Category: Worship

  • C&S spiritual head urges unity as church marks centenary in Lagos

    C&S spiritual head urges unity as church marks centenary in Lagos

    The Spiritual Head of the Cherubim and Seraphim (C&S) Church Organisation, His Most Eminence, Baba Aladura (Dr.) David Bob-Manuel (Moses Orimolade IX), has called for unity within the church and across the larger body of Christ as the church celebrated its centenary anniversary in Lagos.

    Speaking at the grand event held at the Tafawa Balewa Square, Lagos, Baba Aladura explained that the anniversary theme, “Centenary Without Boundaries,” was chosen to promote reconciliation among members and foster stronger harmony with other Christian denominations.

    “We are celebrating Cherubim and Seraphim without boundaries. Even those who broke away will be received back whenever they are ready to return. Our doors remain open, and that is why the praise is massive today,” he said.

    Founded in 1925 by St. Moses Orimolade Tunolase, the C&S has grown into a global Christian movement with branches across Africa, Europe, and North America. 

    The centenary was marked simultaneously across these branches, with the headquarters in Lagos hosting the main service that drew thousands of worshippers and dignitaries.

    Osun State Governor, Ademola Jackson Adeleke, who is also a member of the church, attended the celebration and described the event as a testament to God’s faithfulness.

    “Our church is spread across the globe and very much united in faith and worship. What God ordains cannot go down — the church is marching on in unity of faith,” he said.

    The Lagos State Chairman of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Bishop Steven Adegbite, praised the C&S for promoting grassroots evangelism and maintaining cordial ties with other denominations.

    “For any organisation to reach 100 years is not a joke. The church brought Christianity to the grassroots and made worship relevant to Africans. Its unity and resilience are commendable,” he said.

    The centenary, which began on August 10 with activities such as tree planting in Ikare, the founder’s hometown, seminars, praise nights, and symbolic balloon releases, climaxed in Lagos with a combined 100-man choir, a thanksgiving service, and parades.

    Also at the event was Afro-juju legend Sir Shina Peters, who described the C&S as central to his life and music.

    “The church is my everything. In all my songs, C&S hymns form part of the lyrics. It has shaped who I am today,” he said.

    Despite a heavy downpour earlier in the day, worshippers thronged the venue, seeing the rain as a blessing. 

    The church leadership stressed that as the C&S enters its second century, its mission remains to save souls, reform worship, and foster unity in Christendom.

  • Holy Star of Christ El-Bethel marks 40 years with cathedral dedication

    Holy Star of Christ El-Bethel marks 40 years with cathedral dedication

    The Holy Star of Christ C&S Church, El-Bethel, Ikotun, Lagos, will on Sunday, September 21, celebrate its 40th anniversary and the dedication of its new cathedral, a milestone described by leaders as a testament to God’s faithfulness and the perseverance of the congregation.

    Speaking ahead of the celebration, Special Apostolic Mother S. Ogunfowokan, chairperson of the anniversary committee, said the church’s journey has been marked by defining moments.

    “One of our biggest milestones was putting up a new auditorium after realizing that the former place of worship could no longer accommodate us. We also witnessed the ordination of dedicated leaders who have nurtured our growth. Outreach missions, youth fellowships, and women’s ministries have also shaped who we are today,” she said.

    She added that the anniversary carries deep significance for members and the wider community.

    “It is a celebration of God’s faithfulness and our perseverance. For members, it’s a time to renew our commitment to serve God. For the community, it shows the church remains a steadfast presence—offering hope, prayer, and service in an ever-changing world.”

    Activities lined up for the celebration include revival services, a grand thanksgiving and cathedral dedication, community outreach programmes, and a concert of praise.

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    The General Overseer of the church, His Grace Baba Aladura O. O. Fatungase (JP), reflected on the congregation’s journey from its humble beginnings in 1985.

    “We started small, but strong with 67 members at our first ever service. Over the years, our congregation has grown in faith, worship, and service. Despite challenges, our spiritual maturity has increased, and now we joyfully worship across generations, carrying forward a legacy of resilience and hope.”

    On the role of the church in the wider society, he noted, “The church has been a place of healing, guidance, and restoration. It has nurtured leaders, supported families, and contributed through charitable works, counseling, and prayer. Transformation through Christ impacts not only lives but also the whole community.”

