R.A.M.P.A.G.E. Outreach
Innovative tips and techniques on using media to advance the Kingdom of God.
Tuesday, November 3, 2015
Engaging Culture as Salt & Light
It is very clear to everyone that the game has changed. The Church has left the building and it's in the streets. The change we have all longed for is here. The transition of things, spiritual and physical is here. The possibilities and opportunities are boundless and only our imagination will stop us. We all agree that Church, the way we have known it up till now, has changed. It seems that God is pushing the fact that the church is not just a building but an organism that He has set up in the earth to influence it to reflect the kingdom of Heaven as against the desires of the enemy of mankind, the devil. However, I would like to submit to you that there must be some apostolic action backing all these prophetic declarations we have received. There must be some divinely instruction that we carry out to make these wonderful prophetic words a reality. The truth is that God doesn't just give us great dreams or allow us peek into the future of possibilities just to excite us and give us an adrenaline rush.
Mantles are dropping and anointings are being released in these days we find ourselves but the purpose must be made clear. These spiritual graces and platforms are for repairing the breaches and restoring the broken down walls of society. The cities must be rebuilt and the streets must be restored so that the solitary will find families to live in. The focus of my post today is to encourage us to begin to receive instructions on how we can become active players in the society we live.
Jesus called us both salt and light in Matthew 5:13-16. One of the main qualities of light is that it
illuminates. Light cannot be in a place and not be seen. It will always dispel darkness. As lights, we are meant to provide leadership to our world. We are meant to be the ones to show them what is right and what should be done. Before now most of us have been afraid to shine our lights. What do I mean? We have taken the path of political correctness.
What is political correctness? It is simply when you try not to be offensive with a truth you have to tell someone. It is when you say that Jesus is not the only way and that other people have other ways to get to heaven. The reason for being politically correct is because we don't want to look intolerant and disrespectful of other people. In the end the price you pay for political correctness is COMPROMISE. We end up being like Lot, a righteous man who gradually allowed the perverse world around him to squeeze life out of him. Ultimately Lot lost his entire family to the evil culture of Sodom.
One of the things that light does very well is dispel darkness. To dispel or repeal darkness, light must shine. What does that mean? Let me illustrate with a small story. Just this morning I heard that a petrol station close to my house was selling fuel. I hadn't even taken my bath before I quickly bounded to the place. You needed to see how many people were there. It wasn't surprising considering that for about a 3-5km distance there were no other places selling petrol. As is it a standard in Nigeria, you would meet all kinds of guys at the filling station with cars, motorcycles (okadas) and all kinds of plastic kegs to buy fuel. The unspoken rule is that we should all line up but as corruption and indiscipline has entered into our society, there were some people who were shunting and making a mess of all of us lining up. To cut a long story short, I had to confront one of the guys who wasn't willing to wait to buy less than 4 liters of petrol. He didn't flinch and I was miffed. However my action led to many of the people there, mostly men, speaking about the lack of patience most Nigerian are known for (when we are in Nigeria, that is).
Initially many of the men, even though they were angry about the whole issue, they didn't do anything. However when I began to speak out, they had some courage to fight the corruption that was brewing in this filling station. Finally, we rallied ourselves and enforced some form of order in the filling station. Imagine what would have happened if there was no light in this situation? Lawlessness and chaos would have reigned supreme.
My final submission? Be the light. Speak up against lawlessness. Don't just turn the other way and pretend as if you didn't see it. Make an attempt to speak up. God will give you the courage and wisdom to shine as lights.
Wednesday, October 28, 2015
Engaging Culture; our Christian perogative
This post is spurred by many things that have happened to me in the past 6-10 weeks; the statistic that Nigeria is top ranking in searches for gay pornography on Google, the purported show on a transgender 11 year old that DSTV wants to air in Nigeria, a guy that I know who is openly coming out as a hater of God and has transitioned into being a woman. The culmination of it all was the interview between Flo and Bisi Alimi, the first Nigerian to come out as being openly gay. The interview is in 2 parts and you can watch it here. As per the interview, I'm sure many believers would not agree with Flo's strategy (of not coming on forcefully on the guy about his homosexual status) but I think I know what Flo is trying to do-he managed to destroy that stereotype that Christians are all about condemnation and are not understanding in any way (and I daresay we should try this approach more too) but that's not the thrust of my post today.
