Category: Sunday magazine

  • Nollywood needs to  produce more quality  films –Bimbo Manuel

    Nollywood needs to produce more quality films –Bimbo Manuel

    Veteran actor and AMVCA 2014 nominee, Bimbo Manuel speaks with GBOYEGA ALAKA on the secrets of his youthful looks, Nollywood, its new generation of players and Bimbo/Sola Connect, which he co-hosts with Sola Salako on LTV.

    SMOOTH and suave Bimbo Manuel scores a high any day in the Nigeria’s television and movies industry. His rich resume spans about three decades and includes exploits as an actor, producer, director, voice-over artist and presenter. Even at 56, Manuel already annexed a spot for himself as an industry veteran, except that there still seems to be so much ‘fight’ in him. He caught the eyes of the viewing public with his stellar performances in Checkmate and Ripples – two household television soaps of the late 1980s and early 1990s, and also Tade Ogidan’s movie, Hostages (1996), which was later serialised on television. Manuel has also featured in a good number of Nollywood movies, including The kingmaker (2002), Sitanda (2006), Tango with me (2012) and most recently, Torn, produced and directed by Moses Inwang. His performance in Torn, as a psychoanalyst also got him a nomination in the Africa Magic Viewers Choice Awards (AMVCA) Best Support Actor category for works done in 2013, underlining yet again his huge acting talent.

    Television viewers will also recognise him more as the very confident and sassy male co-anchor of the Lagos Television (LTV) Saturday morning magazine show, Bimbo/Sola Connect, who refuses to be intimidated by a somewhat ‘overbearing’ co-host, Sola Salako.

    Aside the TV talk show, Manuel, however, seems to star in fewer films than his contemporaries. Naturally, this turned out a major high point of our discussion as we took a ride with him in between some studio works on a hot afternoon in Lagos. For an actor of his repute, we simply sought to know why his appearances seem to be so few and far between.

    Manuel, however, says it is all about being more focused on issues than money and the fact that the things that we stand for have to endure and outlive us. “To appear in every film one gets invited to will seem to suggest that one is desperate for money.”

    He also says it’s a deliberate strategy “to be fresh in the consciousness of not just the directors and producers, but also the viewing public.”

    What about the secret of his youthful look? We asked. Safe for his white beard, Manuel would very easily pass for a man in his early 40s. But Manuel says it’s all about mindset and approach to life. “I’m an optimist. I also believe very firmly that age is in the mind. You’re as old as you think you are.”

    He also does not think about age, when relating with people, whether young or old.

    Manuel also has some very strong views about Nigeria’s film industry, Nollywood. First he quells the opinion in a certain interview that seems to portray him as an incurable optimist of the industry, saying “I may have been misquoted.”

    “Although I do not do a lot of press, people who know me, know that I hold these views, especially about the things we’re not doing right or that we’re not doing at all. It may not have made me very popular amongst the Nollywood politicians, but I know that some of them also view me with respect because they know that whatever I say is not borne out of envy for anyone.”

    Having said that, Manuel yet again expresses some optimism about the industry. He is a bit unclear about this optimism, saying it may not be limited to the film industry alone. “It is inclusive of general entertainment, broadcast and all that. And that optimism is born out of what we see in the industry, where young people who are proving to us that indeed some of those things that we were afraid to attempt, do or say, can indeed be done. “

    These young people, he says, are in the vanguard of the growth and regeneration of the industry and are the ones really making the films and creating the shows that are going to the cinemas and making waves across Africa and the world. “They’re the ones repositioning the entertainment and movies industry of Nigeria on the global map and showing that Nigeria can indeed compete fairly on the global stage. So when they talk about Nigeria in the context of such projects, it is these people they are referring to. The likes of Kunle Afolayan, OC Ukeje, Lala Akindoju, Uti; truly young people, who’re very vibrant and are showing vision. They get trained in modern art, which for me is very key.”

    He, however, expresses doubts as to whether these new people truly desire to be addressed as Nollywood, having heard expressions like New Nollywood in some circles.

