Connect with us

Features

Can Science and Religion converge?

• Prayer and fasting cannot be substitute for hard work and application of common sense

• Prayer and fasting cannot be substitute for hard work and application of common sense

I am an unrepentant Presbyterian and nothing will change that. If my parents had not got me baptised when I was barely three months old I would have opted to be either a Catholic or Buddhist even if I see myself as an Esoteric Christian today.

I have gone higher in the study of philosophy of religions and the nuances of religious practice, divinity and spirituality. But I do not claim to be an authority on anything.

Growing up, I knew of the orthodox churches mostly because many or all of them ran schools and the school uniforms were distinct for easy identification of the churches. It was a colourful beauty to see all these schools line up during Independence Day parades.

Advertisement

Then arrived the Pentecostals and after them the ones calling themselves the Charismatic. I recollect one Rev. Dr Kuntu Blankson who enchanted crowds at the Jackson Park at Koforidua back in the day with his powerful voice and gesticulations. The late Rev. Bob Hawkson was one of his lieutenants.

Some of my sisters fell for the new deal but I made it clear I was not a ‘religious prostitute’ hopping from one to the other. I do not know what has become of Dr Blankson’s church in today’s scheme of things.

Many of today’s churches started from little open spaces with a few adherents clapping to songs and dancing their sorrows away, then graduating with megaphones and maracas into musical accoutrements and large auditoria. Soon they became mega churches, commanding a lot of wealth and affluence. And with it fanciful titles and ranks. Apostle General, Prophet, General Overseer etc. What freaks them mist is when they are called Papa.

During the COVID-19 pandemic when the world was under virtual lockdown in 2020, some churches, especially the orthodox ones, took it with grace and followed directives.

Advertisement

But, there was a viral video of the founder of Christ Embassy, Dr. Chris Oyakhilome, screaming his frustrations on scientists, describing the virus a hoax by people to foist 5G antennae on humans by locking us out. Or was he simply rueing the absence of his congregation? He was not alone. Many others complained of loss of revenue from tithes etc.

The latest of his videos that I saw made me laugh. Dr. Oyakhilome says that scientists are injecting us with microchips in the guise of vaccines so that they can communicate with our bodies. Microchips in liquid form? How? If this were the case, I guess science has reached its  zenith. But the inconsistencies in his theories are not lost in anyone. One moment it was 5G and now liquid microchips.

And I also know communication not to be a one-way traffic so how does my body play its part of this communication game?

Prayer and fasting cannot be substitute for hard work and application of common sense. Faith, science and common sense must have a point of convergence.

Advertisement

A popular pastor in Cameroon who said he could cure COVID patients and went to pray and touch patients in hospital was himself buried from contracting the virus. Foolhardiness, if you asked me.

Why don’t these mega churches pool their financial might together, fund research into cure for tropical ailments? What stops them? After all, the Christ left two commandments: preach the Word and heal the sick.

African scientists and researchers are dying for funds to conduct their research and these churches could help. If they do not want to help, I suggest they keep quiet and allow the scientists to do what their limited resources could allow them.

The founders of these churches are supposed to be leaders. As such the emotional, physical and spiritual wellbeing of their members rest on their leadership. As leaders, they must be mindful of the messages they deliver because what you feed one person with can turn another away.

Advertisement

That was why Paul did not write one comment pastoral letter to the Corinthians, Galatians, Ephesians etc. etc. He wrote the letters different from one another because each had a different level of consciousness from the other. Do our preachers understand this?

The founder of  the Light House Chapel, Dr Dag Heward-Mills is seen making jest of people of the Volta Region in a viral video, describing them as practising a little Christianity and a little juju, saying, “Xose vide, bo vide” and topping it with “what a shock!!” And his audience were in hilarious stitches.

Dr Heward-Mills is a leader who, I believe, must understand the sensibilities of his congregants. As a leader, he should have sought out the knowledgeable Ewe in his group to brief him on the genesis of the expression, “Xɔse viaɖe, bo viaɖe.” That would inform how he presents his message. As one who writes a column in one national paper on leadership, I think he has failed this time round with such a divisive comment.

Now, some of these men of God try to outdo one another with prophesies and predictions that boggle the mind. This or that politician will die this year. That celebrity will perish in a car crash on August 3. They never prophesy on anything that edifies. There will be a bumper harvest so government should build silos. No, not that one; they are not interested. Question is what God do we have who only gives doomsday revelations to His supposed servants or anointed?

Advertisement

I know about voluntary clairvoyants who see the past, present and future. But they only speak when it becomes extremely necessary. They rather pray for the positives. Then there are the involuntary clairvoyants who have the tendency to misunderstand what they see or misrepresent them.

