Tag: Pastor Tunde Bakare

  • Church celebrates Bakare at 70

    Church celebrates Bakare at 70

    Citadel Global Community Church (CGCC) is planning to celebrate its Serving Overseer, Pastor Tunde Bakare, as he turns 70 on November 11.

    In a statement yesterday, Media Sub-Committee Team Lead Kayode Ladeinde said the week-long celebration, beginning on November 10, will feature events that reflect Bakare’s impact on faith and public life.

    Read Also; Monday Sit-at-home: where are Southeast leaders?

    The celebration will open with an Appreciation Service on November 10. The next day, Thanksgiving Service and Book Presentation of his autobiography, ‘The Last, but Definitely Not the Least’, will hold.

    Other events include solar project inauguration and law endowment fund launch at the University of Lagos on November 12.

    The celebrations will be concluded on November 17 with a final Thanksgiving Service at CGCC.

  • I will contest after Buhari, says Bakare

    The Senior Pastor of Latter Rain Assembly, Pastor Tunde Bakare, has said he would contest for the presidency after the expiration of President Muhammadu Buhari’s second term.

    He announced his ambition during an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) yesterrday in Lagos shortly after casting his vote at the Opebi Grammar School polling unit.

    “I am going to throw my hand into the fray. I am just waiting for President Buhari to finish his tenure.

    “We cannot continue this way because we have something to offer this country, and we will by the grace of God,’’ he said.

    Bakare, who said that he was desirous of making Nigeria one of the greatest countries, added that he looked forward to a future where every Nigerian vote would count.

    He said that he would continue to pray for the day when every citizen would come out and make their votes count.

    He urged Nigerians to desist from allowing themselves to be deceived by ‘stomach infrastructure’ when the needed infrastructure in their communities had decayed.

    In 2011 Bakare was Buhari’s presidential running mate on the platform of the defunct Congress for Progressive Change (CPC). The pastor had in Calgary, Canada, in an interview published on January 3, predicted that he would succeed Buhari as Nigeria’s next president.

  • How Buhari, Atiku ‘ll slug it out, by Bakare

    Save Nigeria Group (SNG) convener Pastor Tunde Bakare yesterday assessed next February’s presidential election which he described as “the battle of the eagles” between President Muhammadu Buhari and former Vice President Atiku Abubakar.

    Bakare said with Atiku’s emergence as the Peeoples Democratic Party (PDP) standard bearer, the 2019 election will be keen and interesting.

    Bakare, Senior Pastor of the Latter Rain Assembly, told reporters in Ikeja, Lagos after making a speech on Nigeria’s 58th Independence in his church that with Atiku, the race will be “more robust”.

    “It is not going to be an eaglet versus an eagle but an eagle versus eagle: an old eagle versus new eagle and probably both of them old eagles.

    “I wish President Muhammadu Buhari the best in 2019.

    “He has the power of incumbency and he will do his best to win the election, but Atiku is not going to take ‘no for an answer when the two forces collide in the election,” he said.

    Bakare said Atiku, just like Buhari, had the experience, the exposure and the acceptance expected of the country’s president.

    He, however, pointed out that having those qualities alone would not translate into victory for him, as the electorate would decide the parameters on which to elect the next president.

    “I can’t say Atiku will win or lose. You see, I am not advocating for him. Among all the aspirants who contested the PDP’s ticket with him, he is perhaps the most cosmopolitan; he is a Wazobia man.

    “He was Vice-President for eight years, and he inherited something from late Yar’Adua that he has held on to so effectively.

    “He has been a businessman with a business acumen and he has the exposure.

    “But you see, that is not what qualifies you to win. A lot comes into play; so, again, I can not say whether he will win or lose,” he said.

    Bakare said for the PDP to win the 2019 elections, the party would need to demonstrate to the electorate that it is regenerated and “show repentance for the years of the locust they engineered”.

    He added that the opposition party must convince Nigerians that they would not return to corruption, which he said was the way of life during its rule, to win the confidence of the electorate.

    On the chances of APC, Bakare said though the government was trying its best, there was the need for them to do much more to win the next election.

    He said the country was facing a lot of challenges which the government needed to offer solutions to, in order to fast track the pace of development.

    The cleric said that performance and policies, and not necessarily incumbency factor, would guarantee victory for the APC in 2019.

    The SNG Convener said his comments about Buhari’s administration from the beginning, should not be interpreted to mean he was attacking the government, but just raising issues needing attention.