My mind is troubled by the fact that the majority of christians are not realizing that things have changed and that then environment we are in has completely changed so we keep trying to use the same old methods/technology to produce a different result. Earlier in the year, just before the elections and the announcement of Buhari as the president of Nigeria, God spoke to me about the coming months. I posted it on Facebook. Hebrews 7:12, 18 (Amplified Bible)
For when there is a change in the priesthood, there is of necessity an alteration of the law [concerning the priesthood] as well... So a previous physical regulation and command is cancelled because of its weakness and ineffectiveness and uselessness--What does this mean? It means that once a means of achieving an outcome is no longer getting the desired results, it becomes obsolete. What am I saying? Our approach to changing our culture has been ineffective up till this moment, shouldn't we change it and take on a different approach?
I ask myself lots of questions just to be sure I know what I am talking about and so that I will know the reason why I believe certain things. It seems to me that most of us believers don't ask ourselves questions. Something is not working and we just conclude that it is a mystery beyond us and we just let it be. For example how is it that young people are modelling their marriages, careers, fashion, etc after shady characters and not after people with good values? We simply say "It is the end times. There's nothing we can do about it."
My point is that we need to review our approach to young people today because once the next generation is hooked on the wrong value system, we can be sure that the future will be full of darkness and depravity. Train up a child in the way he should go and when he is old, he will not depart from it. It works both ways!
My observation over the past few months is that believers have not developed ways to enter into the conversation of culture and engage. We have stood aloof, making comments, boycotting and complaining about how things are while not doing anything. we have become keyboard critics when we could have done something about infusing the values of the kingdom into that teenager that lives in our compound. We must take this fight on two levels; the grassroots level (one on one) and on a large multi/digital media level. Matthew 5:13-16 comes to mind right now.
- We must be salt; unseen, covert activities that systematically permeate, engage and influence culture and secondly;
- We must be light: overt, obvious action/activities that will educate and address the issues in our environment.
Tuesday, March 31, 2015
Resurrection, the Emergence of a New Nigeria
The time is 10.27PM and here I am, in my study sitting behind
my desk, writing about my dear country Nigeria. Since about 4Pm, I had been
glued to a friend’s laptop, where we were streaming the live updates of the
results of the presidential elections, over the internet. By the time I got
home around 7 PM, there was no electricity (trust PHCN or is it IBEDC they are
called now sef?), so I had to switch to my generating set, which is meant to be
my backup but at times serves as the main de main (shey you get me now?) I
quickly switched on the generating set and poised myself to follow the
unfolding drama. After several minutes of listening to the results, I heard my
gen, which had been purring on gently, suddenly sing a high pitched note. Kai!
My fuel don finish, I thought. I would have to follow the rest of the updates
on social media or on my phone’s radio. By the time you are reading this, it
would be obvious who the president of the country would be for the next 4
years. But that isn’t really my point with this article.
My point is simple. Is it coincidental that Nigeria is
choosing the president of the country the day before Palm Sunday? Is it just a
coincidence that the commemoration of the deliverance, of the human race from
the clutches of the devil, wrought through Jesus Christ death and resurrection
(Easter), coincides with the same week Nigeria steps into a new era of leadership?
I think not! God is the one who sets times and seasons. Genesis 1:14 gives us a clear picture of God’s intention of setting
celestial bodies in the sky and the various seasons. They are signs and tokens
(like signposts of appointed events or happenings already scheduled by God).
All around, Nigerians have been clamoring for a new country.
A place where things work, where the amenities and utilities available are not
just for the enjoyment of a privileged few but open to all and sundry. It is
obvious that Nigerians, home and abroad, are desirous of a nation that they can
be proud of and of which they can enjoy the good in it. I can also say, with
some specificity, that this is the season for the fulfillment of some prophetic
words spoken over this great nation. Just last year, we stepped into our
centenary, and not too long ago we marked 50 years of independence. In the
bible, the number fifty represents a jubilee; a season where freedom is given
to people indebted or enslaved.
As Nigeria receives the new president, let us know that we
are walking into a new season, a season of resurrection and life. A season
where the Emmanuel has broken the gates of brass, cut the bars of iron in
asunder and has ransomed and rescued captive Nigeria from the clutches of the
evil that has held us down the fifty-plus years of our independence.
Tuesday, February 17, 2015
Valentine's Day Bruhaha
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