Where I stand
There are some
things are really get me seriously agitated and they pertain to rights and
abuse. In the body of work I have produced over almost 9 years, I think these particularly
stand out - human rights, injustice, child rights, women’s rights, sexuality rights, child
sexual abuse, sexual violence, cultural and religious abuse.
There is no doubt
that I also cover very controversial issues; it is just my nature to tackle
those as passionately and objectively as I can.
Too vile for words
This morning I
found myself on a Twitter soapbox dealing with religious abuse of the vilest
kind. A church had concocted a cocktail of fruit juice and olive oil then
marketed it as a cure for cancer or HIV; the prayer component of the product
making up about 50% of the price.
People with chronic
and terminal illnesses are desperately in need of succour and hope; they are
vulnerable to the machinations of those who portend to offer palliation or
cures for their ailments.
Hope like greed is
easily exploited and nowhere is that best manipulated than in churches where
the leaders with ethereal provenance and esoteric rituals that could border on
the macabre but pass off as spiritual hold sway.
Your church as a ghetto
These churches
serve as both communities and places of worship but the community aspect almost
turns the congregants into members of a ghetto that project practices very
different from the wider communities in which they exist. Like Nigerians in the
United Kingdom doing only Nigerian things.
People need to feel
comfortable wherever they go but to be exploited in this way is unforgivable.
There should be a
number of inalienable facts that people should have when attending these
churches which on closer scrutiny are more like sepulchres of despair engaged
in commercial activity for the aggrandisement of the church leaders.
Rather than
minister to their flock, their flock ministers to their every greedy need for
ostentation and hedonism which they suggest are the fruits of service to God –
they are not shepherds but wolves conducting assemblies with grandiloquent
names that will be redolent of B-movie thrillers.
Miracles are free
Now, miracles do
exist, but never for a fee, the best example of a miracle was when Jesus raised
Lazarus who was 4-days dead petrifying and decomposing in a tomb for free. Neither did he charge for converting water into wine at the wedding feast where one would have expected at best a donation. It is
implausible that those ministering in the name of Jesus will then demand some
payment directly, by gimmickry or through the sale of potions to offer healing
to those still alive but with terminal illnesses. Miracles are free, every time and always.
People should be
very lucid about the function of the church and the function of medicine. They
are not mutually exclusive. Using medicine is not a sign of the lack of faith;
in fact faith and medicine can make the medicine more efficacious.
My testimony is
that I had cancer and went on chemotherapy, according to the oncologist and
nurses that came daily to dress the cancer lesions, it took up to six months
for lesions as mine to dry up and disappear, but in my case, the lesions were
all gone in 8 weeks. The doctors considered my response to medication and the
result miraculous.
The church and healing
The church should
not replace your hospital neither should your pastor replace your doctor. They have
their roles. If your pastor does say to you, you are healed; you have the right
to a second opinion, a medical opinion to confirm you are healed.
In all cases where
Jesus healed lepers, He told them to go and show themselves to the priests,
this, I believe was to fulfil all righteousness as they’ll say in religious
parlance – or commonly, to ensure all boxes were ticked to allow their re-admittance
into society.
Ultimately, if you
are paying for any treatment and it is not to a professionally accredited
medical practitioner, to a hospital or to a pharmacy for medicine, you have
been swindled by a confidence trickster impostor masquerading as a pastor when
they are in fact no better than bush witchdoctors.
Your pastor is not your doctor
Your pastor should
have nothing against the use of doctors, hospitals or medicine, not everyone
exercises feats of faith that at an instant will manifest as lightning bolt
miraculous cures. Any assurance of healing should include the advice to have
the medically competent confirm the change in physiology indicating healing –
it is NOT a sin to do so.
As I have written
many times before, never ever
discontinue your medication without first consulting your doctor and only on
the advice of the doctor and no other. If the pastor did not prescribe your
medication the pastor does not have the authority or capacity tell you to
discontinue your medicine – do not had your pills over to be destroyed as if
you are attending a magician’s show – medications should be properly disposed
of by pharmacies or given back to hospitals to be used by those less fortunate
than yourself.
Beware!
Just be wary of those
who take advantage of you in the religious space, demanding always but never
giving, selling goods and snake oil remedies not independently validated by the
authorities and whose rituals defy explanation whilst not informing of other reasonable
choices or options you should have in this amazing vibrant world we live in
today.
Source
1 comment:
You failed to go all the way, mr Akin. there is nothing like a miracle. Lets stop spreading these baseless fairy tales
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