    “I didn’t take any swipe at the administration of President Buhari.

    “What I have always said is that despite the acclaimed progress in the country, Nigerians are not feeling the impact in their homes.

    “That does not mean the government is not working. Look at the groanings of the people, the government still has to do a lot more before the 2019 elections.

    “They have to work harder to assure Nigerians that they are really up to the task of listening to their yearnings and aspirations.

    “The purpose of government is the welfare and security of people.Take that from the equation, then governance means nothing,” he said.

    Bakare said the emergence of many political parties was good for democracy and freedom.

    He, however, said many of the parties were pretenders and they would need to “rise above the cacophony of noise” they were making to make impact in the elections.

    The SNG Convener said he had a presidential ambition but would not contest against President Buhari.

    Bakare, who did not say when he would contest, however, said he would be the one to succeed the president.

    In his speech on the Independence titled “The Road to 2019: Quo Basis Nigeria”, Bakare said Nigeria had the potential to be great with the right leadership and positive attitude of followers.

    He said 2019 presented another opportunity for citizens to realise the destiny of the country by participating in the process and voting right.

    Bakare urged citizens to vote according to their conscience and elect leaders that mean well for the country.

     

  • Obasanjo, Gana, others celebrate Badejo at 70

    Friends, well-wishers and religious leaders gathered last weekend to celebrate Pastor Wilson Badejo, the immediate past General Overseer of the Foursquare Gospel church, Nigeria.

    Former President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, chairman of the occasion described the septuagenarian as a “good man” who performed well in all his endeavors.  “As a farmer, he performed well, as a pastor he did the same, he is also a good family man”, Obasanjo said.

    He went on to recount his many years of friendship with the Ogun State born farmer cum pastor, “I learned a lot from Dr. Badejo, when I left office as an unwanted Head of State, I needed something to do and all the lessons I got from him about the farming business were put into practice.”  He also declared that Badejo was the one praying for his release while in jail.

    Similarly, former Vice Presidential aspirant and convener of Save Nigeria Group, Pastor Tunde Bakare, the guest speaker of the program described Badejo as “a man of many parts” who has lived a “purposeful life”. He described him as a mentor with whom he has had a great relationship over the years and the man who commissioned his church, Latter Rain Assembly.

    Former Minister of Information, Prof Jerry Gana who was the chief launcher for Wilson Badejo’s newly written book, ‘My Spiritual Odyssey’ described him as a man of honour who speaks the truth at all times.

    Former Deputy Governor in charge of Operations at the Central Bank of Nigeria, Mr. Tunde Lemo, Archbishop Lanre Obembe of  Elshadai Bible Church and Pastor Yomi Kasali of  Foundation of Truth Assembly were some of the dignitaries that graced the event.

  • Change for good takes time, Bakare pleads with Nigerians

    Change for good takes time, Bakare pleads with Nigerians

    ….Urges Nigerians to be patient with Buhari

    The General Overseer of the Later Rain Assembly, Pastor Tunde Bakare on Friday urged Nigerians to be patient with President Muhammadu Buhari as he steers the ship of state.

    According to him, any change for good normally takes time.

    Bakare, who was the running mate to Buhari during the 2011 Presidential Election under the platform of the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), spoke with State House correspondents at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    He met behind closed doors with President Buhari for about fourty five minutes.

    Bakare said: “I will like to appeal to all Nigerians that we should just excise a bit of patience. This change will not become chain that will tie all of us down. Change for good takes time and we should just exercise a little bit more of patience.

    “We trust that government is listening and the leaders are listening too and they will respond to the yearnings and aspirations of Nigerians.” He added

    Speaking further on the change agenda of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Bakare said: “When you are driving on a wrong direction, for example, you are going to Ibadan and you face Badagry and you get to Cotonu and you realize you have gone in the wrong direction for too long a time, then you turn back and make a U-turn, there will be some suffering you have to go through.

    “Pain is part of gain. No pain, no gain. The years of wastage and all that we have done wrong has finally caught up with us. All we are praying for is wisdom for this government to do things right and to do the right things. So that gradually, we can begin to come out of the woods,” he said.

    He said that it is too early to begin to judge the performance of the administration.

    “If there is anything I know about Mr. President, it is that he has a good heart. He loves this country and he wants the country to run well. But it takes time. I know we are all impatient and in a hurry and I trust we will come out of the woods.” He added

    Bakare declined to speak on the Budget padding controversy at the National Assembly, stressing that he is still studying the allegations.

