Sabitlenmiş Tweet

I will be 44 this year.
For every single one of those years, Nigeria has been in a prayer meeting.
Not metaphorically. Literally.
January fasts. Mountain vigils. Stadium crusades. Begin the Month with the Lord. Revivals that stretched through the night. Shiloh programs. 7 days, 21 days, 30 days. Denominations that disagree on everything else agree on this one thing. Nigeria needs prayer. The prayer points have been the same for four decades. Poverty. Corruption. Bad leadership. Insecurity.
I was born into this. Grew up inside it. Wore white for it. Went without food for it. Sat in those grounds. Sang those songs. Believed those promises with everything I had.
I am not writing as someone who stood outside and watched.
I am writing as someone who knelt on the same floors, waited for the same breakthrough, and is now 44 years old in the same country that was being prayed for before I took my first breath.
We are told to keep praying. That prayer is the answer. That if we cry out long enough and hard enough God will turn this nation around.
And I believe that. I have always believed that.
But I am 44. And I am still waiting for the country the prayers promised.
Because I do not believe prayer is the problem.
I believe something has been done to prayer. Something subtle. Something that has slowly converted one of the most powerful forces available to a people into a reason to stay still. Spiritual energy that could have become civic pressure became a substitute for it instead. Fervour that could have filled town halls filled altars. Voices that could have demanded accountability learned to direct every frustration upward and only upward.
And the people who benefit most from a population permanently looking to heaven are the ones with both hands in the treasury.
Prayer was never meant to replace action. It was meant to resource it. To steel the nerve. To clarify the assignment. To send the prophet out of the prayer room and into the palace with something to say.
James 2 vs 17 does not say faith is insufficient. It says faith without works is dead. Not sleeping. Not resting. Not waiting for the right season.
Dead.
Nigeria does not have a prayer problem. Nigeria has a problem with what prayer has been quietly redefined to mean.
Thread 2 coming. Because the Bible we carry into these meetings has never once shown us a prophet who prayed and then sat down.
English









































