A former National President of the Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria,
Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor, says most people who claim to be pastors or men
of God are not, as they were not called by God in the first place.
Oritsejafor
expressed displeasure over how ‘these men of God’ have now turned the
church into a business centre and living flamboyant lives, stating that
the development was the reason kidnappers now see the church as a place
to make money.
In a recent chat with the Punch, the outgoing
President of the Christian Association of Nigeria, CAN, said, “The
problem we have in the church is that a lot of these pastors are not men
of God as they were not called.
“They are mercenaries, commercially minded people. The duty of the
church is to preach morality not materialism and because Nigerians are
very gullible; they are easy victims of deceit. They fall prey to some
of these pastors or prophets of doom. The way they live gives a wrong
impression of what should be in a church of God. There should be no room
for material possessions.
“I am not saying a man of God should
not live a life of comfort but it should be a life of good comfort; that
is why kidnapping is now a common thing even in the church.
“It
is unfortunate that we are having this kind of problem because most
places of religious gathering, particularly of the Christian faith, are
seemingly reducing their faith to commercials. So many people think they
have money and most of them live a flamboyant lifestyle.
“As
such, the kidnappers mistake them for money men but there is nothing
there. The kidnappers would be kept at bay if they stopped preaching
prosperity and allowing dirty money to go into the church coffers. I
also think the church is losing its moral values. The values are
disappearing gradually.We should preach values and not materialism. I think the churches
themselves should look inwards and correct the poor impression they are
giving people outside that there is money in the church, whereas there
is none,” he stated.
On his opinion on the Kaduna State bill
against public preaching, Oritsejafor said Governor Nasir el-Rufai had
seemingly taken the wrong step.
Oristejafor said, “He should call a
meeting of all the stakeholders in that state with respect to religious
activities before rushing to the state Assembly for any bill. Be that
as it may, we have to be very careful if there is any bill intended to
wear religious colouration.
“When Sharia was introduced into this
country we were lucky to have a Christian President, Chief Olusegun
Obasanjo, who tamed it. Nigeria would have been engulfed by the
conflagration. Sharia would have been misunderstood.
“There are
already enough laws in the statue book that take care of what Governor
El-Rufai has in mind. I have no objection if he wants to curb noise
pollution in the name of religion. I quite agree if this is the basis.
But in a situation where it is meant to tackle extremism, libel,
sedition, incitement and more, there are enough laws in our statute book
for this. Doing otherwise is not good for him.
“I have tremendous
respect for him for he was the person bold enough to say that there
should be no more street begging. Yes, that was a sensible thing because
even in the Islamic countries such is not allowed,” the pastor stated.
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