    “I just return to the country last Friday. I am reading about it. I will make my decision when I have checked both sides. And I will definitely speak on that,” he said.

    When asked if the time has not come for the President to carry out cabinet reshufflement,  he said that it is left for the President to take the decision anytime he wants.

    “He knows what he has given them. For example, I have not given any appointment to anyone so I can’t judge their performance. But if there are yardsticks and standards given to them and if they have performed below par, definitely, the president would not mind at the right time to do those things.”

    On why he visited the Villa, he said: “I came to see the President and he is doing very well health wise. That’s all I came to do.”

  • El-Rufai hails Bakare’s return to politics

    El-Rufai hails Bakare’s return to politics

    Kaduna State Governor, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai, has credited Pastor Tunde Bakare for contributing to his becoming governor of the state.

    He also urged Nigerians to have faith in President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration, saying the President has the best interest of the country at heart and is working assiduously to restore the country’s fortunes.

    El-Rufai spoke during Sunday’s service at the Latter Rain Assembly where he was a guest of Pastor Bakare.
    He said: “I am close to President Buhari today. But I would not be here today as governor if Pastor Bakare did not make me to join the CPC.
    “I was hounded after I left office, I was persecuted. I swore I would not have anything to do with government again. I was bitter. I felt that Nigeria deserves what it gets.
    But Pastor Bakare said no, I will pray for you and the bitterness would go.”
    Describing the present era as the most difficult in the country’s history, El-Rufai called for prayers for the President and Nigeria.
    He said the President was making efforts to go back to the era before oil became a mainstay of the economy but that the transition would be difficult.
    He said: “This is probably the most difficult period in Nigeria’s history. 70 percent of our national income from oil disappeared. It is the worst time to be in government. 30 states of Nigeria cannot pay salaries. We are lucky in Kaduna State that we can pay salaries – perhaps because you are praying for us – but it is difficult.
    “Any time I sit with Buhari I feel sorry for him because he has the fortune or misfortune of being president of Nigeria at the most difficult time. The first time the NPN had almost destroyed Nigeria.
    “There is one thing about him that is a strength and also a weakness – Buhari believes in humanity. So, when he gives you something to do, he expects you to do it as he would do it. But sometimes subordinates put leaders in difficult positions.
    “The Buhari I know will not do anything detrimental to Nigeria. And by God’s grace Nigeria will remain united.
    “Today we have a president that has no interest in making money for himself, his family and his friends. And that is a big difference from the past.
    “But I beg you to have faith and pray. With prayers, guidance…and with people like Pastor Bakare that enjoys unlimited access to the President, Nigeria cannot fail.”
  • 60 Tablets for pains  in pursuit of truth

    60 Tablets for pains in pursuit of truth

    Pastor Tunde Bakare clocks 60 today, November 11. I seek to throw a little light on the man many believe deliberately courts controversy and is unduly harsh on his fellow religious leaders. A man some claim draw anomie to himself, and blind loyalty in equal proportion – like ants to sugar. By his choice of words, subjects of his vitriol and characters of his umbrage – in most cases, Bakare may declare himself guilty – but with well- articulated reasons. If you can control your indignation and hear him out, you are likely to concede him the space necessary for truth and logic to soar.

    Ordinarily, I am drawn to people who are not afraid to speak what they believe is the truth – at all times; who do not succumb to the pressure of impressing others so as to gain their adulation; people who are not bothered about the enormity of your anointing if your obvious actions and conversations give you away as a charlatan – you will be hung out to dry. Oh, I like such people.

    Yes, people who see Bakare as a “noise-maker” or “rabble-rouser” may have a point. He does cause trouble with his statements… and more often than not rabbles are roused on account of his diatribes. The point to linger on is not what he does, but why he does those things. In private discussions, as I sought to probe the spine of his position on this issue…with a mischievous twist of his lips, he would labour to give words to the cascading thoughts in his heart – his glowing face reveals a man thoroughly at peace with the severity of his commentaries.

    Well, 15 years may not be long enough to write a profound character guide on a person, but I can state categorically that he writes down, dwells over, bounces off people, almost all his so-called controversial statements… He does not use the old and tested lacuna: “touch not my anointed…” in escaping troubling issues and scenarios when he is called to account. Bakare would over-prepare for contestation of ideas and understanding of the Word – whether the challenge comes from a peer or neophyte.

