The Victorian Entrepreneural Foundation(VEF) TechRise Initiative, Project 2026.
What is this about?
It's about becoming a part of the solution, it's about creating opportunities, it's about reducing unemployment, it's about complaining less
Good morning everyone, if it's not too much to ask, please let's fast and pray today for these children.
If you've been doing this already, God bless you; if you haven't, please try today, doesn't have to be the whole day.
Dear parents, as much as you want to have fun with
your children, please take out time to pray with them for this children.
Please, let's not act like it's not our business. I keep imagining my 3year old there, what does she know about enduring torture?
Please, I'm begging us, don't turn a blind eye to this.
Please 🧎🏽♀️🧎🏽♀️🧎🏽♀️
Normalize raising your daughters to be mothers instead of employees.
Teach them that motherhood will be their most rewarding job, and that homeschooling should be part of the big picture.
Give them the tools to run a home efficiently and manage money wisely, especially on one income.
Encourage them to pursue a trade or business that operates from the home on a flexible schedule, with babies and children as the first priority.
Help them to find a husband who has the same vision.
So many young women are taught to pursue the degree-career track without giving much thought to future children, and especially homeschooling. When that day finally comes, they’re torn between their salary snd their child. But if parents would prepare them with a generational vision for homeschooling from the start, both the husband and the wife can set up their home, their finances, and their priorities before the first baby even arrives.
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Church Under The Bridge Day 88.
1 Corinthians 12:13 ESV
For in one Spirit we were all baptized into one body—Jews or Greeks, slaves or free—and all were made to drink of one Spirit.
There is a woman among us who urgently needs help, and this is a call to stand for righteousness, compassion, and restoration.
Few months ago, I tweeted about a Pastor who used to be a prisoner and led the church in Kirikiri Female Prison while she was there but has been released, and how she now goes about evangelizing Christ.
She was once a pastor in a well-known Pentecostal church, faithfully serving God and people. She is educated, hardworking, and a mother of three.
But her life took a devastating turn.
Her husband became involved with another woman, who was also a pastor in the same church. Together, they conspired against her. When she spoke up, she was ignored and silenced.
Things escalated.
She was falsely accused of theft at her workplace, humiliated, beaten, and eventually imprisoned. Despite no clear evidence, she spent about three years in prison.
While this happened myself and my sister @abbietayo visited her kids, took care of fees and bought food stuffs for them.
While she was away, everything she owned was taken from her.
Today, she is out, but with nothing.
No home.
No stable income.
Two children to care for.
For nearly 9 months, she has struggled to survive, often depending on others just to eat. Yet, she is not lazy. Even in prison, she was known for her diligence, humility, and willingness to serve others.
We have done what we can, but this burden is beyond us alone.
She needs:
• A safe place to stay
• Support to restart her life
• Financial assistance to become stable again
If the Lord is stirring your heart, please reach out to me via DM. I can provide more details and how you can help.
“Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves… defend the rights of the poor and needy.” — Proverbs 31:8–9
Let us not look away. Let us be the hands of Christ in this moment.
Thank you, and God bless you.
9026726199 Moniepoint.
The Bridging Church.
Narration "For Christian Leader"
The Miracles & Parables of Jesus: Water to Wine | Pastor Sam Oyeyinka | John 2:1-11
Jesus’ first miracle at the wedding in Cana (John 2:1-11) was not just about wine, it pointed to His hour, the cross, and the glory that would be revealed (John 7:30; 8:20; John 13:1; John 17:1). Many expected Him to solve the wine issue naturally, but Jesus used this wedding to reveal His glory, showing that His hour—the time He was anointed to die—guided His actions, not human expectations. This miracle also teaches that God cares about weddings because His glory can be manifested in marriages, and that we are to celebrate what He does.
The jars of water used for purification point to the old ways under Moses (Deuteronomy 28:47-48; 29:4; 30:6), yet Jesus transformed them into something sweet that brings joy and life. Filling the jars with water symbolises active participation and faith. Mary did not make Christ do what He did not want to do, reminding us that people cannot force God to act outside His will. She modelled faith when she told Jesus about the wine, showing that whatever He asks us to do, we must do it. Duty turns to delight when we obey; God can change our desires, and only He can bring transformation. We must participate and trust Him, keeping our “jars filled” in faith, knowing that miracles unfold at the point of obedience.
What stood out for you in this sermon? Share in the comments✨
Good evening everyone,
I write this message with a heavy heart, sincerely asking for help.
