When I was Muslim, I would argue & say we had the same prophets as Christians.
But this one broke me:
Surah 17:101: Allah gave Moses 9 clear signs.
I knew the list. The staff. The shining hand. The drought. The flood. The locusts. The lice. The frogs. The blood.
I held onto those 9 signs like proof I had the real story.
But bro, you know what shook me?
There’s a night missing.
After all nine signs, right before Israel walks out of Egypt, something happens that the Quran goes completely silent on.
A lamb is slaughtered.
Its blood painted on the doorposts.
And death passes over every house covered by that blood.
The Passover.
I grew up hearing the whole Exodus story. But nobody ever told me about the blood on the door.
Islam just skips it.
And here’s what wrecked me.
The Bible, the book I was taught was corrupted, mentions the Passover over 70 times.
Exodus. Leviticus. Numbers. Deuteronomy. The Psalms. The Prophets. The Gospels. Paul.
70 times.
So I had to ask myself the honest question:
If men corrupted this book, why would they obsess over the same story for 1500 years? Across dozens of authors who never met?
You don’t forge a document 70 times.
That’s just not corruption.
That to me is preservation.
And then I read the line that finished me off.
1 Corinthians 5:7.
“Christ our Passover lamb has been sacrificed.”
That’s when it hit me.
The whole story was never just about Moses.
It was always pointing to a King.
The final lamb. Whose blood, when applied to your life, makes death pass over you.
Forever.
The Quran gave me 9 signs but hid the one night that explains why any of them happened.
Because the moment a Muslim understands the Passover…
he’s one step away from the cross.
Dear Young Nigerians,
One lesson from the 2023 elections, particularly in Lagos, should never be forgotten.
In the period following the presidential election and leading up to the governorship election, we witnessed a troubling shift in public discourse. Conversations that should have focused on competence, governance, development, and the future of our nation were gradually diverted towards tribal sentiments, ethnic divisions, and unnecessary suspicion among citizens.
Many sincere and well-meaning Nigerians participated in these conversations without realising that they were being drawn into narratives carefully designed by others.
Throughout history, whenever politicians find it difficult to compete on ideas, performance, character, or vision, some resort to exploiting the fault lines of ethnicity, religion, and identity. Their calculation is simple: a divided people are easier to manipulate than a united people.
Today, I see similar efforts emerging again, sometimes in more subtle and sophisticated ways. Narratives are planted, amplified, and circulated, often by individuals who genuinely believe they are defending a worthy cause, without recognizing the broader agenda behind such campaigns.
Let me state clearly that Pastor Enoch Adeboye remains one of the foremost fathers of faith in our nation. For decades, he has consistently preached the virtues of peace, prayer, love, reconciliation, and national unity. Even when faced with provocation, his response has always reflected humility, restraint, wisdom, and grace.
At 84 years of age, it would be unfair for young and able-bodied Nigerians to transfer to him responsibilities that properly belong to them. The task of building a better Nigeria rests primarily on the shoulders of the younger generation. It is their duty to lead the conversations, champion the reforms, and drive the positive change our nation urgently requires.
We must be careful not to become instruments in the hands of those who secretly nurture division while publicly preaching unity. In most cases, their target is not the individual being attacked; instead, it is the person who is attacking. Their real objective is to weaken the bonds that hold us together as one people and one nation.
I therefore urge all young Nigerians: do not allow anyone to recruit you into hatred. Do not allow anyone to weaponise your ethnicity, your faith, or your admiration for respected leaders.
Question every narrative. Verify every claim. Follow the facts. Resist manipulation.
The Nigeria of our dreams can only be built by citizens who refuse to be divided, who choose unity over hatred, and who place our collective future above narrow interests.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
On the one hand, we have people who in order to establish that Jesus is God, want Him also, against all scriptural truth, to be the Father.
There is no need for that.
Scripture is clear: Jesus is the Son of God. He IS the Son of the Father.
2 John 1:3
Grace be with you, mercy, and peace, from God the Father, AND from the Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of the Father, in truth and love.
And this has nothing at all, to do with the virgin birth.
On the other hand, we have people who in trying to establish that Jesus is not the Father, but the Son, also want so much to believe that He is not God, against all scriptures.
There is no need for that.
The Son of God is THE SAME God the Father is.
Hebrews 1:8
But UNTO THE SON he saith, Thy throne, O GOD, is for ever and ever: a sceptre of righteousness is the sceptre of thy kingdom.