    Oh, he does have a temper. Is there a man without blemish? Excuse it the way you want, he can be a bolt of fire against the devil in one instance; and if an associate, his child or acquaintance steps over or pulls down what ought to be carefully arranged or garnished – the tongue of correction comes sharp and long…touching the recesses of your inadequacy, purging you almost instantly of any dreg of incompetence. Oh, he detests incompetence in any situation – more avidly if he suspects incompetence, insensitivity or high corruption at the citadels of political power. He surely must share the same sentiment with the 26th American president, Theodore Roosevelt, who said: “Patriotism means to stand by the country. It does not mean to stand by the president or any other public official, save exactly to the degree in which he himself stands by the country. It is patriotic to support him insofar as he efficiently serves the country. It is unpatriotic not to oppose him to the exact extent that by inefficiency or otherwise he fails in his duty to stand by the country. In either event, it is unpatriotic not to tell the truth, whether about the president or anyone else.”

    Religious hypocrisy and political charlatanism irk him most. Since “performers” of both “arts” prey on the minds and hopes of people, his most vitriolic deprecations are reserved for them irrespective of their status, influence, motives or familiarity. When people say ‘why wash your dirty linens in public?’ ‘Why doesn’t Bakare call his “brothers” to order in private brotherly love?’ Let me reassure you, on most occasions, he would bend backwards to reach out privately and poignantly point out these “infringements” and “perversions” – especially within the body of Christ. Often, the others chuckled over it with glib assurance of acceptance…yet the issues fester, the complicity deepens…then Bakare explodes, and most people take off in pursuit of ringworm with leprosy left unchecked.

    Like Apostle Paul, Bakare’s teachings are hard: in the pursuit of happiness and prosperity, ‘live holy, depend completely on God, repay evil with good, and do unto others much better than they to you’. He not only lives what he preaches, he challenges others to take him up on his convictions and cross notes afterwards. He is bemused when people find it almost impossible to differentiate between principles (issues he vehemently attacks) and relationship (usually committed by his friends and older associates in faith). He is hurt when hare-brained policies and exertions of governmental powers deliver more hardship on ordinary folks – and he explodes where most leaders merely grumble and vacillate in soporific acquiescence. He is undaunted and scarcely embarrassed when no one believes or even regards what he says God has shown him in visions or dreams – he simply pivots ahead using same as launch pads to more declarations.

    If his person is not violated, if his faith is not compromised; if his loved ones are not in doubts; if his God does not keep silent, then the whole world united in blatant antagonism against him, will not stir the little hair still remaining on his head. An enigma indeed.

    Though little of frame, Bakare’s heart is large. Very large. His generosity sometimes bothers on thick-headedness. Somehow, if you investigate the strands of his magnanimity, you will find narratives of his humble beginnings. He obviously suffered growing up… well, like most successful Nigerians of his age… but his has diverse colorations that will make a  book on his formative years a best seller. So, in his generous spirit hides a desire to help people about to fall into extreme poverty. Don’t get it wrong: weepy, needling, obsequious appeal for mercy-cash will not move him. With obvious compassion and keen intelligence, he would probe the circumstance of your situation and the potency of your peril. And to make sure you are not in any doubt about his position, he will ask that help should be given you, but ‘this and that’ are what you should focus your energies on so you can stand on your feet; but if on his reading, you need more than a token, he will invite others who can effectively intervene in your affairs, so you can stand strong.

    Bakare lives his life in the open (a rare condition in this climate) – the hunger to share and teach makes him tell it all. He fixes his own stories, warts and all, in all his public narratives as he criss-crosses the world teaching and preaching. While most of us will repent of our mis-steps and keep it mum between us and God; not Bakare.  After repenting, the man will “call” the “whole world”, confessing his mishaps. And somehow drawing out a lesson or two why no one else should have any excuse for falling into same. He is quick to do that for his few mistakes; but ironically zips his mouth when he does any of his sundry good deeds. A peculiar man!

    As Babatunde Gbolahan Bakare marks his 60th birthday today, with millions of his silent admirers (and of course, millions of the “others”), a constant train of thought is that he will live long to give of himself to his God and his country – with calm boldness, profound power and enduring grace… such that if the Lord arrives and asks if there’s a trusted and courageous ‘errand-man’ ready for him to use – Layide’s  husband may confidently step forward and say: “Here am I, send me!”