    The 40th anniversary thanksgiving service and cathedral dedication, themed ‘Reaching Our Canaanland,’ will hold at the church’s national headquarters, 2/4 El-Bethel Church Way, Ikotun, Lagos.

  • Churches now refuge for the poor — Akinadewo

    Churches now refuge for the poor — Akinadewo

    The church has become more than a place of worship — it is now a lifeline for many citizens. From providing food, shelter, and school fees, to offering spiritual and emotional support, churches are increasingly stepping in where government structures falter. Reverend Dr. James Akinadewo, General Secretary, Motailatu Church of God and a United Nation ambassador in an interview with ADEOLA OGUNLADE, speaks on his divine calling, decades of evangelism, his ministry’s impact in taking thousands of youths off the streets, and why he believes the church remains Nigeria’s strongest refuge for the poor and the oppressed.

    F you were to describe Dr. Akinadewo, what would you say?

    I am Reverend Dr. James Akinadewo, an ordained bishop, a missionary, and an evangelist to the nations. My mandate is to preach the gospel of Jesus Christ—repentance, salvation, and purpose—helping people discover who they are in Christ. God has used me to bring youths into the limelight, to make them realize their divine potentials, and to bless humanity in diverse ways.

     In recognition of this, the United Nations honoured me in 2019 as a UN Ambassador for my contributions to humanity. I count it all as God’s grace, because my duty is simple: to keep doing the work, bringing those in darkness into God’s marvelous light and reminding the world that Christ died for all.

    What inspired you to go into ministry?

    My calling is a divine mandate. God called me as a prophet to the nations, and I have always known it. As a young man, while active in church, I heard God’s voice clearly about my assignment. Even my father would remind me that there was a divine call upon my life.

    Initially, I tried to dodge it. I pursued other interests because I thought I could still serve God and humanity in different ways. But there came a point when God compelled me. He said, “Souls are perishing. You must rise and save them.” At that moment, I had no choice. This work is not about family legacy or religion—it is a global divine assignment to save souls and deliver people from oppression.

    At what point did you decide to go into full-time ministry?

    That was in the 1990s. Although I had been involved in church activities and evangelism for years, God made it clear to me that the time had come to take up the mandate fully. My father also insisted, “You have no choice but to do God’s work.” I began as a full-time evangelist, preaching in the streets, markets, villages, and cities. Over time, God instructed me to establish a church base where people could be taught, trained, and discipled. Yet, evangelism remains the heartbeat of my ministry-we still go out daily, weekly, and monthly, reaching out to souls in different communities and nations.

    What challenges have you faced as a church leader, and how have you managed them?

    The biggest challenge is leading people. Human beings are the most difficult to lead. Everyone has different ideas, weaknesses, and personalities. But with divine wisdom and the guidance of the Holy Spirit, it is possible. I see ministry as a training ground. We take people as they are and, through teaching, prayer, and example, help them grow into who God wants them to be. Leadership requires patience, learning, and imparting wisdom daily. Once people see you live by example they follow. By God’s grace, we have been able to turn challenges into testimonies.

    It was reported that you have taken over 20,000 youths off the streets. How did that happen?

    Yes, by the grace of God. Our ministry focuses heavily on street evangelism. We go to the very places many avoid—markets, schools, ghettos, and drug dens. We meet addicts, street boys, and people society has written off. We don’t just preach to them; we show them love. We feed them, clothe them, and minister deliverance to those under bondage. Many of them encounter the power of the Holy Spirit, realize there is hope, and surrender to Christ.

    From there, we empower them. Those who wish to return to school, we sponsor. Those who want to learn trades, we set them up. We no longer call them ‘area boys’ or ‘drug addicts’—we call them Jesus Boys. And by God’s grace, many of them have gone ahead to help others out of similar lifestyles.

    How do you follow up on these youths to ensure they stay transformed?

    Before we send them out, they are thoroughly discipled and filled with the Holy Spirit. Some are in Nigeria, while others are abroad. We have missionaries, crusade teams, and follow-up ministers who track their progress. Many of them are active in church, growing in grace, and serving God. We also provide leadership and personal development training, because I believe everyone has leadership potential. Once people discover who they are in Christ, they rise above their old life. We are seeing great results, and we give God all the glory.

    How do you see the role of the church in addressing Nigeria’s moral, social, and economic challenges?