Here is God talking to God, and calling God, God! As it was in the beginning, it is now, and ever shall be. For He changes not!
There is one Being who is God, and He manifests Himself distinctly as Father, and as the Son, and as the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Part One
Understanding Public Frustration While Recognizing the Wrong Target: Pastor E.A. Adeboye Is Not Our Problem
Rooted in scriptural and spiritual wisdom, Pastor E.A. Adeboye- like a true bearer of the Cross of Christ - has often chosen dignified silence whenever attacked. Through the years, I learned from him to do the same.
But this moment demands a historical clarity that we must not miss. I must therefore write publicly to help bring us back to what truly matters and to the urgency of this moment.
In doing so, it is crucial to first acknowledge the broader context in which criticisms of public figures have erupted in our beleaguered country. Nigerians are exhausted. Decades of systemic corruption, insecurity, economic hardship, and unfulfilled promises have produced a deep well of frustration. That frustration has evolved into trenchant distrust - not only of politicians, but of institutions and influential individuals whom the people believe possess the moral authority to demand accountability from those in power.
Across Nigeria today, the cry is simple:
“Our religious leaders must rise and help rescue Nigeria from the grip of ineffectual, corrupt, and selfish politicians.”
This is the crux of the matter. Nothing else.
And this is how I want to see where Pastor Adeboye - a simple messenger of God - who has dedicated his life to both praying and speaking up for the good of Nigeria and Nigerians matters in ongoing conversations of this scary time.
Pastor Adeboye does not only pray about Nigeria’s governance. He speaks. He has always spoken when it matters. I know this personally, and evidence abounds. This piece will provide two of the most compelling examples.
We must avoid our national habit of “majoring in the minors” - the distractions that consume public energy while our country slides deeper into crisis. Over the decades, I have watched Nigerians repeatedly miss the mark of what matters most. I now understand this as a psychological coping mechanism that paradoxically rewards the failures of ineffectual governments, allowing Nigeria and her people to degrade year after year, decade after decade.
It allows political leaders to deflect responsibility while the people pummel a soft target. It perpetuates our national decline from one administration to the next. It is a self‑sabotaging pattern. We must break that pattern now and confront the terrifying reality of this moment.
Nigerians, our 2‑year‑old baby, Christianah Akanbi, is in the wilds and has been held captive for several days now.
This is our horrific reality.
Twelve years after the tragedy of the Chibok Secondary School girls’ abduction in Borno State, it is now our 2‑year‑old - a toddler who simply went to school - who has been abducted along with 49 others: his carers, older pupils, secondary school students, and seven teachers.
The reality is that our baby and the rest of our children, women, and men are being held captive by terrorists in Oyo State, South‑West Nigeria. Let that sink into our hearts.
The reality is that three different administrations since Chibok - and the Nigerian State itself - has still failed to protect our children and secure our country.
We must face the reality that one of the teachers of our 2‑year‑old baby was brutally beheaded in his presence. The terrorists recorded and released the video to taunt Nigerians, to show that they - not our government - hold the upper hand.
Our baby is still in the wild with terrorists. Let this image sink into our hearts.
Let the image of the wailing and terrified Principal, Rachael Alamu, in the video - guns pointed at her by captors who hide from view- sink into our hearts.
……./1
Nineteen days.
That's how long dozens of children have remained in captivity while families wait, hope, and ask the same question every day.
Some are toddlers. Some left for school and never returned.
Every day in captivity is one day too many.
Where are they?
Final Part
Understanding Public Frustration While Recognizing the Wrong Target: Pastor E.A. Adeboye Is Not Our Problem
No, Pastor Adeboye is not our problem. He speaks.
He spoke in the 1990s.
He spoke in the early 2000s.
He spoke in 2010.
He spoke in 2020.
He spoke in 2025.
He has spoken across administrations, regardless of who governed or governs as President. The real question is:
How many of us were listening?
Did I hear you ask, “What did he say, and when?”
I will share two of the most relevant examples- not only because they are factual, but because they embody the pathway forward for our beleaguered country, if we are finally ready to listen, act, and compel our government to lead the reforms Pastor Adeboye has long advocated.
1. November 2025 - A Direct Public Message to President Tinubu
Contrary to the misinformation circulating online, Pastor Adeboye’s strong message was delivered in November 2025, during the Holy Ghost Service- not this week.
