👋🏾I'm Bolu, I help students age 4🆙thrive in their studies, so parents can breathe easy knowing their children are in good hands. I and expert tutors on @bookflightA deliver personalized learning experiences, driving academic success and fostering a love for learning.
It’s time smart Nigerians started making content. If clowns can go viral back to back, educators should too. These clowns will mentor your kids tomorrow and get written into history. Your children are one of Pellers followers on TikTok 🙂↔️
The first time the word worship appears in Scripture, there is no music, no choir, no instrument.
It is Abraham.
“And Abraham said… Stay here with the donkey; the lad and I will go yonder and worship”
and the worship was a journey to Moriah, carrying Isaac.
This establishes the biblical frame for worship.
Worship, before it ever became sound, was posture.
Abraham worshipped by:
Obedience – he went where God pointed
Alignment – he agreed with God’s word even when it cost him
Surrender – he laid down what was most precious
Faith – he believed God beyond understanding
No song.
No atmosphere.
No encouragement.
Just posture.
Worship was not what Abraham sang; it was how he stood before God.
From that moment onward, Scripture teaches us that worship is first a stance, then a sound.
People stood in reverence.
They knelt in surrender.
They lifted hands in dependence.
They fell on their faces in awe.
Each posture preached before any melody followed.
This tells us something crucial:
God responds to alignment before expression.
You can sing loudly and still miss worship.
You can be silent and yet fully worshipping.
True worship is when the heart bows, the will yields, and the body agrees.
Before the song rises, let posture speak.
That is worship.
It was never about the money... And that's what a lot of people dragging this issue fails to understand.
Is ₦50k enough to run a home? Big NO! But is Is ₦50k enough to show INTENTION? YES.
A man must not become a parasite in his own house,,, Provision is not about how much you have it is about what you are willing to give. A man who earns little & still gives,
is announcing something to his wife that look “If I had more, you would not beg.” And that message is heavier than what you bring to the table as a man at home.
That ₦50k is not feeding the house,,, it is saying “I am still responsible.” or “I am not waiting for you to save me from myself.” That kind of man will always be respected even when his pocket is small. Because respect is not built on income, it is built on INTENTION.
The whole idea of "A man's money is our money" is not about feeding the home,,, it's about feeding RESPECT. Many of you men still don't know women oooo... Let people who have lived with them for a long time tell you more about them. The danger is not that a woman earns more. The danger is when a man starts feeling entitled to her earnings. When he begins to think that “Since you have, you should carry everything.” That is not partnership. That is what I'll call ABDICATION.
A man does not lose leadership because he earns less. He loses leadership when he stops trying. I know some women can carry weight but she must never carry a lazy spirit.
So don't think Pastor Paul or Agba are teaching FINANCE,,, Incase you want to argue like an economist,,, they are teaching POSTURE. That even when you are behind, stand like a man going forward. Because the home does not collapse when the woman earns more,,, it only collapses when the man stops trying.
Provision is not a number but a mindset. And any man who understands that will never lose his place,,, even when life humbles his pocket.
Pastor Paul Enenche is 58 years old, & has been married for 31 years.
I have been married for a little over half of that.
But we are saying the same things when it comes to a man being the provider.
And we are both providers to our respective families.
Telling you that, if your wife earns N1m, and you earn N100k, and that you should give her N50k from it, is wisdom that many of you have failed to see the depth of its meaning & importance.
Is it 50k that would truly feed the wife, kids and handle the expenses?
The answer is no.
What he's saying is that you as the man should not feel entitled to your wife's money.
And that just because she's making way more than you're making, then you should relax and say she should take over from you as the provider.
He mentioned that giving your wife half of what you earn, despite her earning more, shows that you care.
And it shows that if you have more, you'd give.
Your wife will respect you better than the wife of a man who feels entitled to her money.
He's speaking wisdom.
You're the one that doesn't want to think, neither do you really have a full grasp of his message, even if you're a married man.
Lastly, there would surely be some imbalance or friction in a marriage where the wife earns more.
But a wise husband that is not greedy, will retain his position as the head of his home, for a much longer time, while he works harder to bridge the gap.
Not feel relaxed because his wife is always stepping into his roles and responsibilities for him.
End.
I don't understand why people don't just lock in on YouTube
My faceless YouTube channels make me $10,000+/month (long form only)
There is 𝗻𝗼 𝗹𝘂𝗰𝗸 involved.
Let me send you a free course on exactly how to do it.
