Tag: E.A. Adeboye

  • 4704 ordained as assistant pastors at RCCG Convention

    THE General Overseer, Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Pastor E.A. Adeboye, has ordained 4704 as Assistant Pastors of the mission.

    Speaking during the event on Tuesday, Rev. Joe Olaiya advised those ordained to preach the Gospel as Jesus remained the only solution to every challenge confronting the world.

    This year’s convention tagged, “and God said,” is taking place at the Redemption Camp KM 46, Lagos-Ibadan Expressway and with over two million worshipers expected at the weeklong event.

    The RCCG at the opening of its 62 Annual Convention on Monday ordained 12,811 deacons and deaconesses.

    Describing the 2019 Convention as mighty and prophetic one, never seen before, Enoch Adeboye, the General Overseer of the Church, had in July promised participants some of the first things ‘God said to man.’

    Read Also: RCCG hospital gets award

    Adeboye prophesised that participants, who have challenges in those areas of life, will be relieved of them at the convention.

    The church’s National Overseer, Joseph Obayemi, presented the candidates to the Adeboye for ordination to help in the growth of the church and in service to God.

    The candidates were so many that the ordination was done in batches with senior ministers taking turns to lay hands on them. The number of those ordained is 1,563 higher than the figure of last year when Adeboye ordained 11,258 deacons and deaconesses, drawn from various parishes of the church.

    Explaining the process of ordination, Adeboye said: “In the Redeemed Christian Church of God ordination is done by laying of hands, proclamation and prayers.”

    The candidates filed out in batches for hand-laying by Adeboye’s senior assistants.

    In a short sermon on Monday night, Adeboye reminded workers of the church and House Fellowship leaders of God’s recognition of their contribution and His reward for them.

  • 52 students inducted at RCCG college’s first matriculation

    The Rector of Redeemer’s College of Technology and Management,(RECTEM), Redemption Camp,  Ogun State,  Prof Adedeji Daramola has said the institution was set to equip students with the right knowledge to be technically productive.

    He said RECTEM would be research intensive and technology based through its set patterns of exploratory innovations.  It will engage it’s students in rigorous academic study and practical exploratory discoveries.

    Speaking at the first matriculation of 52 students from nine departments in the college he said “the quality of our training is high and we are not comprising the quality of our students.  We are training the middle level manpower, to create a pool of highly trained technicians and technologists that will support the nation’s engineering infrastructural development as well as the growth and development of the country’s small and mediums Enterprises”.

    He noted that the founder of the college,  Pastor E.A  Adeboye had a clear concept to enhance the standard of technical education in the country through building the human capacity in the field of science, technology and management, thus his heavily investment in the college.

    He said the journey which started four years ago,  got licence to operate three months ago.

    With an affordable tuition fee of N190,000, excluding accommodation , he said students would be practically trained to meet the demands of the society.

    Daramola added that all the nine programme are of international standard and  approved  by the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE). The college is also awaiting the final approval of a new engineering programme-Civil Engineering by NBTE board. With that approval,  the college would have ten programs at its inception, having the record of been the only private polytechnic in the country to have approval for ten programme at its inception.

    It will also soon commence Mechanical Engineering programme after fulfilling all the requirements by the NBTE.

    The rector advised the students to always have the God factor,  be determined and focused to be successful in life.

    Earlier,  he  National Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church, Pastor Joseph Obayemi who represented the General Overseer, E. Adeboye advised that  wisdom, knowledge and understanding are the necessary virtues the college needs to imbibe to fulfill the mission of it’s establishment.

    He commended the founder for his courage and vision  to address the lapses in the technical education.

  • Killings: God will expose killers, kidnappers soon, says Adeboye

    Killings: God will expose killers, kidnappers soon, says Adeboye

     

    General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Pastor E.A Adeboye has condemned kidnapping and killings in the country.

    Leading his congregation in prayers, at the February 2018 Holy Ghost Service tagged “Stronger than your enemies – Part 2”, held at the Redemption Camp, Adeboye asked the congregation, which included the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, to pray that God should expose and deal with those that are shedding blood, and those that  are sponsoring  them.

    In his words “Father, wherever those who are shedding bloods are hiding, please expose and deal with them.  All those who are condoling evil or colluding with them, wherever they may be please expose and deal with them. All those who are sponsoring evil and bloodshed, please expose and destroy them.”

    Read Also: Adeboye salutes Adams on installation as Aare Ona Kakanfo

    Responding to those who have accused him of being silent on the issue, the General Overseer said “I am a Christian and I belong to the Christian Association of Nigeria which has a President. So whatever the President says is what I say. I am also a Pentecostal and I belong to the Pentecostal Association of Nigeria. So whatever the President says is what I say. That is how to be under authority.”

    About 50 persons were murdered by Fulani herdsmen in Benue State in the first two days of January, 2018. There have also been several cases of kidnappings in some parts of the country. Reports say that the herdsmen started attack since the Benue State Government implemented the anti-grazing law, giving the herdsmen no space to feed their cows.

     

     

     

  • The NEWSWEEK 50: E. A. Adeboye

    The American magazine-Newsweek in 2008 picked Pastor Adeboye as one of 50 most influential people in the world. We hereby reproduce its profile of the precher.

    YOU may never have heard of E. A. Adeboye, but the pastor of The Redeemed Christian Church of God is one of the most successful preachers in the world. He boasts that his church has outposts in 110 countries. He has 14,000 branchesclaiming 5 million membersin his home country of Nigeria alone. There are 360 RCCG churches in Britain, and about the same number in U.S. cities like Chicago, Dallas, and Tallahassee, Fla. Adeboye says he has sent missionaries to China and such Islamic countries as Pakistan and Malaysia. His aspirations are outsize. He wants to save souls, and he wants to do so by planting churches the way Starbucks used to build coffee shops: everywhere.