    The Bible says the government is on our shoulders. The church must pray, shine its light, and also act. Today, the church has become a refugee camp because people troop in daily for help — food, school fees, clothing, prayer, and encouragement.

    During COVID-19, without any government support, churches fed thousands. Even now, with the high cost of living, many Nigerians go to bed hungry. Parents struggle with school fees. Yet the church stands in the gap, praying and providing. Without the role of the church, things would have been far worse.

    However, the government must also wake up. Leadership is sacrifice and positive influence. Nigerians are suffering. Food prices are skyrocketing. Millions of employable youths roam the streets unemployed — a time bomb waiting to explode. Our leaders must do better.

    Can government partner with the church to tackle these challenges, especially in youth empowerment?

    Yes, absolutely. If the government comes, we are ready to share our model. The church already runs seminars for youths, families, artisans, businesspeople, and traders. We empower them spiritually and practically. Imagine what can happen if the government partners with us — more youths will be taken off the streets and given hope.

    Sadly, the current system frustrates young people. For example, we saw students writing exams late at night with lanterns because there was no electricity. That is abnormal. When abnormalities become normalized, our children grow up accepting them as the standards. This is dangerous. Nigeria has so much potential. We once led Africa in many ways, but now we are lagging behind. If our leaders embrace true governance, partner with institutions like the church, and create an enabling environment, God will restore our lost glory.

    There have been allegations of false doctrines creeping into the C&S movement. How is Motailatu Church of God addressing these controversies?

    Motailatu Church of God is founded on the Word of God, the fire of God, holiness, and the power of the Holy Spirit. We follow what Jesus laid down. Anyone doing otherwise is not truly C&S. Light and darkness cannot walk together. From the beginning, C&S was rooted in mass evangelism and preaching the gospel. Those involved in fetish practices or cultism are not C&S. Anybody can wear white garments and call themselves a name, but by their fruits, we shall know them. The real C&S will never indulge in fetishism. At Motailatu, we worship as the Holy Spirit directs, just like the day of Pentecost.

    What legacy do you hope to leave behind?

    A legacy of shining the light of Christ. We are raising children and youths in holiness from a young age. Many of them are now in higher institutions across Nigeria and beyond, spreading the fire of Jesus. We train them to lead worship, preach holiness, and witness boldly. The light of Christ must continue to shine through them, and posterity will know that Christ reigns forever.

    Some say the Aladura movement is more about the white garments than inner holiness. How do you respond?

    Holiness is not about clothes. If you wear white and live in sin, you are heading to hell. The garment must reflect an inner life filled with the Holy Spirit. Our conduct should show Christ in us. In Antioch, people observed the disciples for a year before calling them Christians because they saw Christ in them. Likewise, our white garments must be unstained, symbolizing purity within and without. Holiness is about living sanctified, Christ-centered lives, not outward appearance alone.

    What is the greatest lesson God has taught you in your journey?

    God has taught me to abstain from anything that will hinder me from reigning with Christ. The Bible says, “Love not the world, neither the things in the world.” So, I live daily with heaven in view. If Christ comes today, I want to be ready. Everything I do is to prepare myself and others for His return. My legacy is to keep shining the light of Jesus Christ and to raise generations who will continue to shine it to the ends of the earth.

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    Many young people are leaving the country. What does that mean to you?

    It is sad. Today, parents send their children to schools in Ghana, while in the past, it was Ghanaians and South Africans who came to Nigeria. Nigeria once stood tall as the giant of Africa. I remember in 1986, at the Commonwealth Games in New Zealand, Nigeria led the boycott against apartheid in South Africa — and the whole world respected us. Western Nigeria once had television before France and Belgium. With cocoa and other resources, we developed estates and communities. But look at us now — leadership failure has dragged us down. Still, I believe God will restore Nigeria’s lost glory if we get leadership right.

    Some youths recently had to write exams at night because of lack of electricity. How do you respond such situations?

    It is painful. When students are forced to write exams at night, using lamps, because there is no electricity, and leaders ignore it, what message are we sending? We are normalizing abnormalities. When young people grow up seeing abnormal things treated as normal, they repeat the same mistakes in leadership tomorrow.

    In other countries, less endowed than Nigeria, things are done properly. But here, our lawmakers saw these things and did nothing. That is why leadership remains Nigeria’s greatest problem.