    We also took him up on the tendency of Nigeria to play second fiddle at major African movies awards. The recent Africa Magic Viewers Choice Awards (AMVCA), where the major awards were again carted away by countries like Kenya and Ghana, leaving Nigeria to again settle for individual awards is another case in point.

    “It is an extension of what we’ve been saying,” he began. “The fact that Nigerian films even get nominated for these awards is a positive statement, because there was a time, when we were never even considered for nomination – because of the kind of films we were making.”

    The fact that we’re now getting nominations therefore shows that there is more professionalism and the standards have indeed gone up. But again, he insists that the industry needs to generally grow and dedicate more energy to making quality films, as against just making huge volumes of films for the sake of it.

    As for those countries that seem to leave Nigeria eating dust, Bimbo Manuel says he will not join in the discussion that seems to suggest some kind of conspiracy. “If they win so regularly, it just shows that they are better in that which they do. We won individual awards, but you will also notice that those awards were generally in the areas where votes were counted by the public. The fact that we have the population on our side means that we will win anywhere and any day over anyone on the continent, when it is public vote-related.”

    He also does not think that Nigeria’s limitation is solely about budget. In his opinion, “a producer could carry a hundred million dollars into a film and still come to nothing if he does not deploy all the production values correctly. Conversely, a producer could have a lot of money and yet decide on a small budget project, know what he wants, insist on what he wants by deploying the proper values, and come out a winner.” Therefore, money may count, but he thinks that attitude as a major factor has to change.

    The fact that Nigerian films still struggle to reenact convincing fire and accident scenes also show that we have not mastered stunts, which Manuel says is a key ingredient in film-making. “It means that we have not quite mastered the art and techniques of cinematography. And if these form a part of the judgment of what a good film is, it means we failed. That’s not money; that is technique. That is education.”

    Away from Nollywood, Bimbo Manuel has also transited overtime from a radio presenter in the old Ogun State Broadcasting Corporation, to become an all-rounder with commendable skills in voice-over, acting, TV and movie production/ directing, TV presenting and writing. Would this be a case of natural endowment or deliberate skills acquisition? We inquired.

    “It was not anything deliberate. I started out as a radio presenter; and because of that, I learnt to do voice-overs. I trained as a director in school remember, I read Theatre Arts. Acting was therefore a part of my classes. But to produce, I learnt; to write, I learnt. And that was because I didn’t want to be playing in every acting job I was offered, because as an actor you could burn out very easily.” He explained.

    So he learnt the different skills just so he could diversify, and earn money doing other things aside acting. He concedes though that appearing in fewer films has its downsides, as an artist could easily get out of the consciousness of his fans. “But again, it’s a choice. You could choose to be popular or to be respected. I chose to be a respected actor.”

     

    On his AMVCA nomination

    “I’d like to establish that I was glad to be nominated, although it was not my intention to play for an award nomination. To win would definitely have been a fantastic addition to my chest of awards, but I’ll confess here that I didn’t bother to get anyone to vote for me because it was satisfying enough that fellow professionals deemed the work I did good enough to stand amongst that cast of excellent actors. I’d also said to myself that any of the other guys on that list who won, would be deserving of it. You have Chris Atto on the list; and of course Desmond Eliot, who eventually won.

     

    On Bimbo/Sola Connect

    The Bimbo/Sola Connect show is one show that is very dear to him, especially because he never had enough opportunity to do consistent broadcasting, since leaving OGBC. He was therefore glad when the opportunity came, courtesy of Lekan Ogunbanwo, the then permanent secretary of Lagos Television, who was looking to rejuvenate the once popular station. It also necessitated his first meeting with the co-anchor, Sola Salako.

    “Even the name, Bimbo/Sola Connect was Ogunbanwo’s creation, as it was he who noticed how quickly they both gelled during that first meeting and came up with it.