    “In the developing world we say we want churches to be within five minutes’ walk of every person,” he tells NEWSWEEK. “In the developed world, we say five minutes of driving.” Such a goal may seem outlandish, but Adeboye is a Pentecostal preacher: he believes in miracles. And Pentecostalism is the biggest, fastest-growing Christian movement since the Reformation.

    One of the strangest images from the 2008 campaign was the YouTube clip of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin in church, head bowed, palms turned up toward heaven, standing silently as Thomas Muthee, a Pentecostal preacher from Kenya, prayed for her freedom from witchcraft. The clip (and a NEWSWEEK article about it) triggered its own little culture skirmish, with secular observers calling Palin a “wack job” and conservative Christians responding “There’s nothing wrong with her church!!!” Few commentators on either side noted how normal that scene was to hundreds of millions of Christians around the globe.

    The world now has about 600 million Pentecostals, the largest group of Christians after Roman Catholics. In Asia, the number of Pentecostals has grown from about 10 million to 166 million since 1970, according to the Center for the Study of Global Christianity at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. In Latin America, Pentecostals have expanded from 13 million to 151 million; in North America, from 19 million to 77 million; and in Africa, from 18 million to 156 million. By 2050 most of Africa will be Christian, estimates Grant Wacker, professor of Christian history at Duke Universityand most of those Christians will be Pentecostals.

    Modern Pentecostalism was born in America in the early 20th century, when a former Methodist minister named Charles Parham began teaching that Christians who were filled with the Holy Spirit could, like the disciples of Jesus, speak in tongues. (The sound, for those who have not heard it, is extraordinary: like crooning or keening or jibber jabber.) From the start, the faith appealed across ethnic lines to the poor and the marginalized. Its lack of denominational structure meant “you didn’t have to have a highly trained and educated clergy with a long graduate education,” says Vinson Synan, dean emeritus of the divinity school at Regent University. “Common people [were] pastoring common people.” Televangelist healers like Oral Roberts helped keep the movement growing.

    Pentecostals believe that the Holy Spirit is always at work in the world and that certain people possess its gifts: speaking in tongues, the healing touch, the power to cast out demons and witches. An emphasis on prosperity and healing attracts converts without savings accounts or health insurance. The emphasis on Biblical inerrancy and on rigid social rulesno drinking, no smoking, no premarital sexoffers structure for people whose lives have been devastated by addiction or illness. In places like Africa (and indeed, like Palin’s Alaska at the turn of the last century), Pentecostalism finds fertile ground among adherents of native religions who already believe the world is alive with spirits.

    By Pentecostal standards, Adeboye is mainstream. Formerly a mathematics instructor at the University of Lagos, he began working at RCCG translating the previous pastor’s sermons from Yoruba to English. He took over the congregation in 1981. His success, he says, is rooted in his message. “Pentecostals have such an impact because they talk of the here and now, not just the by and by, he says. “We pray for the sick, but we pray for their prosperity, for their overcoming of evil forces and so on. While we have to worry about heaven, there are some things God could do for us in the here and now.” At a recent revival meeting in London, Adeboye and his ministers preached 12 hours straight to a crowd of 30,000. At the altar call, hundreds of people rushed toward the stage from every corner of the arena, visibly filled with euphoria. They call their pastor “Daddy.”

    Behind Adeboye’s extraordinary success is his reputation for honesty. While other Pentecostal pastors (including some Nigerians) have been accused of financial misdeeds or faking supernatural powers, Adeboye remains above the fray. Nigerian government leaders seek his input on pressing social issues. He recently made a public-service announcement condemning discrimination against people with HIV. He distributes his message globally through Facebook and MySpace, a self-published magazine called “The Mandate,” and a digital-cable channel called Open Heavens TV. His appearance is straitlaced: he always wears a pinstriped suit, a gleaming white shirt and a bow tie.

    Adeboye experienced a miracle recently on a long and dangerous stretch of highway near Lagos, he says. His car was out of gas, and the gas stations were empty. Then God spoke to him, clearly, and said to keep driving. Adeboye drove 200 miles on empty. Could his gas gauge have been broken? No, he insists, God intervened “because of the need … in a crisis.” Adeboye knows well what some in the West have forgotten: in today’s world, everyone needs a Daddy.

  • ‘Deolu Adeboye on different page with dad, siblings

    WHEN King Solomon wrote in the bible that you should train your child the way he should go and when he is old, he will not depart from it, he was emphasising the need for parents to guide their kids in the right direction. This biblical injunction appears to be holding true for Deolu Adeboye, son of the General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Pastor E. A. Adeboye.

    While the senior Adeboye has not relented in his efforts to win souls into the kingdom of God, the junior Adeboye has continued to win more and more customers for his business. Deolu, the boss of Wisemen Apparel, a leading fashion outfit in Nigeria, has also become a major player in the real estate sector in London.

    He has been able to conquer many territories by opening more outlets in London and adjoining cities while his Nigerian businesses have also been expanding. While his father and siblings have adopted a Spartan lifestyle, Deolu makes no pretence about living life to the fullest. Unlike most of his siblings, Deolu is a lover of state-of-the-art-cars. He is also reputed as a power dresser.

  • RCCG holds fasting, prayer

    RCCG holds fasting, prayer

    The Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Penile Chapel, 82, Railway line, near Adeshina Street, Fadeyi, Lagos has begun 100 days of fasting and prayer.

    The programme, which began on January 2, is expected to end on April 11. The theme is: “Destiny Recovery”.

    The host pastor, Oluwasegun Isaac Awoyale, said the General Overseer Pastor E.A. Adeboye mandated every member to participate in the programme.