To get: -
1. Follow (So I can DM you )
2. Retweet is mandatory
3. Like+ Reply " Yt " Must follow me to get DM.
Free for 48 hours.
My 2025 wrap 🌯
- First year in tech
- Built a personal brand from zero.
- Grew my X account from 100 followers to 45,000, close to 50k.
- Became more confident in myself.
- Stepped out more than I ever have in my life.
- My direction became clearer than it has ever been.
- Made my first 8 figures.
- Earned 7 figures consistently every single month.
- Moved from 700 naira to $15k+. Use to be a beggar😭🫣
- Launched my marketing agency.
- Started paying salaries.
- Secured brand partnerships.
- Got gifts from brands.
- Worked on world class projects in the US across fintech, travel, and entertainment as an email marketing specialist.
- Hosted Wednesday virtual events every single week without missing names, Struggles in tech as a freelancer.
- Over 100,000 people tuned in across X Spaces and other platforms.
- Coached People to land their first jobs, first clients, and first millions.
- Spent 3 to 4 million naira helping people, supporting positioning, and giving back.
- Personally gave out two laptops
With @TheQueenArit, we made it four laptops given to the community.
- Started a Telegram community with 1,000+ members and 5,000 applicants
- Built an X community from 0 to 3,000+ members
Named it “Broke Ones Will Rise Again”
- Spoke at my first tech event hosted by Mastercard and Jobberman.
- Became more visible across tech and business spaces.
- Built a freelance platform, currently on hold
- 4,000+ people joined the waiting list.
- Started building my startup app.
- Added weight and lost it. Took my health seriously.
- Multiple failed talking stages.
- Went to Lekki for the first time.
- Took an Uber for the first time.
- Tried new delicacies for the first time I went to chicken Republic for the first time.
- Bought more clothes and started dressing better. Now my ex talking stage wants to talk again. Lol 😂
- Received my first Valentine’s gift.
- Made more money in one year than my parents ever did.
- Celebrated my mum and dad’s birthdays properly.
- Went for my first Rave and Concert.
- Booked an apartment for the first time.
- unlimited data access for one year.
- partnered with the federal government and cleva to teach people.
Your life can change in one year 2025>>>>>>
There is a core practice in the ministry of Apostle Paul that we must not overlook. It is what I call the Ministry of Reasoning.
Some call it disputing, but in truth it was much more—it was engaging, examining, persuading, testing, and clarifying truth in fellowship with others.
Sadly, in our generation, very few ministers have the temperament for this. In the age of social media, many have lost the discipline of reasoning. When there is disagreement, instead of opening the Scriptures, they resort to emotional outbursts. Instead of genuine dialogue, they throw insults. Instead of patiently engaging, they attempt to bully or silence others, as though their view is final. When they lack the discipline of doctrinal reasoning as scholars, they substitute with intimidation, name-calling, manipulation of followers, or outright cancellation. And the moment you maintain your position, the refrain becomes, “How dare you argue with me? You know better than me?” The next step is to delete,remove,cancel or ex-communicate and the likes...
This is immaturity, and it is not apostolic. And this is why—whether online or offline—you will never see me fight, insult, or cancel anyone because of doctrinal persuasion. I literally follow the footprint of Apostle Paul: reasoning without bitterness, disputing without despising, holding convictions without making it personal. Nothing is personal when it comes to the Scriptures.
Look at Paul. Reasoning was one of his core apostolic praxis. He could spend fifteen days with Peter (Gal. 1:18) and not lose fellowship, even while holding strong convictions. He could engage the pillars in Jerusalem (Gal. 2:9), state his case, and still part with the right hand of fellowship. He could reason daily in the synagogue and the marketplace (Acts 17:17) without reducing truth to insults. He spent 18 months in Corinth (Acts 18:11), patiently teaching and persuading.
He spent an entire day in his Roman dwelling (Acts 28:23), expounding from morning to evening about the kingdom of God. This was not quarrelling. This was reasoning—sustained, disciplined, apostolic reasoning.
Why does this matter? Because iron sharpens iron. Revelation becomes stronger when tested.
The body of Christ becomes healthier when ministers and believers learn not only to receive but also to engage the word. Paul told the Thessalonians: “Test all things; hold fast what is good” (1 Thess. 5:21).
We must therefore recover this as a core practice of apostolic ministry. Reasoning in the Scriptures is not evil. It is healthy, it is necessary, it is apostolic. Just don’t take it too personal, and don’t take yourself too serious.
Selah.