    He complements Salako the harmony on the show, saying “She is a more vocal and more communicative person. “Even the logo, which has our backs to each other, is deliberately conceived to emphasise the conflicts in our characters.” Manuel concluded

  • What to wear with  a cocktail dress

    What to wear with a cocktail dress

    THE most popular cocktail dress of all is a little black dress, but it also comes in all shapes, sizes and length. When selecting a cocktail dress, you should consider the current trend, your wardrobe and your height. Your height is important because depending on trends, height of a cocktail dress varies. Some are knee-length, while others end around two inches above the ankle also known tea length cocktail dress. Ankle length are called ballerina length. This is also associated with evening gowns and the difference is hard to tell. Materials used for cocktail dresses vary and chiffon. It is totally your decision which you prefer.

    You shouldn’t wear a sequined gown if you are going casual; it is for more formal occasions, such as a wedding or anniversary party.

    The shoes that you select can also set up a cocktail dress, if you are sporting a shorter length, the shoes become an important focal point, and hence, you should wear nice shoes.

    When choosing the color of your cocktail dress, you should keep in mind that during this season, floral prints, light pink, sky blue, pale green and yellow, as well as other pastels look good during this time.

    For a winter get-together, gray, crimson, black, dark brown and dark blue cocktail dresses are quite flattering.

    Do not try to fit into a dress that is cut too low or is too tight; the results could be disastrous.

  • Nicole Chikwe  prepares for  second baby

    Nicole Chikwe prepares for second baby

    NICOLE Chukwueke, ex model and wife of rap sensation, Naeto C, is preparing for the birth of her second child. The daughter of Chief Chukwueke, owner of auto company -Germaine Auto Centre, had her first child, a baby boy in March 2013.

    Naeto C, the son of the former Minister of Aviation, Kema Chikwe, and Nicole tied the knot in July 2012. The couple were secondary school sweethearts at the Atlantic Hall, Epe, Lagos. The rapper’s wedding was undoubtedly one of the most expensive weddings ever in the Nigerian music industry.

  • Priscilla Soyemi cools off in Abuja

    Priscilla Soyemi cools off in Abuja

    BORN to a medical doctor father and an Irish mother, Priscilla loves the good life and has friends across the social divide among whom are Daisy Danjuma, Angela Adebayo, Ranti Johnson, Lanre Ojora, Joko Olunloyo, Nike Makinde, Nene Lawal and others. To say she is a jolly good fellow is like stating the obvious. A mother of two beautiful girls in her late 50s and nothing about her depicts that she would soon be 60. The mixed race ex-public servant who used to be married to Chief Dele Fajemirokun was a bubbly socialite until she relocated to Abuja.

  • ‘Govt unwilling to resolve ASUP’s strike’

    ‘Govt unwilling to resolve ASUP’s strike’

    Chibuzor Asomugha, is the President of the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP). He explains in this interview with Gbenga Omokhunu the recent developments on the ten-month strike and how ‘the government has not been serious about resolving the issues.’

    TEN months down the line, gates of Nigerian Polytechnics are still under lock and keys, what is the latest development?

    I think this question would be better answered by the Federal Government and its agents. As far as ASUP is concerned, we have done all that we think we should do as compromise, to bring this imbroglio to an end; but what we have is a government that has failed serially on its own part of the bargain. The strike began on April 29, 2013, and after several interventions especially by the Senate committee on education, we suspended it on July 7 on the understanding that the government was going to resolve four of the issues it also chose within two weeks. But three months into the suspension, the government hadn’t done anything, which was why we resumed the strike on October 4, 2013. Since then, I will say the government’s attitude has been one of snobbery, insensitivity, intimidation, and total disdain for the sector, the union and the students and their parents. Recently something happened that suggested to us that the officers who are supposed to take up this matter with the president have not been doing anything. We petitioned the Nigerian Labour Congress to write the president to intervene in the matter and last week, President directed the minister of Labour to intervene in the matter with a view to bringing it to a logical conclusion. We also had a meeting with the NLC, the minister of Labour and our colleagues from the colleges of education two weeks ago and reached further compromise, just so that this strike can be resolved. The education supervisory minister, Nyesom Wike also promised to take our proposal to the presidency for assent, and when assent is given, that will be a platform for signing an MOU that will definitely lead to resolution of this strike. To show how seriously we want the strike to end, we also gave the government a one-week timeline, at the end of which we hoped to have got the assent from the president. But again, the one week has passed and the government has not called us. We just hope that this initiative will not end like the ones in the past. And now the government has unleashed the ‘no work no pay’ chastisement on our members, we are saying it is a very clueless move because it will not help the situation but rather aggravate it. We also learnt that the president met with the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), the minister and permanent secretary of education on the same matter over a week ago, but we haven’t got any feedbacks from anybody. And that is part of what we have been complaining about; why keep us in the dark? We ordinarily should not be left out of that meeting. You would recall that when ASUU was on strike, they were involved in the negotiation even with the president.

