known as “nation formations”.
Research proves that these fundamentals are what have helped other
countries in similar circumstances as Nigeria to transit into the more
progressive concept of “State Building”. It is after Nation Building
that the phase of State Building which focuses on the building of the
social, human and physical infrastructure as well as the critical
institutions can commence on a solid foundation. It is State Building
that progresses a territory of unified people to citizens of
economically, socially and politically viable nation-state through what
is known as a “Capable State”.
Countries with multiple divides do
not just melt into one happy union. It requires deliberation and
intentionality for diverse people with divergent interests, threats,
opportunities and strengths to forge a common and shared framework for
lasting unity of purpose. In some of the instances where this has
happened either through wars and or dialogues/negotiations or their
combination , it had required the elite of such countries to lead the
rest of the people in a deliberative process of nation building. Nation
building agenda envisions the forging of a common identity that all have
resolved that they will defend at all time with clear mechanisms for
conflict resolution. For countries like South Africa and more recently,
the people- led constitutional process were their pathway. It is the
visionary power of the elite to move a people of diversity beyond the
lowest common denominator of mere citizens of one country into a nation
of people. It is what makes the United States to stand out as a model
multi-cultural society. Hence, even “with its multicultural society, the
United States is also referred to as a nation-state because of the
shared American “culture.”
Some people may of course dismiss this
crave for evolution from country into a nation and say it does not
matter. For those ones, I recall the wise words Carolyn Stephenson, who
is a Professor of Political Science at the University of Hawaii-Manoa.
She could have premised her thesis specially for Nigeria. Professor
Stephenson states that “ Nation-building matters to intractable conflict
because of the theory that a strong state is necessary in order to
provide security and that the building of an integrated national
community is important in the building of a state, and that there may be
social and economic prerequisites or co-requisites to the building of
an integrated national community” Simply put, if a people of diversity
in a country truly wish to succeed, they must forge a shared identity,
vision and values to realise their goal of building a strong, secure and
viable nation- state.
THE PAST, THE PRESENT OF THE CHURCH IN
NIGERIA AND THE NIGERIAN CONDITION. CAN THE CHURCH IN BECOME THE
CATALYST FOR A NEW NIGERIA?
That failure to immediately use the
early days of independence to commence the nation building process is
what I consider the biggest missed opportunity in the history of
Nigeria. So, it was not surprising that shortly after the novelty of our
political independence wore off, the troubling underbelly of our
nascent 1959/60 democracy was revealed in the rather prescient reading
of the situation at that time by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
of the United States its memorandum of 1966. CIA wrote thus: “Africa’s
most populous country (population estimated at 48 million) is in the
throes of a highly complex internal crisis rooted in its artificial
origin as a British dependency containing over 250 diverse and often
antagonistic tribal groups. The present crisis started” with Nigerian
independence in 1960, but the federated parliament hid “serious internal
strains. It has been in an acute stage since last January when a
military coup d’état destroyed the constitutional regime bequeathed by
the British and upset the underlying tribal and regional power
relationships. At stake now are the most fundamental questions which can
be raised about a country, beginning with whether it will survive as a
single viable entity. The situation is uncertain, with Nigeria,……is
sliding downhill faster and faster, with less and less chance for unity
and stability. Unless present army leaders and contending tribal
elements soon reach agreement on a new basis for association and take
some effective measures to halt a seriously deteriorating security
situation, there will be increasing internal turmoil, possibly including
civil war”.
The question anyone of reading this should ask in the
context of our topic is, “where was the Church in Nigeria at the time
these lethal strains that became entrenched even up until today, were
brewing? How could the Church have been irrelevant in the foundational
work of unifying diverse aspirations by woefully failing to influence
the individual actors of that era considering that many of them wore and
do in fact continue to wear their ecclesiastic garment as boldly as
they wore and wear their ethnic cleavage? Even if the other end of the
dialogue was the mostly Muslim North, could there not have been a way
that the church could have helped to prevent the needless deaths that
started and degenerated into a pogrom, claiming the largest number of
our people?”
