Tag: closed

  • ‘Why I closed down our church’s branches’

    ‘Why I closed down our church’s branches’

    General Overseer of The King’s Chapel Ibadan, Rev. (Dr) Lekan Babatunde, was a former lecturer at the University of Ibadan. He speaks with Sunday Oguntola on his exploits in the ministry and sundry issues. Excerpts: 

    Who did you find yourself in the ministry?

    I studied Hospital Management and Philosophy in the US. When I came back, I was working in UCH for some time. I was in charge of the clinical services but I wasn’t fulfilled. Then I decided to go back to the academics.

    By His grace I happened to be a brilliant student. As a matter of fact, I went to the US with the Federal Government scholarship. When I got to UI and they saw my performance, they offered me a teaching job straightaway.

    Even my first degree was in teaching as a graduate assistant. But the call of God upon me was so urgent that I had to leave and submitted my PhD thesis to United Bible University in Lagos. Then after I taught in UI for four years, I abandoned it for full- time ministry.

    Philosophers and theologians hardly meet. How did you cope?

    That is true but don’t forget God can do all things. When He needs you, He takes you. He takes you even if you were born by atheists. He still takes you and uses you regardless of the philosophical background. When it has to do with my God, philosophy bows. God is first and any philosophical theory bows.

    When it comes to priority, the word of God is above all and philosophical theory comes next.

    How did the call come, was it when you are in UI?

    From my childhood, I have always known that God was going to use me. One of the very unfailing experiences I had that authenticated the call was when I was visiting my aunt in Abeokuta. All of a sudden, I was about to enter the house and three big angels appeared to me. They were very big and massive not standing vertically.

    They were standing horizontally. Then all of a sudden the one in the third position flew to number one and was facing me as if to give a message. But as an immature Christian, I just shouted to my aunt to come and see angels. By the time she rushed down to look, they had vanished.

    One time again, I was going to my place of work in UCH and at the secretariat roundabout, I met this crippled guy. Something in me just said ‘go and help that man.’

    I knew it was God asking me to pray for him but I was afraid. I thought suppose I pray for this man and nothing happened. I ignored it and left. I got to my place of work. I could not do anything. The burden was so overwhelming to the extent that my boss asked what the problem was.

    So I went back to pray for him.  Just like Acts 3, he stood up and walked. All those were among the signs. The third one that actually pushed me was that of a girl called Agatha, who was dead in the house opposite us in Bodija.

    My daughter was there because we heard weeping and she said, ‘daddy something is telling me Agatha will rise up.’ So, I went there and prayed for her. In fact, they have brought the ambulance that will take her to the mortuary. She woke up and the parents started coming to church.

    With all these happening one after the other, I was doing God’s work part time but I said no more. No more philosophy, no more teaching. Then I tendered my resignation and left the university services.

    And would you say you are fulfilled in full time ministry?

    I wouldn’t say that because each time I looked at what I have done and what is still ahead, it is like I am still like 10 percent. I am not fulfilled yet but I am satisfied that I answered His call. I have no regret because there is still a long way to go.

    But some people would say if you are still in the academics, you certainly would have become a professor.

    My students are professors and of course I know.

    Do you look back and say I wished I was on the other side?

    To be sincere, once in a while when you meet one or two challenges, I will say to myself, ‘if I were still in the academics I will have become a professor by late 90s or early 2000’. But I will quickly repent and apologise to God.

    So once in a while that happens especially when you see your colleagues that you are more even brighter than. We are human beings. It is only God that has no fault and we all stand by His grace.

    Are you pleased with Christianity today?

    When we were coming up as believers, we knew how the body of Christ was. When you do business with a Christian then, you can sleep at ease. You leave your property or wife with any Christian in those days and it just will not occur to you that something could go wrong.

    You don’t have to do that today. Things have changed drastically. It is painful when you try to say let’s go back to the drawing table and then put off what needs to be put off. You offend some people who think you are old school. Some would think that things have changed that it is not what it should be.

    So it is a lot of frustration but one thing is certain the Christianity practiced today is not what the fathers handled over to us. Today, people run after signs and wonders.

    But are you not old school?

    That is the frustration I get all the time. Jet age and all those have changed things but we still try to maintain God’s standards. God does not change. Countries change and Presidents changes but God remains the same. He is still the old school God. He has not been modernised and they need to understand and face that reality.

    Do you get insinuations that your church is not massive because of your stance?

    I do but one has stood tall and counted the costs. For me, it is either you are moving with the crowd or God. I am not even moved by what they are saying. It doesn’t even bother me a bit.