Over the past year, I made some poor financial decisions that led me into taking high-interest loans. I take full responsibility for my actions and deeply regret them.
1
A few people have asked if The Seed Within You will be on Amazon…
Not yet 😊
This first launch will be on Selar — and I’m excited for you to be among the first to read it.
Launching March 26 🌱
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Some people desire to know theology just for the pleasure of knowing it. That's self-entertainment. It's a shameful type of curiosity.
Some others desire to know theology so that they can sell it and make money from it. That's shameful entrepreneurship worthy of God's wrath.
Some others learn theology so that they can show it off. They seek to earn a reputation as the custodians of knowledge. These are worthless types, shameful hypocrites.
Those who will be useful to God's people and receive God's blessings are those who pursue theology so that they may know God and glorify Him with their lives as they edify their brethren, bringing them into a fellowship with God that enjoys God.
Paraphrased from Baxter who Paraphrased Bernard.
PSam
@Olafemi121212@Afolasakin01 I'm sorry.. I don't agree with what he said, but your words.
Stupid? Rada rada? Werey? Even if he was wrong, are you right by using this words as a believer?
Let your words be seasoned with salt please. You can make your point without insulting one another.
May God help us.
I have been watching the conversations around Lent and Hallelujah Challenge, and honestly, I feel the need to speak — not from a place of attack, but from understanding.
I was once a Catholic. I was in Seminary. I desired to be a priest before life took a different turn. So I understand what Lent means. I understand Ash Wednesday. I understand abstaining from meat on Fridays. I understand confession. I understand the discipline and the doctrine.
And because I understand it, I also know this:
Lent is not just about what you remove from your plate.
It is about what you remove from your heart.
It is not just about avoiding meat on Fridays.
It is about crucifying pride, anger, dishonor, and hatred daily.
It is not just about going to confession every week.
It is about living in a way that reflects what Jesus did on the Cross.
Lent is a season of reflection on the sacrifice of Jesus Christ. A season of humility. A season of repentance. A season of examining your own heart.
So when I see some people on X dragging Nathaniel Bassey over Hallelujah Challenge, I ask myself — is this truly the spirit of Lent?
Hallelujah Challenge has been happening every February for years. It did not start yesterday. It did not start to compete with Lent. It has been a consistent altar of worship long before some of the loudest critics even joined it.
And let’s be clear:
He has never told Catholics to abandon Lent.
He has never preached against Catholic doctrine.
He has never forced anyone to choose between Lent and worship.
So why the dragging? Why the dishonor? Why the insults?
If you are Catholic and you believe that during Lent you should not sing “Hallelujah,” then focus on your Lent. That is your conviction. Honor it. Live it. Practice it with integrity.
But why attack someone who is simply leading worship?
You can: – Pause Hallelujah Challenge and focus fully on Lent.
– Participate in both quietly if your conscience allows.
– Or simply scroll past and mind your devotion.
Spiritual maturity means knowing that not every altar is yours — but you don’t destroy what you don’t attend.
The irony is this:
Lent calls for humility.
Yet some responses are full of pride.
Lent calls for repentance.
Yet some comments are full of accusation.
Lent calls for self-examination.
Yet many are busy examining someone else.
Dragging a man of God publicly, speaking with dishonor, and masking it as “defending doctrine” — is that truly the spirit of Christ?
Even within Christianity, there are different expressions of worship. The Body of Christ is diverse. Catholics have their traditions. Pentecostals have theirs. Evangelicals have theirs. The beauty of the Church is not uniformity — it is unity in Christ.
Maturity is understanding that conviction is personal.
Ignorance is assuming your conviction must control everyone else.
If something offends your doctrine, withdraw respectfully. That is strength.
But attacking, insulting, and misrepresenting? That reveals more about the heart than about theology.
As someone who has walked both spaces, I can say this boldly:
Lent should produce gentleness.
Lent should produce restraint.
Lent should produce Christlike character.
Not online warfare.
The world is already watching the Church. And when believers tear each other apart publicly, what testimony are we giving?
We can disagree without dishonor.
We can uphold doctrine without hostility.
We can stand firm without being rude.
And above all, we can remember that worship is not a competition.
If Hallelujah Challenge is not for you during Lent, that is okay.
If Lent is your focus, embrace it fully.
If you choose both, do it in sincerity.
But let us not reduce Christianity to online arguments and spiritual superiority.
Examine your heart.
Guard your words.
Represent Christ well.
Because at the end of the day, it is not about the programs
And if this season is truly about Him, then our character should reflect Him first.