In a similar situation in Rwanda, the Church has had
to face the scrutiny on its failings or complicity in the genocide that
almost wiped out an entire ethnic race. I do not recall that the Church
in Nigeria has reviewed or been compelled to review its role in the 60s
multiple tragedies of our country. The satanic seed of deep ethnic
distrust, mistrust and hostility were sown unchallenged in that era. It
pervades the Nigerian society today engulfing all generations in their
relationships and explains why other ethnic groups often withhold
empathy from any other of the groups which is faced with challenges at
any given time.
Nigerians engage in what I call “equal opportunity
suffering”. Not having received empathy in their time of pain, they see
no reason to empathize when it is the “turn” of another ethnic group to
suffer their “own pain”. Nothing is more revealing of the absence of
the spirit of nationhood as this inability to rise beyond ethnic
trenches and show humanness to another group, regardless of past hurts.
What one has known from advocating for our abducted 219 Chibok School
girls and the North East more broadly, reveals extremely deep divides
that should not exist where the Church in Nigeria living up to its
Reconciliatory role. Unfortunately, the Church is very woven into the
fabric of inter and intra ethnic conflicts. Such conflicts have become
very common within the Christian fold in Nigeria, thereby robbing it of
the moral pedestal it must have in order to play the role of
reconciliation in a country where conflicts easily erupt and escalate
unnecessarily.
I dare say that our protracted failure to build a
nation out of a country is what changed the course of Nigeria’s history
and squandered the huge benefit that empirical research shows is
possible for diverse societies. That our political elite could not
speedily and “sincerely act” on the lofty ideals espoused in their
nationalist struggle when they successfully united against a common
“enemy” and brought us our independence, is the reason our language
remains divisive, churlishly clannish and religiously irredentist.
Rather, our political elite turned their backs on the supposed
“independent sovereign nation” and resorted to lethal ethnicity. Worse,
they hid under their fiery brand of ethnic and religious politics to
paradoxically unite in offering a toxic variant of leadership that is
mostly devoid of altruism. Now, what remains of leadership if it is
lacking in sacrifice?
Rather than thread a collective path toward
nation building, what Nigerians know as the prevalent character of the
political elite class across board is that they frequently push the
country to a precipitous slide that has become the lot of Nigeria since
independence. It was within this context of elite failure that the 1966
military coup struck and unleashed a huge canvass of governance
instability epitomised by long period of military adventurism in
governance, that abated only recently in 1999 with the coming on of the
fourth Republic. It is only in the last sixteen years that our fifty
four year old country finally got the longest season of the sins qua non
democratic context that helps a people to negotiate their differences
through freedoms of discourse, disagreement, dialogue and principled
negotiation. The question however is, will our country ever seize the
opportunity for such and achieve triumph through the pain and discomfort
of the nation birthing process?
There is an incentive for us to
push ourselves toward this painful choice. Not having deliberately
engaged the best medium for shaping our consensus around a shared
national identity, shared vision and shared values we continue to
struggle. Even in the last sixteen years of the latest cycle of being a
Democracy, Nigeria stays struggling to commence sensible and sustained
“State Building” process. I mean, how can you possibly commence the
structure of a house without laying the strong foundation required by
engineering standards? That is precisely what we as Nigerians have been
doing in “pretending to build a capable state” when basic nation
building remains an unfinished business.
The unfinished business
of nation building has created room for the wily elite class to cleverly
capture what passes for the “State” and push the larger population of
the excluded who dot the entire landscape of Nigeria to the fringes of
the benefits of governance. Such elite capture and “pocketization” of
the “pseudo state” is exemplified by the governance failures of the past
fifty four years that has engaged academic researchers around the
world. Nearly all of Nigeria’s problem is traceable to poor governance
and its more manifest symptom of cancerous corruption. Corruption is
empirically proven to be the greatest obstacle to Nigeria’s development.
Grand corruption which is the variant popularized by the elite of our
society created the current endemic and systemic corruption. That in
turn, has produced the most unacceptable levels of poverty in a country
that evoked great expectation at the time of independence. Today, poorer
segment of citizens all over the country, who find themselves caught in
the corruption-poverty-corruption trap are angry at the “crumbling
state” that has failed to provide them the most basic services that
people of other nations enjoy. Hence, regardless of what part of the
country they come from, what language they speak, what culture they
practice, what religion they believe, Nigerian citizens are gradually
realizing that the ethnic jingoism of our elite may after all be purely
self serving.