    The church will continue to pray, stand in the gap, and help the needy. But the government must rise to the task of leadership. Nigeria is richly blessed, but until we do things the right way, suffering will continue. If the government partners with the church, and if leaders embrace sacrificial service, God will restore Nigeria’s old glory.

  • Adeboye, Oyedepo others to grace Foursquare’s 70th national convention

    Adeboye, Oyedepo others to grace Foursquare’s 70th national convention

    Pastor Enoch Adeboye, Bishop David Oyedepo and many other leading clergymen will be attending Foursquare’s 70th national convention, the General Overseer of the church in Nigeria, Reverend (Dr.) Sam Aboyeji has said.

    Dr Aboyeji disclosed this during a press briefing heralding the convention.

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    According to him, “the convention is scheduled to hold by the grace of God from Monday October 6 – Sunday October 12, 2025 at Foursquare Campground, Kilometer 75, Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, Ajebo, Ogun State. The theme for this year’s event is COMPLETION AND PERFECTION, taken from Leviticus 25:13 and Psalm 138:8. Fathers of faith in the land have graciously accepted to join us in declaring God’s counsel at the convention. They include – Pastor E. A. Adeboye, Bishop David Oyedepo, Pastor Matthew Ashimolowo, Bishop Francis Wale Oke, and our International President, Rev. Randy Remington from the United States of America.

    “This year’s convention promises to be a time of Refreshing, Revival, Restoration, and Renewal. Also, it shall be a time of completion and perfection of all that concerns us as individuals, families, the church, and our nation.”

  • How to build an ideal Christian home – Bishop Johnson

    How to build an ideal Christian home – Bishop Johnson

    In a world where many marriages collapse under the weight of trials, Dr. Robert and Pastor Ruth Johnson stand tall as a testimony of faith, love, and resilience. Recently, the couple marked their 45th wedding anniversary—not just with feasting and glamour, but with purpose. Beyond celebrating with family, friends, and associates, the Johnsons unveiled a book, 12 Pillars for Fulfillment in Life, and hosted couples and intending partners to a special dinner at Kings Mission Centre, Dopemu, Lagos. There, they shared the remarkable story of their journey together: from their humble beginnings as undergraduates at Ahmadu Bello University in 1977, through seasons of rejection, health battles, financial sacrifices, and ministry transitions, to becoming an enduring example of what it means to walk hand in hand in service to God. ADEOLA OGUNLADE Report.

    Dr. Robert and Pastor Ruth Johnson recently celebrated their 45th wedding anniversary. Aside the usual feasting with family, friends and associates that usually glamorizes such milestone celebration, the amiable couple chronicled their marital experiences in a book titled: 12 Pillars For Fulfillment In Life and also hosted some couples and intending partners to a dinner where they took their guests down the memory lane of their 45 years of partnership in service to God as an ideal Christian couple.

    Dr. Johnson, a former university lecturer, author, publisher, entrepreneur and Lead Pastor, Kings Mission Centre, held the guests emotionally-bound as he shared profoundly his 45-year-marital odyssey with his delectable wife, Ruth. He began with the essence of the special dinner with the married and the intended at the Dopemu-based Kings Mission Centre. Lagos. “The Lord told me to put this meeting together for the married and those intending getting into marriage. We are here to tell our story to encourage the married, and also to help those going into marriage in making the right choice as their life partner.”

    He then recalled how his path crossed with Ruth at Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) Zaria, Kaduna state. “We met as undergraduate students at Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) in 1977. Somewhere along the line we decided to get into a relationship. We entered into courtship to know and understand each other. I was 24 years old while she was 23 when we met. We started praying together for our marriage. From age 13 till 24 I prayed for a suitable life partner and God answered the prayer when I met my wife at ABU in 1977 and we got married in 1980.”

    Earlier before their meeting at ABU, Robert was counseled to start praying for a life partner as soon as he gave his life to Christ at age 13. He discloses: “As a young boy of 13 years old I had the privilege of being brought up in a missionary school. They taught us that after you are born again, the next is who you should marry. We should start praying for a life partner. That was funnily exciting to a small boy of 13 years to begin praying for a wife that will love me and be a help mate. God cannot be silent to the prayers of the little ones. He gave me a wife that will love me and be a help mate. It’s not the year you want to get married, you start praying for your marriage.” he counseled youths.

    Based on his experience of praying for a suitable life partner from a tender age, Robert counseled whoever wants to make a marriage decision, must make it a joint project with God as early as possible. He however confessed that despite praying for a wife from a tender age their marriage still contended with severe challenges.