    Do you doubt government’s sincerity in resolving the strike?

    The body language of the government does not indicate any measure of sincerity. In the first place, this strike was not necessary; and to have allowed it to drag for ten months is really lamentable. It is symptomatic of the general atmosphere of dysfunction and systemic rupture in virtually all sectors in the country. Ten months strike, with students sitting at home and everyone keeping quiet? Really strange.

    The supervisory minister of education has been giving the impression that enough has been done by the government and that the union is just not shifting ground.

    We disagree with the minister and we do not agree at all on the way he has carried on concerning since this strike begun. He has worked at cross purposes with the union, and we actually think that things would have been different if somebody who had a different disposition had been in charge. Rather than look at the situation holistically, he has simply opted to blackmail the union by making it look like we are simply asking for money. What we are asking for is the revamping of the system, the institutional framework, deepening the capacity of our students, making the polytechnic a preferable option for higher education. The minister has tried to reduce all these to mere asking for salary arrears that the government has owed the lecturers since 2009, as if there is anything to be ashamed of even in that. Every attempt to get him to even set up a technical committee headed by the permanent secretary to discuss the other issues has been rebuffed. Rather than think of bringing it to an end, he is reducing it to an ego fight, the repercussion of which will only be on the students. This is not our intention.

    Has government commenced the ‘no-work -no pay order’?

    Yes, it was implemented on March 21st 2014 and this is interesting because the minister had given a March date to settle the arrears of the lecturers. It cast a serious doubt on the sincerity of the government. There is nothing on ground to even indicate that the government wants to pay and I’m challenging them to make public any evidence that they even started the process. All we heard was that the ministry wrote to the presidency. But we also gathered that the president is just beginning to get acquainted with the matter. Besides, we don’t know what the ministry is presenting to the president. It is difficult to have any confidence in the minister because he hasn’t done anything to earn our confidence in that regard.

    What are basic things to be done to end this lingering strike?

    Government should tackle the four issues it already said it will address. Government has already met one of them, which is the needs assessment, though this is supposed to have been taken care of since February. Government has also appointed the governing council of six polytechnics; so we could say that one and half of the four demands have been met. The white paper on the needs assessment was said to have been ready since nine months, but we are yet to see it. Also full funding of the CONTIS 15 migration, that is the salary scale that was approved for the lecturers since 2009 has not been implemented; the implication is that since 2009, the polytechnic staff have been under-paid what is statutorily due to them. And we are saying pay us. Government said it would address these four issues in two weeks, but it’s been four months since then. We are willing to compromise more if only the government is sincere in resolving these issues. And these are issues that are time bound. We are talking about salary here which is about N20.4b and that of colleges of education, which is about N22b. Do not forget that federal government pulled N40b to ASUU as allowances; but ours is salaries, yet government is finding it hard to comply. The minister even said government will pay us in installment and we accepted, yet we have not received a kobo.

    Is the union demanding for a separate body like National Universities Commission (NUC) for the polytechnics?

    Yes, we are asking government to create a body solely for the polytechnics. Universities have NUC and colleges of education have NCCE. Do you know that even nomadic education has a board? Primary and secondary has a board; so why not the polytechnics? Government has instead merged us with the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE), a body responsible for all manner of certification. And we’re saying this is doesn’t make sense.

  • Student leaders speak

    Student leaders speak

    OLAOLO Folarin, President, Federal Polytechnic Ilaro Students’ Union

    On the strike and the effects

    Our lecturers at the Federal Polytechnic Ilaro backed out of the strike some months ago, but joined again about two months ago. The funny thing is that they joined two weeks to our exams, which is a bit frustrating because it means we have to continue studying, as exams might take place immediately the strike is called off. It has affected our calendar, such that most of those in HND 2 like myself don’t know when they’ll graduate.