Over the years, the depth of poor governance and
corruption by the political class and their private sector collaborators
and to a lesser extent the acquiescing religious elite has worsened the
cynicism, pessimism and skepticism of citizens leading to huge erosion
of our Social Capital. No society can build for a lasting future without
some reasonable measure of Trust of government by the people. That
citizens do in fact openly express trenchant cynicism about the
uninspiring role that the religious spheres including the Church has
played in bring forth a values- deficit and broken down Nigeria- State
is heartbreakingly opposite of the standard set for the modern church by
the Early Church. The collapse of our values and the depletion of our
social capital heightened have further sharpened the ethnic and
religious fault lines and increases conflicts. Conflicts of all kinds
have further deepened poverty among the poor citizens already excluded
from the benefits of recent economic growth. Feeling abandoned by the
Nigeria- State, our society is seeing a growing number of people among
the excluded cynically following after the “examples” of their elite.
They do so by engaging in all manner of acts of criminality and
wickedness in apparent attempt at lashing out against the country which
they believe has failed them.
And yet, the nation building process
is one in which all of society must. play a role and happens faster
when it is designed as an all inclusive process that leaves no one, no
segment, no group, no gender, no class and no sphere behind. Lessons
from other lands show that in negotiating and agreeing a shares
identity, the religious sphere for its inherent tendencies to building
and nurturing human relationships usually play a strong role. The Church
therefore- both for its individual members and as a group/ organization
has always had a central role to play in nation building – in fostering
the sense of shares humanity of a people bound minimally by territorial
neighborhood .
The question today however, is how has the Church
in Nigeria fared as a potential catalyst that helps propel Nigerians
toward a positive trajectory and progression into nationhood?
Let
us even narrow this evaluation of the role of the Church to the
fundamental premise of my considered opinion that Nigeria has been a
victim of an elite crisis. Doing so, would mean asking how much of a
restraining or constraining influence has the Church tried to be on the
Nation-State destructive role of our “power elite”? Has the Church not
mostly acquiesced with this class of people in the manner it is welcomes
and honors those of its folks who ordinarily should receive its moral
sanction?
There is if not empirical, at least some reasonable
anecdotal basis for probing the role of the Church in so far as the
public piety of its flocks is concerned. The privileged class are traced
to the grand ills of the Nigerian society in nearly all the instances
of truncation of governance by coups. Here is a classic description of
the “power elite” of Nigeria in the statement “justifying” the 1966
coup: “enemies are the political profiteers, the swindlers, the men in
high and low places that seek bribes and demand 10 percent; those that
seek to keep the country divided permanently so that they can remain in
office as ministers or VIPs at least, the tribalist, the nepotists,
those that make the country look big for nothing before international
circles, those that have corrupted our society and put the Nigerian
political calendar back by their words and deeds.”
Every other
coup more or less repeated the text until the last one in 1993. One can
reasonably conclude that what we today confront as systemic corruption
only metamorphosed to the gargantuan scale as Nigeria’s elite class
perverted the values of our country and distorted our incentive and
disincentives regimes. It has been so since the painful 60s unto this
day, robbing the poor who the Church exists to be their voice of the
better life possible in Nigeria.
So, sure the economy has been
growing at 7% every year in the last ten years but what quality of
growth have we had with still more than 61% of poor in the land, 24%
unemployment level with more than 40% level among the youthful segment?
We have a negligible changed structure of the
Nigerian economy since
independence with the consequence that manufacturing has stayed at less
than 15% thus narrowing the opportunity for rapid absorption of labour.
The massive unemployment and underemployment is because our indigenous
private sector is underdeveloped compared to the countries of Asia and
Latin America where small businesses account for more than 60 percent of
the economy or 75% in America. Our private sector that thrives mostly
does so by depending on the distortion of policies, the corruption of
the public sector and influence peddling while the small businesses
suffer the severe adverse effects of failure of the same
policies.Inequality and growing disparity between few that have had
grown deeper. Regrettably the elite fail to understand the implications
of such an unsustainable pattern of power and wealth relations in any
society even as the heinous effects of long lasting poor governance in
the North East of Nigeria stares us in the face.
