@lanre_koleosho@Ayoola0527 Lol, "Europeans being the most racist!".... A joke. Try traveling eastwards of this planet and come back to tell your tales.
No other race allows blacks to mingle with theirs' as much as whites do.
An ex-Muslim, Nabeel, buttresses the concept of the Trinity to an Islamic scholar. He started from Second Temple Jewish thoughts and narrowed it down to the Christian worldview.
Rest in power Nabeel❤️
@marcus_herve Why is a black woman being used in this image? Why not an Arab woman, which would be geographically accurate?
There's no need for us to take part in our own dehumanisation by posting images like this. Black women are not sex objects.
They hate the UAE
but beg for jobs there.
They adore Iran’s regime
but refuse to live in it.
They trash Europe
but would kill to live there.
They curse America
yet crave all its goodies.
Pure keyboard hypocrites
cowardly terrorism cheerleaders 😂
“My mum told me to reject the AFCON trophy. I'm officially rejecting the trophy and hope my teammates do the same. We had a chance to win it but we failed to win it. That's football, sometimes you win and sometimes you lose. Senegal beat us fairly and deserved the win. It will be unfair to ruin their joy after the hardwork they put in. I respect the CAF decision but I'm officially rejecting the trophy. I didn't win 2025 AFCON. Congratulations to Senegal once again.”🇸🇳❤️
—Achraf Hakimi
No, Nigeria did not ban only white models;
the policy prohibits the use of foreign models and voice-over artists in advertisements targeted at the Nigerian market, regardless of race or ethnicity.
This means the ban applies to all non-Nigerian citizens, aiming to promote local talent and address the overrepresentation of foreigners in ads.
So, it's not just white people, as you make it seem. It's foreigners. Meaning we have whites who are Nigerians that you can use—if you want to.
They are saying, use Nigerians to sell to Nigerians. Where is the problem?
You can't just outsource all the big money to others who aren't from Nigeria while you make all the money in Nigeria.
I don't think that's discrimination; it's protection.
It gives Nigerians more opportunities to thrive in their country in a space where they have been previously excluded.
You wouldn't know what that is until you have seen how these multinationals abused all their privileges in Nigeria.
If you think Joseph was imprisoned just because he resisted her, read her first sentence.
We usually treat this story like a basic lesson on resisting temptation. Joseph runs away, stays honest, and keeps his integrity. That’s all true. But we don’t spend enough time talking about what happens after he does the right thing.
You could have ten years of perfect performance reviews. You’re the first one in the office and the last to leave. You’ve built a reputation as someone who doesn’t cut corners. People trust you. Your name commands attention in the room.
Then someone with more power decides to tell a different story about you.
In a single conversation, your ten-year track record suddenly feels vulnerable. The atmosphere changes. People start looking at you through the lens of an accusation instead of the person they’ve known. You realize something painful; that integrity does not always protect you when the other person controls the narrative.
That is the real tension in Genesis 39.
The Bible is careful to show how much Potiphar trusted Joseph. He put everything under his authority. Scripture even tells us Joseph was “handsome in form and appearance.” When Potiphar’s wife pursued him day after day, Joseph refused. He spoke from loyalty; “How then can I do this great wickedness and sin against God?” he said.
Then he ran, leaving his garment in her hand.
But see what happens next
She called the men of the house and said, “See, he has brought among us a Hebrew to laugh at us.” She did not say “Joseph.” She did not say “the overseer.” She said, “a Hebrew.” When she spoke to her husband, she repeated it; “The Hebrew servant, whom you have brought among us…”
Think about that for a moment…
In one sentence, she pulled him out of his position and placed him back in his class. Suddenly he is no longer a trusted manager or faithful servant, just “a Hebrew”; an outsider. The coat in her hand became evidence, and the “Hebrew” label became the lens.
When Potiphar heard his wife’s words, scripture says his anger burned. the Bible doesn’t record Joseph saying a single word to defend himself. He didn't argue his case. Genesis 39:20 simply says Potiphar took Joseph and put him into the prison.
Now, Egyptian law usually meant execution for this kind of thing. The fact that Joseph only got prison suggests Potiphar might have had doubts, or maybe he was just trying to save face. We are not told. What we are told is that Joseph did everything right and still ended up in a cell.
That's a lot to process. He refused, ran, honored God, and he still lost his position and reputation in a single afternoon.
Imagine sitting there, the whole thing replaying in his mind; the offer, refusal, shouting, footsteps and anger. You did exactly what God wanted, and instead your reward was a dungeon and a ruined reputation. Nobody is clapping for you. There’s no big "thank you" for your obedience.
And you know what, God didn't stop the lie.
He didn't strike the woman or burn the house down to prove Joseph was innocent. He let the injustice happen. Only after Joseph is locked away the Bible says, "But the Lord was with Joseph and showed him steadfast love".
Joseph’s story proves that obedience isn't a strategy to get the outcome you want. It is a decision about who you will be when the outcome turns against you. That kind of faith does not look impressive. It looks like waking up in a place you don't deserve to be and refusing to let bitterness take over.
You might be looking at your situation, waiting for "the truth" to come out so you can get your life back. but Joseph’s time in prison suggests your identity isn't found in being proven right, but in the fact that God is with you. He doesn't leave when your name is dragged through the mud.
When doing the right thing costs you your reputation, who are you if no one ever clears your name?
#Christianity #BiblicalTruth #FaithOverFeelings #Injustice #Integrity
Ellis Enobun
I think we focusing on a wrong thing in this country,
We are focusing on things that don’t matter,
We don’t need more religious houses,
We need infrastructure that will benefit the society,
Like modern health facilities, our school facilities being well equipped, religious Leaders build a large religious houses instead of good health care systems, the take their families abroad for medical treatment,
Note:- I know government are to be blamed, but religious leaders should also receive part of the blame.