    “As marriage takes place you watch out because the devil you have escaped by marrying the right spouse will come with full force to attack you both. We went into early challenges because of our Islamic background. We fought this early battle and won. In those times when a girl wants to get married, there are usually lots of distractions. My wife’s Islamic family cut her off for her decision to get married to a Christian brother despite that she had already given her life too, to Christ from Islamic background before meeting each other. So our marriage was unapproved. We had to face the reality that the family support wasn’t coming. Some of our friends in a similar situation or circumstance have ended very badly. In our own case we thank God we survived this early battle and here we are to tell our story.”

    The former don also recalled Satan’s attack on his wife with a terrible sickness which he said almost claimed her life when their marriage was barely five years old. “After you get married and escape the devil’s plot, he will start waging war against your marriage. We already had three children by 1984. After our third child, the devil hit my wife with some mysterious diseases. We visited hospitals. Doctors and nurses were at our beck and call. They prescribed all manners of drugs but they were having bad effects on her. I told myself if the sickness will not kill my wife, the drugs will kill her. We were just getting established in faith.

    “One day I looked at my wife in terrible condition and cried. Our marriage was ordained by God but our parents were waiting for it to fail. The spirit of the Lord arose in me. I gathered all the drugs and flushed them in the wash room. I told God if He can’t heal my wife then let her die. That was the end of the story. She started recovering. The doctors gave her one year to live and now it’s been 40 years. If the devil is going to wage war against your home, he can do that to your health.”

    The veterinary doctor-turned preacher also shared the pains of losing his job and successful entrepreneurship too in the course of their 45 years of marriage. “When I went to England I didn’t find fulfillment as a place that I could work without compromising. After returning from post graduate studies in England and my wife starting her doctoral programme in ABU, I decided to resign my lectureship position to what I felt was a new challenge God was calling me into. I joined a team with a young minister when we moved from Zaria to Kaduna by name David Oyedepo in 1986.He later became Bishop in 1988.

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    “I bore my part of the burden of this budding ministry, following its establishment from Kaduna to Lagos where I already had a business office. I served there as a lay leader till about 1997 when I was asked to start a campus ministry for University Students. By 2001, the Lord led us to start Kings Mission Centre with a church base and an outreach ministry, GRACE TOURS. The Divinity Bible College came on board about 2010. When God beckoned me to full time ministry, a trailer from our church came to carry our loads.”

    He continues: “That was another phase of our lives. I asked my pastor how much my monthly salary was? He said N10, 000. I had issued a cheque of N100,000 to my wife for exigency. Imagine a successful entrepreneur with a whole building complex as office close to Chief MKO Abiola’s residence on Toyin Street, Ikeja, Lagos, with over 20 staff members now being offered a monthly salary of N10,000 as a full time pastor.

    “At this point we started coming down. We didn’t allow money to determine our joy, happiness and peace in our marriage. We sat with the children to serve God together. We couldn’t afford any more of the luxuries with which we raised them. We couldn’t afford sending them abroad for their education as we had planned. God helped us through that phase. Today, all our three children are where God has placed them doing very well. God made a way for them to acquire the best quality education,” he gladly expressed with joy and fulfilment.

    Dr. Robert Johnson counseled couples and those going into marriage never to build their marriage on material things. His words: “Don’t make material things the guide to whom to marry. Don’t allow material things to form the basis of your choice. Your life partner must be someone that must serve God with you with the same mind and the same love for God. When I see people zealous for God, I’m not quick to mark them as spiritual. Your decision to serve God and live for Him will make you accept God’s choice as your life partner. As much as you serve God make sure you connect with the church that God had already pre-ordained for you,” he counseled.

    In her account of their 45 years of marriage Pastor Ruth Johnson expressed profound gratitude to God for keeping her and her amiable spouse alive these 45 years together. She also recalled the rejection she suffered from her family over her marriage decision and how the devil aimed to kill her barely five years in marriage. She counseled the married to sue for peace in their homes, particularly wives, with total submission to their husband and the intending to marry correctly to secure their future.