    On the lecturers’ demands.

    They are fighting over the disparity between the university and the polytechnic and we are in full support of it. Come to think of it, we spend five years in the polytechnic, while they spend only four years, except maybe for a few courses, and then they are rated higher. On what basis? In most organizations now, polytechnic graduates are only allowed to go as far as supervisor level while university graduates can become managers. That as far as we are concerned is not fair, especially because we even go through more practical learning experience and are always ready to go when employed. Besides, if they were our parents, we would not ignore them because they are fighting for posterity and stopping their salaries is not the right approach.

     

    Salvador Ganiyu Babajide, President, Yaba College of Technology Students’ Union

    On the attending frustration

    To say the strike has been frustrating is to put it mildly. If there is a harder word, I recommend you go for it. The aftermath of the strike has been so demoralizing because it is automatically elongating our stay in school. As an HND II Accountancy student, I should ordinarily be rounding off my first semester in readiness for my final semester, but that is not the case now. Everything is uncertain and this represents the feeling of the entire students’ populace. Everyone’s hope is left hanging in the balance. In fact, I wouldn’t be surprised if I see some of our female colleagues coming back with protruding tummies. Everyone has been left with too much free time. Even the guys have been engaging in all sorts of nefarious activities including gambling, which the government has now legalised in the name of football betting joints springing up everywhere. Some of us have even secured jobs and are now saying they don’t care when the strike is called off, because they are making money. To me this is dangerous for our education because education is supposed to be a continuum. If this break in learning process continues, then it wouldn’t be long before Nigerian students become the half-baked students we don’t want to become.

     

    Appeal to the government

    Government shouldn’t be insensitive to the yearnings of the polytechnic sector. If they say that education is the bedrock of this country, and they are handling it with such levity, why then will there not be brain drain? Whether we’re talking of the petroleum sector, the political sector or any other sector at that, education is the engine room and the polytechnics are the technological backup; hence they have no justification for neglecting it. If we lose out in technology in this modern day, then all other sectors will crumble. The insurgency in the country is as a result of a lot of things, and the systematic neglect of education is part of it.

     

    As for the apathy

    I think we need to articulate the fact that the polytechnic has been systematically reduced to a school for children of peasants and petty traders. You will hardly see the child of a middle-class Nigerian or elite in the polytechnic and that is why there is this total quiet about the polytechnics situation. If they truly want a peaceful and prosperous future for this country, then they should rise up and fight this polytechnic neglect and subjugation together.

     

    Adaranijo Sodiq Ajibade, General Secretary, Lagos State Polytechnic Students’ Union

    Let me also use this opportunity to express y disappointment with the Nigerian media, which has seemingly neglected ASUP and the polytechnic students. We all know how much hype and noise the media made during the ASUU strike. We saw how they amplified their every move. Why not extend the same gesture to the polytechnics.

     

    Owolabi Isaiah, Director of Public Relations, Yaba College of Technology Students’ Union

    Personally, it’s looking to me as I’m just wasting my time, which unfortunately is the fault of my government. I was actually in the middle of some plumbing job, when I got a call to come for this interview. For somebody who already acquired some technical skill before coming to school, I have been able to utilise the strike positively. But what happens to those who do not have that advantage? Strike is not a good thing for us students, because it elongates our learning calendar indefinitely.

    Does he now have doubts about coming to the polytechnic?

    No. the polytechnic is what I’ve always clamoured for because I like to do practical things. While not trying to criticise the university system, I think the whites that introduced the polytechnic before the university knew what they were doing. It is more to the efforts of the polytechnics that countries like China, Japan, Germany and co are now giants in technological productions. Here we consume all things and produce nothing; and that is why the economy is not growing. Even the government is busy neglecting the establishment that can drive us to that level.

    The government should stop the neglect; besides they have the resources. In fact, if you asked me, I’d say that the politicians in government want us to be idle and available, so that they can be able to use us for their political campaigns.