All of the
foregoing are policy, institutional, investment and broadly governance
matters that constitute the State Building process. Our effort at
tackling them without tackling the faulty foundation of absence of
nation building has produced disappointing results. The
corruption-poverty-corruption trap has thus capped the possibilities of
our larger population of citizens while unlike the Early Church, today’s
Church busies itself with materialism. That the Church in Nigeria
provides a place of comfort rather than rebuke and sanction to the elite
of the land who in one factually evidenced basis or the other are
culpable for poor governance and corruption makes it unwittingly
acquiescent in the entrenched inequality In the land. God cares for the
poor. God wishes that His Church should also care for the equity and
justice for the poor and to stand on the side of the weak and vulnerable
and not with those who oppress them.
While the political and to a
lesser degree, the business elite set the stage for the broken and
deficit foundation of Nigeria, the rest of our society must also accept
their fair share of the blame for helping to accelerate the slide by
their apathy, lethargy or indifference. The governed, be they men or
women have a major role to compel their elite to act in always that
promote the collective good of society. Those citizens who not
understanding the power they wield and to collectively deploy it in
demanding for good governance and accountability for resources and for
results from those that lead them pay huge costs for their ignorance. To
simply accept and applaud acts that injure a citizen is injustice to
both the person and the rest of society. When citizens of Nigeria fail
to actively engage, participate and exercise their voice in helping
shape course that the country is taking, nation building will be further
delayed.
To return to the basics and compel this all too
important and painful process of nation building, I recommend that the
Church in Nigeria acting as a collective, can become the Catalyst that
galvanises individual members, families, civil society to set out an
agenda for a discourse of our common identity, vision and values. There
is no better organisation of people to trigger a Values Renaissance as a
lasting counter to the present “distorted normal” . What happened to
virtues like honesty, integrity, character, dignity, hard work, selfless
service? The distorted VALUES of the failing Nigerian society seeped so
badly into the church such that we are reminded “if the foundations be
destroyed or broken, what will the righteous do”? Is it not the case
that we also have crisis of leadership values in the church today?
Should we not first repent for failure to be the SALT, THE
LIGHT AND THE
CITY UPON THE HILL
. Reading Prophet Hagia’s first and second chapters,
one will conclude that like the children of Israel in his time, we the
Church of Nigeria of today sit in church praying to all become
prosperous while the vineyard (Nigeria) that God had given us over grows
with weeds. “Consider your ways”, the Prophet roared then. Where are
our own Prophets to roar at His church? If today they will emerge, then
God will return to us!
Who better than the Church can boldly take
this agenda to the top of our national discourse determined to force our
deliberation of the ideals upon which vibrant and successful nations
emerge? The justification for the Church to make such a bold move is the
urgency necessitated by growing inequality that seeks to engulf the
land but which the political elite class that should provide leadership
is too distracted by the pattern of power conflicts to give its
attention.
A corrupted Nigeria will eternally rob the same poor
that the Church should be protecting. Has today’s Church not mostly
failed to use its Voice on behalf of the poor in the land by
systematically living up to its “watchdog” roles in the same manner as
our Lord Jesus, John the Baptist, Prophets Elijah, Elisha, Jeremiah,
Ezekiel, Amos and several others? How ready is the Church to champion a
credible sanction era to punish the cancerous corruption that afflicts
our land? Would it not be a tragedy if the government becomes actually
serious to lead such a corrective war to rebuild our foundations and
what the church does is to “blow the trumpet in an uncertain way” such
that the people fail to prepare for battle?
The Lord understood
that His children would have needs but His assurance that if we kept the
matters of the kingdom— such as nation building, being the standard
bearers in our nation as the “Salt of the Earth and the Light of the
World”, excelling in our “Ministry of Reconciliation and Peace” unto
which He has called us, then ALL THESE OTHER MATERIALISTIC “THINGS” (
Note that He belittles them as mere “things”) shall be added unto us.