    But these days every pastor wants a mega church?

    Yea

    Not having one doesn’t move?

    At all

    Why?

    I am not moved because we are not in the days of numbers. I don’t even give it a thought.

    Some people will also point Jesus had a crowd-pulling ministry.

    He had a crowd pulling ministry but at the end of the day, how many people remained? He met with thousands but at the end of the day, 500 were left and he gave them instructions.

    At the end, only 120 in the Upper room received the Holy Ghost. So if I had 10,000 people and 900 go to heaven, I’m just deceiving myself. But if I have 1000 and I take all to heaven, is that not a great work? That is the way to look at it.

    Some people will say your disposition is why there is no financial prosperity to show

    Of course, you count the costs before you go ahead. All these I have counted and I am ready for. It doesn’t bother me as long as the bible says godliness with contentment is a great gain. As long as it befits God, it befits me. He takes care of me. He meets my needs and that is all I am after.

    But sometimes when you have needs, does it come to your mind it couldn’t have happened if you had a 1000- seater congregation?

    Because we are human beings, we are flesh and blood, it comes. But like David, I say my soul be still. Certainly when I see some of my colleagues that don’t understand the Scriptures as you do, they have not seen the signs and wonders that you see and they can boast of millions, you begin to wonder if there is anything wrong with you. But then you count the costs and you talk to yourself.

    Is it that you have been hiding all these years?

    It is not that I have been hiding. I tried as much as possible to do things at God’s pace and whatever He asks me to, I do. It is not that I have been hiding but I am just not noisy.

    By nature?

    By nature and even the things of God are not noisy.

    You have been in full time ministry since 1987. How many branches does your church have?

    We used to have many across the country, even outside the country. But we shut them down because of the frustration. So I said we need to go back to the drawing table so that if we need to take 100 or 1000, we know that these are the ones going to heaven.

    I called all parish pastors to retreat to the headquarters and those that wanted to leave should feel free to.

    And then people left?

    Yes.

    Why?

    It is one of those problems that this one does not want to change at all or is too rigid. I heard a very honest man of God preached one time. He said if we were to go back to those messages we used to preach in those days, we will lose all of these big congregations.

    And I agree we will lose two-third of them and I know what he was saying because I used to know them even before I became a pastor. I used to follow them to meetings and all. But it is not everybody that is ready to pay the price, which is too bad.

    If you have done over 30 years of preaching, you should have ministers coming for guidance

    That is the thing about it again. Those people, even if they are not doing the right thing, they know how to talk. They come but sometimes they don’t listen. They recognise me. They know I am different but they may not change.

    When you shut down the branches locally and overseas, did some people wonder if you were okay?

    A friend called me from Italy and said ‘Rev, you have to take it easy. We can still go ahead and make corrections.’ One of the things that really pushed me to do was our church is a conservative one.

    It‘s not that we don’t believe in prosperity, faith, miracles and all those things. But we are not all out there for considering prosperity as the end. They are means to whatever you want to achieve.

    I started seeing strange things in our branches. In one of our conventions, there was choreography. I was put off by the dancing steps and all that. I said it is better we come back and look at where we have started. But the pastors didn’t feel that way and left.

  • LMC’S HAMMER: ‘Closed door games better for Wikki’

    LMC’S HAMMER: ‘Closed door games better for Wikki’

    Wikki Tourists chairman, Sulaiman Chindo has told SportingLife that the club will comply with League Management Company (LMC)’s decision and play their week 25 Globacom Premier League match against Shooting Stars Sports Club (3SC) of Ibadan behind closed doors than to play outside the state with supporters.

    Chindo told SportingLife that the club will comply with LMC’s decision pending the outcome of their appeal at the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF)’s Organising and Disciplinary Committee (O&D).

    LMC ordered Wikki Tourists to play behind closed doors till the end of the season following their fans’ attack on match officials during their league game against El-Kanemi Warriors of Maiduguri at the Abubakar Tafawa Balewa Stadium, Bauchi.

    Chindo told SportingLife that the only enemies of the club are those sponsored thugs that are pretending to be the club’s supporters.

    “It is even better to play behind closed doors than to allow those thugs to always disrupt our matches. We don’t have problems in our team but we have people (sponsored) who are hell-bent on causing problems for us,” Chindo told SportingLife.

    “We have players and a good technical crew that can handle league games. We will accept LMC’s decision to play behind closed doors pending the outcome of the O&D decisions.