  • Floral beauties

    Floral beauties

    FLORAL dresses are colourful this season and will never disappear from the spotlight. It makes every woman look gorgeous and most importantly, a celebrated femininity is a plus. The floral dress also adds personality to your look. It is appropriate for the workplace and casual occasions. One thing to always bear in mind when wearing a floral dress is to choose the right accessories.

    How to rock it

    •When wearing a floral dress, never overdo it.

     

    •Stick to only one floral pattern and keep the rest of the outfit simple.

     

    •Don’t let the floral dress compete with other busy patterns

     

    •Floral bottoms are very fashionable

     

    •Smaller jewelry are better than the chunky ones when rocking the floral dress.

     

    •Flat sandals, heels. They go well with the floral dress.

  • Favour’s top 10

    Favour’s top 10

    Nollywood actress, Favour Oma, reveals her top favourites to Kehinde Oluleye

    Favourite shoes designer

    Christian Louboutin

     

    Favourite bag designer

    Christian Dior and Louis Vuitton

     

    Favourite wrist watch designer

    Tag Heuer

     

    Favourite earrings

    Chandeliers

     

    Favourite car

    Porsche

     

    Favourite perfume

    Jo Malone London

     

    Favourite fashion designer

    Alexander Mcqueen and Rikaoto

     

    Favourite drink

    Courvoisier x.o

     

    Favourite underwear

    Victoria Secrets

     

    Favorite sunglasses

    Gucci, Chanel, Emporio Armani

  • ‘I don’t envy any minister  or feel pressure at all’

    ‘I don’t envy any minister or feel pressure at all’

    The General Overseer of The Stone Church Ibadan, Pastor Alex Adegboye, spoke with Sunday Oguntola on recent strides in the church as well as challenges in the ministry. Excerpts:

    One sees so many infrastructural developments coming to the church’s environment. It seems the architect in you is finally paying off for the church?

    Maybe but it is always there. Our new auditorium, The Word Alive International Convention centre, was commissioned last year to commemorate our 20th anniversary. I wanted us to have a structure that would the hub of our activities. We have come of age in 20 years and we needed to have some infrastructure in place.

    We also developed our youth church called the Ark because we have so many young people. The Lord said we should reach out to senior teens from 19-22 in Mokola where we are based. We gave them a pastor. We also have the junior church for children; so, we have three churches in one in the last one and half years. We also have the satellite church where we interpret in Yoruba and English.

    How were you able to secure the property for such expansion in the heart of Ibadan?

    I think it is just God. We came here in 1995 and so many people said we would have to relocate because of space constraints and I was looking forward to that. Then, about three years ago, it occurred to me that we should solve our parking problems. We have been parking on the main roads and everywhere on Sundays. Once or twice, they have stolen our cars. During conventions, we used to utilise a space opposite us and I thought why don’t we have a long lease? We got it and said we wanted to buy off. The women said her father asked none of them to sell. So, she gave us a long lease for 15 years. Further down, where the convention centre is, was owned by Chief Bisi Rodipe. He was ready to sell and asked for some millions in six months. Somehow, God saw us through that outright sale.

    So, that is how we were able to take over the whole place and stretch. God has just been grateful to us. I was planning to move out because we constituted a nuisance here. We were in Bodija when we started but ran into troubles because of parking space. The elites there gave us hell and we moved to Mokola. I thought we would move out but realised we don’t have to go after all.

    Why are you and most of your pastors not on full time?

    I think it has to do with how I developed in ministry. I was a deacon in a Baptist church and was teaching Bible Study in the Full Gospel Businessmen’s Fellowship. We filled up the banquet hall of the Premier Hotel in those days and God blessed the work. That went on for three years. So, I didn’t start out thinking that I had to be a full time pastor to be effective. It was easy for me to do the work because I wasn’t looking for the offering to survive.