God forbid that the Church will become irrelevant because it joined the
people of the world to mind the irrelevant things and not the Lord’s
mandate! The Lord goes further and warns that should His Church busy
itself with “things” then it is no longer the “Assembly of the people of
God” but a gathering of heathen.
I believe that this awakening
calls the Church to deep retrospection and introspection to unreservedly
discover where we missed it and veered into the path of perfidious
acquisition craze. How did we, who should lead as His Light become the
LED, into darkness? How did the Church become so “at ease in Nigeria”
that we are now misled by our political and business elite who should
have been under our positive influence? One pathway out of this quagmire
is for the Church to judge itself and admit that it has fallen short as
a cleansing ground; and that in order to qualify to function as a
Cleanser in this land, we would all need to plead with the Lord of the
Church to mercifully come into the sanctuary and purge His people. Is
the Church ready for the painful purging?
When evil is prevalent
in a society we know that God keeps for Himself a Remnant. There
remaineth a REMNANT as Prophet Isaiah declared in chapter 10 verse 20.
How come FourSquare Church has tied its entire Diamond Anniversary to
the issues of the Nigeria condition? It is because the Church senses
that a new season has come. It is a season of opportunity to “do a new
thing that can spring forth!”. As Solomon said, there is a time for
everything under the sky. A time to be indifferent and a time to become
involved. A time to ignore and a time to no longer ignore. A time to sit
in church and just pray and a time to both pray and work like Prophet
Nehemiah and like the four carpenters that Prophet Zechariah spoke
about. The season we are in is the season when the salvation of Nigeria
is closer than when we first began. The season for a new birth has come
and so there is a restiveness in the Spirit of the people of God. We
shall both pray, groan in the spirit, travail and walk our beliefs for
the birthing of the New Nigeria through deliberations that will transit
us from country to NATION.
When Nehemiah heard the news of the
broken walls of Jerusalem, his heart was burdened at what he was told
about not just the city but the poor in the land. Nehemiah had no reason
to be so distressed because after all, his situation as the King’s
cupbearer was remarkably privileged for one in captivity.
Yet, his
sorrow new no end. He prayed and asked God for a strategy and received
it immediately because God loves and supports those who care about His
vision. Nehemiah, set out on the journey back to Jerusalem determined to
succeed. Of all the tools that Nehemiah needed for a successful
reconstruction effort— money, men and material– a good read of his book
shall reveal to us that it was none of these that brought the prophet
his successful delivery on target. What did bring the completion of work
despite all the challenges he encountered, was RIGHTEOUSNESS. Nehemiah
new how to do the RIGHT THINGS. He did not engage in the wrong things
while praying to get a good result. In nation building, we know that it
is “Righteousness that exalts a nation while sin is a reproach to any
people”. It was the Church as in the members not the buildings that
Christ commanded to be known for “a pattern of well doing”.
Today,
because it is appropriate to nation building, I have decided to use the
concept of righteousness as the pattern of “doing the right things”
even by a person or nation that is outside of the Christian Faith. We
have an example of a country like that – of a people who do not confess
our Lord Jesus Christ – as majority of our Christian folks do here in
Nigeria. It is a nation with similar multi- ethnic, history of
colonisation and poverty challenges like we had in the 60s at
independence. That nation, is known as Singapore. Together with Nigeria
and many other developing countries, it started on the Development
journey with Gross Domestic Product – GDP per capita of less than $500
in the 60s. By first resolving the nation building process and then
moving on to the state building process with leadership that “did the
right things consistently” , Singapore today has a GDP per capita of
$60,000 compared to our beloved country’s $2300.
Where then are
our own Nehemiahs? Where are our Deborahs? Where are our Ezras? Where o
country of Nigeria, are your Modecais and Esthers who have made up their
minds to not bow but to rather dethrone the STRONG MAN OF CORRUPTION
that is sitting over NIGERIA? It is time, Church! This is the season!!
It is time to:
To PRAY !
To WORK!!
To WALK!!!
To
BUILD …………. Until we become a Nation. ….. Until our New Nigeria
emerges. Until the Nigeria of God’s dream comes. Until Nigeria becomes a
praise in all the earth. I BELIEVE.
Obiageli “Oby” Ezekwesili
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