The night of every 31st of December is a special time for Nigerian
Christians. It is that time of the year when they congregate in their
millions to listen to prophecies and pray for blessings that will guide
them throughout the following year.
These
watch-night services as they are known often do not end until tithes
and offerings have been collected multiple times. Nigerian pastors are
ingenious when it comes to extorting money from their members - they
persuade members that God will bless them abundantly, but only if the
members first bless God with their tithes and offerings. These pastors
claim to resurrect the dead and heal all kinds of diseases but when it
comes to money they are always powerless, and must always beg for it.
They never seem able to explain why an all-sufficient God needs money or
why the well-being of the church member is dependent on the donations
they make to the pastor.
I do not understand the point of the frenzied prayers that
characterise watch-night services neither. As Christopher Hitchens said,
"the man who prays is the one that thinks God has arranged matters all
wrong and thinks they can instruct Him how to put it right". Praying is
not a sign of faith, it indicates a lack of faith. You would not pray if
you truly believed in an all-powerful God who has a perfect plan for
your life. Nonetheless, Nigerian Christians say the same prayers every
year at watch-night services, which begs the question - is God bothered
by their prayers?
One thing is clear - the prophecies are fuzzy proclamations which
lack specificity. The prophets all claim to hear from the same God but
their prophecies often contradict one another. Even worse, they do not
say anything that matters to the life of the Nigerian. I invite the
reader to consider my analysis of Pastor Adeboye's prophecies for 2015,
(http://saharareporters.com/2015/01/02/end-year-prophecies-ijabla-raymond).
Since he made them 12 months ago, the Chibok girls are still missing
and no one knows if they will ever be found; Boko Haram (BH) insurgency
is still raging on; our national revenue is being threatened by the drop
in the price of crude oil, and so on; but none of these featured in
God's conversation with pastor Adeboye when He was drawing up the 2015
prophecies. On the occasion that he tried to be specific, the prophecy
turned out to be inaccurate. He had prophesied that, "Daddy (referring
to God) says all over the world insurgencies will be considerately
weakened." I am not sure which world daddy was referring to because the
terrorist activities of BH, al-Shabbab, ISIS and the many lone wolves in
2015 on planet earth do not support His claim. At the international
level, it appears that God also forgot to tell pastor Adeboye and His
other prophets about the Syrian war; the refugee crisis in Europe; the
unprecedented floods in Britain; the terrorist attacks in France, Egypt,
Algeria, America and Australia; the devastating earthquake that killed
nearly 9,000 people in Nepal; the blowing up of Russian plane over Egypt
by suspected ISIS jihadists. Or the fact that Russia came to the brink
of a war with NATO after its fighter jet was shot down by Turkey. The
reason prophets do everything they can to avoid being specific when they
announce their prophecies is that it weakens them and makes them appear
as charlatans.
It is usual for Nigerian Christians to respond to any criticism of
their pastors with the cliché, "touch not my anointed and do my prophet
no harm". But they forget that the bible also says: "If what a prophet
proclaims in the name of the Lord does not take place or come true, that
is a message the Lord has not spoken. That prophet has spoken
presumptuously.” It goes even further: “But a prophet who presumes to
speak in my name anything I have not commanded . . . . is to be put to
death.” Deuteronomy 18:20,22. To me, this means that the prophet
(pastor) is accountable.
The other common excuse Christians make for their pastors is: "the
pastor did not force anyone to give money." This excuse ignores the
threats of the devourer being unleashed on people's health, income,
relationships, family or even eternal damnation in hell. This is a form
of psychological control and explains why some members who cannot even
feed their families or pay their children's school fees would borrow
money and still pay tithes and offerings from it. The pastors spend the
money as they like on luxury lifestyle, real estates investments,
private jets, and are hardly ever held accountable. Some of them have
built private schools and universities with the tithes and offering of
their members but the members cannot afford the fees for their children.
Yet, some of these pastors benefitted directly from the free schools
built by foreign missionaries.
Nigerians are extremely gullible when it comes to religion and would
believe every sentence that starts with the word, "God." Charlatans
understand this vulnerability and have come up with all sorts of schemes
to con them. These include prophecies and miracles. I do not believe in
miracles because like gods, demons, spirits, witches and wizards,
there's no evidence for their existence. Death certificates and medical
reports can be forged. Deafness, blindness, paralysis, epilepsy - they
can all be faked. Even death can be faked. A real miracle is watching an
amputated limb grow. Real miracles stopped happening from the moment
cameras and videos were invented. Christians should consider why there
are no videos of pastors Kumuyi, Adeboye, Oyakhilome, Oyedepo, TB Joshua
and others growing the limbs of amputees during their numerous church
conventions. You would think there would be at least one considering the
massive volumes of videos they have accumulated purportedly showing
people who have been cured of all kinds of diseases and resurrected from
death. No one who claims to resurrect dead people or heal diseases is
to be trusted. Surely, if they can perform these miracles then they can
magically manufacture money, and should not have to mentally coerce
their members for it.
My heart bleeds every time another poor patient dies because their
pastor has led them to believe that their illness has been cured and
that it is okay to not take their medications. It is unconscionable to
exploit the desperate situations of vulnerable people for one's gains.
Personally, I feel there is need for a specific legislation to prosecute
faith healers who cause demonstrable harm to others through
misrepresentations.
Ijabla Raymond is a medical doctor and he writes from the UK.
You can contact him at ijabijay@me.com or Ijabla.Raymond@facebook.com
Miracles, Faith Healing And Prophecies - Tools For Exploiting Gullible Christians By Ijabla Raymond
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