    So, when I started the church, I carried the same mentality there. In Full Gospel Fellowship, we were using our money to fund the operations and it was effective. Most of the preachers in Ibadan today came through the fellowship. When I found out that I didn’t have to resign to work for God, I was thrilled. When God spoke to me about starting the church, I didn’t think he meant I should stop working. I knew I could not combine the two effectively though. What I used to do in those days, for the first five years, was to resume 8am in the office in Dugbe and come over to the church office from 12noon. But after five years, I could not cope because practice involves so many meetings and travels.

    Right now, my practice runs without me running it on daily basis. When I get projects, I get people to do them under my name while I only supervise. I attend some very, very important meetings. So, many of the pastors that came came in like that. They felt comfortable and have been working while still pastoring.

    Many feel if you were in Lagos, you would have built a richer, larger and more popular church. Does this bother you?

    Maybe but I am never bothered by those permutations. I came into ministry reluctantly. So, I don’t compare myself or envy anybody. I am very, very comfortable with myself and confident in my person.

    Are you then insulated from the performance pressure that most ministers face?

    Trust me, I am. I don’t feel any pressure to perform anything at all my brother. I don’t feel intimidated or envious of any minister. I feel we are all serving God and running a different race. I cannot be like them and they cannot be like me.

    The day those robbers came to your church. You could have hidden your identity when they were asking for the general overseer. Why did you give up yourself at gun point?

    It was a Sunday and a guy walked up to me after the service. And that is one of my problems; I can be too accessible. He asked to see me and I said he should come later that evening when I would be meeting with some pastors and departmental heads. Looking back, I feel he was one of them. They would still have fished me out and it could have been messier. So, there was no point hiding because they told us to face down.

    Then, they just shot at you…

    No, they took me to our account department, which was then at the basement. They asked me to open the safe, which was there and I said I didn’t have the keys. They said who kept the keys and I said it was the accountant, who was then at home. I mean, it was around 6pm. I said the accountant was home and the guy just got angry and shot at me.

    What ran through your mind after he fired the shot?

    I didn’t feel anything for some moments. I just looked down and saw blood, which convinced me I had been shot. I remember when we were in the university and one Akintunde Ojo was shot in the leg. He bled to death before they could rescue him to Igbobi. So, I felt I was going to die and just sat down. That went on for about forty-five minutes and it started raining heavily. There was so much noise and my people didn’t know what had become of me; they were very afraid. When I realised, I hadn’t died, I crawled to the phone box and called them to come over. That was the last thing I remember. When they got to the hospital, I was paper white.

    Did that incident shake your faith in God?

    No, not in God but it shook my faith in ministry. I doubted if God really called me. I thought if he did, why did that happen? I thought can God call a man and will still face crisis? I had to come around that until sometimes later.

    But what shook me was the crisis later because the wound did not heal until two years. I was in UCH for three months during which I had two operations. I was discharged to go home but the wound had swelled. I was infected by bacteria that I took up in the hospital. I was in a side room and there was no water. The head of the orthopedic department was a member of my church. My brother is a professor in the hospital, so I had the best that UCH could offer then. That best was the infection I took away. I was a big patient and that is why I wonder what would have happened to somebody who knew nobody. It was that wound that took me to England for two years.

    You have seen many messy things in the ministry in the last 21 years. Do some of these things sometimes want you to throw up?

    No, rather I wonder how God copes with all that he knows about his ministers. Knowing those things humbles me the more. My mentor when I was in NYSC, Pa S.G Elton, told us he used to agonise over how some Nigerian ministers lived despite being used of God. One day, he went to God in prayers to complain and God told him: “are they your servants? What is your business?’ Since then, he learnt to keep silent.

    What is the vision behind Higher Dimension, which is the theme for your convention?

    We believe that this ministry has taken roots after over 21 years. So, we want to grow within and without. We want to bear fruits upwards and take roots downwards. We are moving on to the next level in reaching more souls and imparting righteousness.

  • Unveiling the healing mystery in the communion!

    Today is Easter Sunday, a day when Christians celebrate the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. As you celebrate, don’t forget that Christ is the reason for the season. I Wish You A Glorious And Happy Easter!