    “How you marry will determine the love, joy and peace in your marriage. That’s why you have to make the choice correctly. Those who chose God correctly will give us grace to sustain it. To you young ones, it’s good you start praying for your life partner early. It can never be too early. As parents, encourage your children as they get born again to start praying for a suitable life partner. As married women, let us know and play our roles rightly in our homes. I was able to know my role as a wife. I know and do what I have to do .My in-laws always thank me; telling me well done how I trained my children. As married women, we have the major part to play in raising our children in the way of the Lord and to serve Him together with us and their parents. Let us have a clear definition and understanding of our roles at home as wife to our husband with total submission and as mother to our children.”

    Pastor Ruth Johnson also shared the experiences of their wilderness. “During the wilderness time, I always encouraged our children to look up to God for provision. The entire family, including the children looked up to God to pay school fees. Before going to school, I would tell the children to go to the store with faith; calling those things that are not as though they were. When they return and ask mummy how far now, I will sing “come and see the Lord is good. “I always told them to remember the children of Israel; how their journey of 40 days became 40 years because of murmuring. I told them not to complain or murmur to avoid stretching the days of the wilderness, and they never complained. From bags of rice, we came down to buying Derica of rice which I never knew until the wilderness days.”

    Pastor Mrs. Johnson attributed the success of their marriage to God’s backing and her absolute submission to her husband. She said any woman that is not ready to submit absolutely to her husband should not marry. “God created us women to submissively be by the side of our husband; not on their head. This demands our submission totally to our husband to support and enable them to be the man that God created them. Any woman that is not ready to submit totally to her husband should not marry. With the help of God my submission absolutely to my husband these 45 years brings joy, peace, love,” she said.

  • Archdeaconry women hold praise day

    Archdeaconry women hold praise day

    The Archdeaconry Women Praise Day, an annual event dedicated to celebrating the faithfulness of God, will be held on Saturday, 27th September, at St. Paul’s Church, Breadfruit, Lagos.

     The event has been scheduled to commence at 10:00 AM.

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    The programme provides a platform for women to reflect on the Archdeaconry’s activities, review its progress, and explore ways to expand its impact in line with the Christian call to love and serve others. This year’s theme is drawn from Psalm 150:6: ‘Let everything that has breath praise the Lord.’

     The event will be chaired by Chief (Mrs.) Funke Arthur-Worrey, with Lady Abike Ogundeyi serving as Co-Chairperson. Several other distinguished guests and dignitaries are also expected to attend.

  • Knights and ladies mark 30 years of service

    Knights and ladies mark 30 years of service

    The Knights of St. John International (KSJI) and Ladies Auxiliary (LAUX), Lagos Grand, between October 10 and 12, 2025, will celebrate 30 years of its existence.

    The event will be held at the Church of Ascension, Murtala Muhammed International Airport Road, Ikeja, under the chairmanship of Pro. Obiora Okonkwo (OFR), Chairman, United Nigeria Airlines.

    Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, is the special guest of honour and the Oba of Lagos, His Royal Majesty, Oba Rilwan Babatunde Akiolu, as the Royal Father of the Day.

    The keynote address is to be delivered by Chief Sir John Nnia Nwodo, former Information Minister and ex-President General of Ohanaeze.

    The two-day event, themed ‘Celebrating 30 years of Service to God and Country,’ is expected to be graced by the crème of the Ancient and Noble Order, among them business moguls and leaders of the Order from across the country.

    Chairman of the Planning Committee is Major Greg Ugwueze, with Sister Marian Aniekwena as the co-chairman.

    In his remarks heralding the planned celebration, the Grand President, Lagos, Brig-Gen Joachim Chuks Amongbo, said the occasion would feature awards to deserving Knights and Ladies who have used their time, talent, and treasure to foster the ideals of the Order and who have dedicated their lives in the service of God and country.

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    He promised that the event would be full of pomp and circumstance with a colloquium, traditional dance troupes and speeches that would set the tone for the Order when it marks its Golden Jubilee in two decades.

    Also speaking, the Grand Respected President, Ladies Auxiliary, Noble Sister Justina Chinyere Nwakwo, said the Knights and Ladies all over the world, and those in Lagos would line out in their numbers to showcase their journey this 30 years and soldiers of Christ who no longer fight with guns, but with the word of God as contained in the Holy Bible.

  • Adeboye charges legal luminaries, Nigerians to show mercy

    Adeboye charges legal luminaries, Nigerians to show mercy

    The General Overseer, The Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) Worldwide, Pastor Enoch Adejare Adeboye, has charged all legal luminaries in their divergent areas of calling and by extension, every Nigerian, not leaving out politicians, to put on the cloak of mercy, and execute same. 