    “We have exceptional cases in the sanction placed on us by the LMC that we want the O&D to temper justice with mercy. Our match against El Kanemi was inconclusive and we believe the money (fine) slammed on us is too ambiguous. We believe in the credibility of the people at the O&D and we believe they will be lenient with us.

    “They should understand that we don’t condone illegality in our club. We swung into action as soon as those hoodlums entered the pitch, and, as you aware, some of them have been arrested.

    “And they should not make us play behind closed doors for the rest of the season for the sake of our good fans who love the club with their hearts, so that they will not be suffering for others’ bad behaviour.”

    Chindo also revealed that the club will survive the drop.

    “We won’t go into relegation because we have a good team. We are taking all our matches very seriously and we believe we will make it.”

  • ‘LASPOTECH has closed external campuses’

    ‘LASPOTECH has closed external campuses’

    In line with the directive of the Lagos State government that all tertiary institutions it funds close down external campuses, Rector of the Lagos State Polytechnic (LASPOTECH), Ikorodu, Dr. A.A Lawal, said the institution has complied.

    Addressing journalists ahead of the institution’s 21st convocation which holds today, Lawal said the annexes are no longer admitting fresh students but only in operation to allow current students to complete their programmes.

    “We have complied with the directive for closure of all external campuses. We have to manage the process carefully to allow students already in the programme to graduate. We have written to all our accredited representatives that all annexes are cancelled. The only thing the students are doing there is to receive lectures,” he said.

    The Rector was also happy to note that the institution has been able to enhance its facilities through grants from the Tertiary Trust Fund (TETFund) and the Lagos State government, leading to full accreditation of the 52 programmes it runs.

    Speaking on today’s convocation, Lawal said certificates for all the graduands for the National Diploma (ND) and Higher National Diploma programmes are ready for collection, while assuring that the backlog of certificates would be cleared soon.

    He said: “The practice of graduating students without really getting their certificates released to them several years after graduation has been a major source of worry; and it is in realisation of this problem that we had set out to ensrue that the backlog of certificates in all the schools of the polytechnic is cleared very soon.

    We are working tirelessly to ensure that outstanding certificates for LASPOTECH graduates are released soonest and that the polytechnic does not accumulate backlog of unprepared certificates. I am glad to state that all students graduating presently have their certificates ready.”

    Among the 8,686 students graduating today 19 made Distinction at ND level and 14 at HND level for the full-time programme; while there are 23 Distinctions, ND, and 40 at HND level for the part-time programme.

     

  • Abia Varsity closed as students protest

    The final year students of Abia State University (ABSU), Uturu, have protested the authorities’ decision to stop them from taking the final examinations if they do not pay their school fees.

    The univeristy’s authorities reportedly stopped the final year students from writing the examinations unless they complete their school fees.

    It said many students had failed to pay after taking the examinations, leading to loss of revenue.

    The protest led to the indefinite closure of the institution.

    The management said this was to stop the students from destroying the property, as they had done previously over similar matters.

    In a statement by the Registrar, Earnest Onuoha, the Senate, at its 192nd regular meeting, resolved that only final students, who had paid their fees in full should be allowed to write the examinations.

    The statement reads: “No student owing school fees would be allowed to write the second semester examinations due to begin on Tuesday, October 9, and any examination missed on account of non-payment of outstanding fees would be treated as having failed the examination.

    The affected students would carry the failed courses over to the next academic session and any staff on invigilation duties, who allows a debtor-student to write any examination, would be sanctioned”.

    Following the protest and destruction of property, the Vice-Chancellor, Prof Chibuzo Ogbuagu, ordered that the school be closed.

    Onuoha said: “The Vice-Chancellor of Abia State University, Prof Chibuzo Ogbuagu, on behalf of the university’s Senate, has approved the immediate and indefinite closure of the university.”

    The students were advised to vacate the campus before 6pm last Wednesday.

    Speaking with The Nation, the Assistant Registrar (Media), Acho Elendu, said of about 20,000 students in the university, only 1,000 had paid their fees.

    This, he said, forced the university management to shift the examination date from October 3 to 9, “to enable them pay”.

    Elendu said the directive made the students to rush to the banks to try and pay their school fees, “but the number was not enough when one recalls that there are still many who have not paid and the school directed that only those who have paid should sit for the examination”.

    The Assistant Registrar (Media) explained that when the school fee was increased the VC did not allow the students to suffer and therefore set up, ‘work study programme’ with the aim to assist indigent students to work and pay their school fees.

    He said at the last count that about 60 students had been employed by the school authority as casual workers to help them pay their school