    For us to enjoy the expertise of any physician, we must understand his prescriptions. Jesus’ prescription is the medium through which He demonstrates His expertise. God said, ‘I will bring you Health and Cure’ this month, but you need a revelation of His prescription to partake of it. As the Bible says, My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge (Hosea 4:6).

    Our Lord Jesus Christ once said, “Verily, verily, I say unto you, Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink his blood, ye have no life in you. Whoso eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood, hath eternal life…(John 6:53-56).

    The greatest enemy of the believer is not the devil, but spiritual ignorance, which has its cure in spiritual revelation. Every provision in scriptures is only accessible by revelation. There is a Balm in Gilead and the Great Physician is available, but until we have a revelation of this, our affliction continues (Matthew 12:15).

    What Is His Prescription?

    The Holy Communion is one of the Great Prescriptions of the Great Physician for our total health and dignity. It is a mystery of life transplant as unveiled by the Great Physician Himself in John chapter 6 verses 48-58.

    Jesus is the Bread of Life. It is an anti-death Bread. When we partake of it, whatever is dying or dead in us is completely restored. It is a ‘global Bread,’ with global impact; it works anywhere on earth (John 6:52). When we partake of the Communion in faith, we are empowered to live like Jesus¯sickness-free, sin-free and mentally sound like Him (John 6:57; Galatians 2:20).

    What Is In The Communion That Heals?: The Communion consists of the Flesh and Blood of Jesus (1 Corinthians 11:23-30). First, what is in the Flesh?

    •The Rod of God: Jesus is not only the Son of God; He is also the Rod of God (Isaiah 11:1). Jesus is the Rod that came out of the stem of Jesse with the seven Spirits of God upon Him (Revelation 4:5; 5:6). In Exodus 7:10-14, Moses took the Rod of God and went to Egypt. When the Rod was cast down, it became a serpent and swallowed up the rods of the sorcerers and magicians of Egypt.

    So, inside the Flesh is the Rod. When we take it in, it swallows the rods of the magicians (sickness and affliction). Therefore, whenever you take the Communion, imagine yourself taking the Rod, that is, Jesus. As you take it, not one serpent of the magicians, wise men or sorcerers in your body will escape its power.

    •It is a Miracle Meal that neutralizes the poison in your Body: When eaten, every defiled part of our body is restored (2 Kings 4:40-41). The Flesh of Jesus is the Miracle Meal that goes into our ‘biological pot’ (stomach) with its unlimited power and neutralizes every poison there.

    Secondly, What Is In The Blood?

    •The Life of the Flesh: Every disease is traced to the blood, because the life of the flesh is in the blood (Leviticus 17:11).

    When we partake of the Blood of Jesus, there is a spiritual blood transfusion that ejects our defiled blood in exchange for His undefiled and incorruptible Blood. Therefore, whatever cannot be traced to His Blood disappears from our body.

    •The Conquering Power of God: When we partake of the Blood of Jesus, every evil spirit waging war against our health is crushed (Revelation 12:11). So, the Blood of Jesus gives us victory and restores our health in a double fashion (Zechariah 9:11-12). The Communion is God’s method for dealing with every sickness of the spirit, soul and body.

    Friend, the power to benefit from the communion, is the preserve of those saved. You get saved by confessing your sins and accepting Jesus as your Saviour and Lord. If you are set for this new birth experience, please say this prayer: “Lord Jesus, I come to You today. I am a sinner. Forgive me of my sins. Today, I accept You as my Lord and Saviour. Thank You, Jesus for saving me! Now I know I am born again!”

    Every exploit in life is a product of knowledge. For further reading, you can get my books: Keys To Divine Health and The Healing Balm and Satan Get Lost!

    I invite you to come and fellowship with us at the Faith Tabernacle, Canaan Land, Ota, the covenant home of Winners. We have four services on Sundays, holding at 6:00 a.m., 7:35 a.m., 9:10 a.m. and 10.45 a.m. respectively.

    I know this teaching has blessed you. Write and share your testimony with me through: Faith Tabernacle, Canaan Land, Ota, P.M.B. 21688, Ikeja, Lagos, Nigeria; or call 7747546-8; or E-mail: feedback@lfcww.org