One typo can turn eternal love into eternal combat.
Let's bring back the PROOFREADING of:
✓wedding brochures
✓ wedding souvenirs
✓wedding itinerary/timeline
✓memorial folders/booklets
✓obituary programs
and so on...
Before sending to press!
#MaritalNotMartial
1 Samuel 2:12
Now the sons of Eli were worthless men. They did not know the Lord.
A man's true worth is tied to his intimacy with the Lord. He may own the whole world and still be worth nothing if he doesn't know the Lord.
@ieServe@IkejaElectric I have now been able to successfully send you a message. Please and please, check and action accordingly. I beg thee. Thank you.
@ieServe@IkejaElectric Funny you'd ask me to send you a DM after you have made it impossible to send you the same. I believe that my message has been passed across, please and thank you.
It is precisely the dangerous habit of intertwining the destinies of the Church of Jesus Christ with the fortunes of the Nigerian state that led many believers to blaspheme God in 2023. When Peter Obi lost the election despite months of intense, nationwide prayer, some openly questioned God’s faithfulness—as though the Church’s mission rises or falls with a single political outcome. The same confusion is already planting seeds of disillusionment for 2027.
We must recover a biblical perspective. The Church and the State are not married; their futures are not fused. Scripture is clear: the Church is the Bride of Christ (2 Corinthians 11:2; Ephesians 5:25–27), purchased with His blood and destined for eternal glory, while earthly nations are temporary stages that rise and fall under God’s sovereign hand (Psalm 2; Acts 17:26). Jesus Himself declared, “My kingdom is not of this world” (John 18:36).
This distinction is liberating. It means the Church of Jesus Christ can (and will) thrive even in a deeply hostile environment like Nigeria. She does not need a prosperous or righteous nation to fulfill her calling. History confirms this: the early Church exploded under Roman persecution; the Church in China and the former Soviet Union multiplied while their states tried to crush it. Salt preserves meat that is already rotting; light shines brightest in the darkest night.
When we separate the two, we guard against both idolatry and cynicism. We can pray fervently for Nigeria (Jeremiah 29:7) without staking the credibility of the gospel on her political or economic success. Our hope is anchored in Christ alone, not in any earthly outcome. That is the clarity that keeps faith steadfast.