    Adeboye gave the charge during the September thanksgiving service with the theme: ‘Divine Mercy,’ at The Throne of Grace, Ebute-Metta, where the Church hosted legal luminaries in a very large number.

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    Adeboye, who seized the occasion to pray for Bench and Bar, at the federal and state levels and sectors, legal practitioners in public and private sectors of the economy, among others, described justice as getting what one deserves, while mercy is getting what one does not deserve.

    “Mercy of God is unlimited, and it is from everlasting to everlasting.

  • ACCoN congratulates PFN Lagos chairman Davids on first anniversary

    ACCoN congratulates PFN Lagos chairman Davids on first anniversary

    The Association of Christian Correspondents of Nigeria (ACCoN) has congratulated the Lagos State Chairman of the Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria (PFN), Rev. Yemi Davids, on his first anniversary in office.

    At a media briefing held at Global Impact Church, Ogudu, Lagos, PFN’s anniversary was marked with a presentation of a congratulatory letter to Rev. Davids by ACCoN President, Adeola Ogunlade, on behalf of the association’s members and executives.

    In the letter, ACCoN commended Rev. Davids, who also serves as Senior Pastor of Global Impact Church, for his commitment to unity, reconciliation, and service to society. It recalled that his election as the 11th PFN Lagos Chairman came with both excitement and challenges.

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    “Your vision of building bridges between generations, fostering harmony within the body of Christ, and reinforcing the relevance of the Church in addressing both spiritual and societal needs continues to inspire many,” the letter read. It further praised his initiatives, including the training of pastors, political and governance advocacy, and humanitarian interventions such as the ₦46.2 million relief support for displaced families in Benue State.

    ACCoN also expressed interest in partnering with PFN Lagos to enhance public enlightenment and provide robust media support for its initiatives.

    In his response, Rev. Davids thanked the association for the honour and pledged closer collaboration to amplify the voice and programmes of the Church.

    He endorsed the proposal to establish a robust media committee of church and media professionals and directed his officials to begin the process immediately.

  • C&S Church marks 100 years as Iya Aladura Yomi-Sholoye leads colourful parade

    C&S Church marks 100 years as Iya Aladura Yomi-Sholoye leads colourful parade

    Iya Aladura General, Dr. Oluwaseye Yomi-Sholoye, JP, Founder of The New Seraph Evangelical Ministries, mounted the podium at Tafawa Balewa Square, Lagos, on Tuesday, September 9, to take the first Bible reading at the centenary celebration of the Cherubim and Seraphim (C\&S) Church Worldwide.

    Reading from Isaiah 61:1–11, her voice carried both history and faith as thousands of Seraphs from across the globe gathered to mark the church’s 100th anniversary.

    Dr. Yomi-Sholoye, who recently received the Centenary Award for Outstanding Contribution to the Church’s Development, also led her congregation in a thanksgiving parade that turned the atmosphere into a festival of colours.

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    Horses in ceremonial regalia, the Army of Salvation in uniform, and a lively brass band drew cheers from the crowd, leaving worshippers dancing in gratitude to God and honour of the founder, Saint Moses Orimolade Tunolase.

    A born Seraph with deep family roots in the church, Dr. Yomi-Sholoye is the daughter of the late Baba Aladura Sunday Peter Akinjogunla, founder of New Mission C&S (now Faith Mission Church), and Prophetess Dr. Marian Adeleye Akinjogunla, JP, President of Faith Mission C&S Worldwide.

    Praised for her role in uniting and inspiring a new generation of Seraphs, as well as her philanthropic efforts beyond the pulpit, the New Seraph leader was widely celebrated during the event.

    The grand centenary drew church leaders, government officials, dignitaries, and royal fathers, including H.M.E Baba Aladura Bob-Manuel (Prelate of ESOCS), the CAN President, representatives of the Pope, the Owa Ale of Ikare Akoko, Oba Adeleke Adefemi Adegbite II, Osun State Governor Ademola Adeleke, and music legend Sir Shina Peters.

    For the Cherubim and Seraphim Church, founded in Lagos by Saint Moses Orimolade on September 9, 1925, the centenary was not just a celebration but, in the words of many leaders, a testimony to “God’s enduring grace, mercy, and faithfulness” upon the church and its people for the past century.