He said:
“You can only advise the Commander‑in‑Chief; you cannot command him. But I’ve tried. God is my witness.”
“Tell our security chiefs to get rid of these terrorists within 90 days or resign.”
He added:
“They must eliminate the terrorists and their sponsors, no matter how influential.”
These are not the words of a passive observer.
These are the words of a citizen - an influential leader - demanding results, accountability, and consequences for failure.
This is the same Pastor Adeboye some are attacking today.
He issued one of the strongest public demands for accountability ever made by a Nigerian religious leader. But how many of us were listening? What did the President do with that message? And what did we do with it?
2. October 1, 2020 - A Public Call for Structural Reform
At a national governance forum co‑organised by the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) and the Nehemiah Leadership Institute to mark Nigeria’s 60th Independence Anniversary, Pastor Adeboye critiqued our dysfunctional governance structure:
“It is ridiculous that a traditional ruler must inform a local government chairman before he travels.”
He went further:
“We all know that we must restructure. It is either we restructure or we break. You don’t have to be a prophet to know that. Now, we don’t want to break up - God forbid.”
He proposed a “United States of Nigeria” - a governance model with a President and a Prime Minister, rooted in institutional effectiveness.
These are not the words of a man indifferent to Nigeria’s future.
Nigeria is structurally dysfunctional. As presently constituted, cycles of elections without correcting the underlying structure will only degrade - but God forbid- collapse this country.
Now that we know - from just two of his many significant public statements that Pastor Adeboye has long been speaking truth to power on the hydra-headed crises that cripple our nation‑building process, the real question becomes:
What are we all now going to do about it?
“Shall these bones live?”
Like Ezekiel in the valley of dry bones, we stand in a moment of national reckoning.
The bones can live - but only if we act.
It is time for Nigerians to let the image of our 2‑year‑old baby held captive by our common enemies galvanize us to collectively rescue that child and through her rescue our nation.
The answer, my compatriots, is in our own hands.
Obiageli “Oby” Ezekwesili
A Mother
June 4, 2026
✍🏾✍🏾✍🏾
@oadefisayo@ManuelX9999 Sir Bunmi! This is an outrageous claim
I can't authenticate that it can't happen in maybe some special cases but this is in no way a reflection of how RCCG parishes are formed
It's public knowledge that it's by Evangelism & Church planting by other RCCG Churches
It is well
@TrendingEx This is a longstanding sign of humility, respect, and gratitude to the bride's family.
Let's stop manipulating fake news to discredit the church!
We are aware that the church has its weaknesses but let's stop being the devil's tools to malign the church deceitfully
2
@TrendingEx This is NOT Nigerian & also NOT a Christian church scene—it's a misrepresented traditional cultural practice from the Acholi people in northern Uganda
Acholi custom involves the groom & his delegation remove their shoes & crawl with knees into the bride's mother's/family home
1
“I am among the three people they have marked for death in this country, they have publicly declared that anyone who kills any one of us will be rewarded, my name has become a target, my life has been priced by men who hate the truth, yet even with the threats, the fear, and the danger that follows me every day, I cannot abandon my people
Every morning I wake up knowing that there are those who wish I would not see another sunrise, every night I sleep not knowing what tomorrow may bring, but how can I remain silent when innocent people are crying, how can I turn my back when widows are mourning, children are becoming orphans, and families are being buried in sorrow
I have seen mothers weep over the lifeless bodies of their children, I have listened to little boys and girls ask questions that no child should ever have to ask, where is my father, why did they kill my mother, when is she coming back home, their tears have become my tears, their pain has become my burden
Many times people ask me if I am afraid, the truth is that I am human, I know what fear feels like, I know what it means to look over your shoulder, I know what it means to receive threats and know that people are waiting for an opportunity to silence you, but I also know that God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind as written in 2 Timothy 1:7
When I remember the words of our Lord Jesus Christ, I find strength, Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness' sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven, Matthew 5:10, the path of truth has never been easy, the prophets suffered, the apostles suffered, even our Savior suffered, yet they stood firm because they knew that darkness can never overcome the light
There are days when the burden feels heavy, there are nights when the cries of suffering families echo in my heart, but then I remember Isaiah 41:10, Fear thou not, for I am with thee, be not dismayed, for I am thy God, I will strengthen thee, yea, I will help thee, those words remind me that I do not walk this road alone
If speaking for the voiceless makes me a target, then I will continue to speak, if standing with the oppressed puts my life at risk, then I will continue to stand, if defending my people means carrying a cross of persecution, then by God's grace I will carry it
For every child who has lost a parent, for every mother who sleeps with tears on her pillow, for every father who has been taken from his family, and for every believer suffering because of their faith, I will not stop standing with them, my life is in God's hands
As Psalm 27:1 declares, The Lord is my light and my salvation, whom shall I fear, the Lord is the strength of my life, of whom shall I be afraid
They may threaten us, they may try to silence us, they may put a reward on our heads, but our hope is not in man, it is in God, and as long as He gives us breath, we will continue to stand with our people, speak the truth, comfort the brokenhearted, and shine His light in the midst of darkness
That is why it’s not of any use capturing these devils alive. If they are not alive today, their fellow kachallas won’t be demanding for their release.
