Onuru ube nwanne agbala oso"
Is a profound and deeply rooted Igbo proverb. Literally translated, it means:
"He who hears the distress call (or cry) of his sibling/kin should not run away."
In Igbo culture, "ube" refers to a cry of pain, distress, or a call for help, while "nwanne" means sibling or a relative, literally "child of my mother".
So finally I think it’s time I start off the movement that was discovered a long time ago, people are depending on AI this days and they believe it to be everything to them but before it came to light I have been screaming “Artificial intelligence’ from way
Another Sunday is here and we are all getting ready to go to church again.
Clothes ironed, shoes polished, Bible in hand. But I want to ask a simple question this morning. After you sit down and listen to that word today, what are you actually going to do with it?
Because most of us have been hearing the same messages for years and nothing is changing in how we live from Monday to Saturday.
And let us be honest about something that nobody wants to say out loud. Some of the men standing on those pulpits today are doing things that would shock you.
Sleeping with married women, collecting money from desperate people, living double lives while the congregation bows and calls them Daddy.
Yet we keep filling those seats every Sunday and acting like we cannot see what is happening right in front of us.
I am not saying stop going to church. I am saying wake up. Your relationship with God is personal and your judgment day is also personal.
Nobody is going to stand there with you on that day, not your pastor, not your spiritual father, nobody.
So while you enjoy this Sunday, just remember that what you do in private matters more than how you appear in public. Happy Sunday everyone. Live right.