Because the enemy understands something many believers still do not understand: if the incense continues long enough, manifestation will become inevitable.
THE ENEMY IS CRAFTY….
The Incense rising from this altar is already attracting a weight of GOD, and the enemy has discerned it.
This is why voices will begin to arise. Voices designed to weaken our conviction. Voices designed to produce fear. Voices designed to weary praying men until the altar is slowly abandoned.
Because the enemy understands something many believers still do not understand: if the incense continues long enough, manifestation will become inevitable.
So distractions will arise. Weariness will increase. Discouragement will begin pressing heavily against the soul.
Because the incense is working.
Brethren, there are dimensions of GOD that only open to men who refuse to step away from the altar. And in our generation, we must see this gross wickedness that has spread its tentacles across our nation dissipated.
So Saints, whatever you do, do not stop praying.
Your Brother,
Toluwalogo Agboola
@oparameka@Iamkolotayo There's a specific lie that the RCCG is refuting. It's debunking the widespread lies that he protested against one govt while supporting another
Adeboye has always stayed away from politics even though he talks about govt failure (including Tinubu) time & again
Face the Govt!
@_mr_nuel@Optimistic_Ade So should Baba Adeboye lead the Nigerian army into the bush to rescue them at 84?
Our elderly ones at home who are graced to reach such age wouldn't be allowed to join protest, but G.O should lead aluta
Let's all face this evil Govt together instead of looking for soft target
@_mr_nuel@Optimistic_Ade I won't deny that d toxicity of d Obidient Movement (which I identify with) is partly a catalyst to these woke cancelling culture
But believers should not allow godless men deride our God & his church all for political egoism
There are agendas running underneath these things o
And sometimes, the enemies of the church are not non-Christians or atheists but so called fellow believers who don't have any sense of responsibility
The church has its lapses & it should do better BUT we must not be blind to the subtle war to discredit the church & its labours
And sometimes, the enemies of the church are not non-Christians or atheists but so called fellow believers who don't have any sense of responsibility
The church has its lapses & it should do better BUT we must not be blind to the subtle war to discredit the church & its labours
You're a Christian and you're watching the world blacklist an entire denomination who have evangelistic outreaches everywhere and you're being politically correct? Church ronu ooo.
There are issues, yes, but they're being exaggerated and weaponized against the work of the kingdom.
We've seen it through the debates for tithes. We've seen it through the argument of prayers and healing. Now it's through political commentary. The same people who commended Dr. Eneche for speaking out dragged him this week for throwing his suits.
Are there no Imans that teach where Tinubu and other failed leaders worship? Did they arrest the one that placed bounty on Rev. Dachomo head? We're doing our best. Have they urged people to attend Dunamis or LFC because the leaders spoke up
I won't say Pastor Adeboye is perfect, but I won't side with the enemies of the church to attack him some with lies and misrepresentation.
You're a Christian and you're watching the world blacklist an entire denomination who have evangelistic outreaches everywhere and you're being politically correct? Church ronu ooo.
There are issues, yes, but they're being exaggerated and weaponized against the work of the kingdom.
We've seen it through the debates for tithes. We've seen it through the argument of prayers and healing. Now it's through political commentary. The same people who commended Dr. Eneche for speaking out dragged him this week for throwing his suits.
Are there no Imans that teach where Tinubu and other failed leaders worship? Did they arrest the one that placed bounty on Rev. Dachomo head? We're doing our best. Have they urged people to attend Dunamis or LFC because the leaders spoke up
I won't say Pastor Adeboye is perfect, but I won't side with the enemies of the church to attack him some with lies and misrepresentation.