There are also those who train into Astral projection to visit the Akashic Record of world events. Whatever is revealed to all these people is supposed to be used for the good of mankind. These could be scientists, researchers who are desirous of finding solutions to current and future problems.

God reveals things to others in dreams as the Bible says. Some are through the stars as was with the three wise men. However, dreams mostly reflect our physical and mental condition. Go to bed on a hungry, empty stomach and tell what dream you had. Then go to bed with a half kilo of fufu or sleep with a bout of malaria. Only a sound mind in a sound body can yield a meaningful dream worth considering.

If some of our prophets are true, they will be the last people to say anything at all. But not only do they talk too much, they are so intolerant of one another that they engage in turf wars on social media. There was news about one who got a bunch of his followers to threaten another with cudgels recently. Another was seen in a video stomping the belly of a pregnant woman in an orgasmic frenzy of deliverance. Yet one in some African country ordered his followers to go chew grass. And they did.

Advertisement

Now, the target is captains of industry and business as adherents who can help swell the churches’ collection bowls.

One founder of a church spotted the many delivery vans of a company at Kaneshie and sent one of his assistants to go invite the CEO because God revealed to him about this business. After listening to the young acolyte, the CEO said in a soft tone, “I have over three hundred staff in my employ.

I pay tax, social security and can you imagine how many benefit if each of them has four or five dependents? How many has your leader employed? What tax does he pay? Go tell him I give to charity but not to churches.” I do not have this CEO’s permission to mention names, else I would have done so.

What has happened to the Christ as the ideal? Churches have become big money making machines, seeking not the kingdom of God but economic kingdom; most of them. There are a few that practise what the Christ commanded though. Very few.

Advertisement

I wonder why their followers do not know that the very miracles they are seeking from these pastors are right inside of them. Godhood is in each and every one of us; never in the churches. Why is it difficult to look for the God within? Until we realise this as a fact, we shall always assume that science and religion are on a collision course.

*Post Script*: In my last article, I stated inadvertently that Obetsebi Lamptey was sent to bring Kwame Nkrumah down to Ghana. It was rather Ako Adjei who took on that assignment. The error is deeply regretted.

By Dr. Akofa K. Segbefia

Writer’s email: akofa45@yahoo.com*

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement

Features

Tears of Ghanaman, home and abroad

• Sikaman residents are more hospital to foreign guests than their own kin
• Sikaman residents are more hospital to foreign guests than their own kin

The typical native of Sikaman is by nature a hospitable creature, a social animal with a big heart, a soul full of the milk of earthly good­ness, and a spirit too loving for its own comfort.

Sikaman Palava
Sikaman Palava

Ghanaman hosts a foreign pal and he spends a fortune to make him very happy and comfortable-good food, clean booze, excellent accommoda­tion and a woman for the night.

Sometimes the pal leaves without saying a “thank you but Ghanaman is not offended. He’d host another idiot even more splendidly. His nature is warm, his spirit benevolent. That is the typical Ghanaian and no wonder that many African-Americans say, “If you haven’t visited Ghana. Then you’ve not come to Africa.

You can even enter the country without a passport and a visa and you’ll be welcomed with a pot of palm wine.

If Ghanaman wants to go abroad, especially to an European country or the United States, it is often after an ordeal.

Advertisement

He has to doze in a queue at dawn at the embassy for days and if he is lucky to get through to being inter­viewed, he is confronted by someone who claims he or she has the power of discerning truth from lie.

In short Ghanaman must undergo a lie-detector test and has to answer questions that are either nonsensical or have no relevance to the trip at hand. When Joseph Kwame Korkorti wanted a visa to an European country, the attache studied Korkorti’s nose for a while and pronounced judgment.

“The way I see you, you won’t return to Ghana if I allow you to go. Korkorti nearly dislocated her jaw; Kwasiasem akwaakwa. In any case what had Korkorti’s nose got to do with the trip?

If Ghanaman, after several at­tempts, manages to get the visa and lands in the whiteman’s land, he is seen as another monkey uptown, a new arrival of a degenerate ape coming to invade civilized society. He is sneered at, mocked at and avoided like a plague. Some landlords abroad will not hire their rooms to blacks because they feel their presence in itself is bad business.

Advertisement

When a Sikaman publisher land­ed overseas and was riding in a public bus, an urchin who had the impudence and notoriety of a dead cockroach told his colleagues he was sure the black man had a tail which he was hiding in his pair of trousers. He didn’t end there. He said he was in fact going to pull out the tail for everyone to see.

True to his word he went and put his hand into the backside of the bewildered publisher, intent on grab­bing his imaginary tail and pulling it out. It took a lot of patience on the part of the publisher to avert murder. He practically pinned the white mis­creant on the floor by the neck and only let go when others intervene. Next time too…

The way we treat our foreign guests in comparison with the way they treat us is polar contrasting-two disparate extremes, one totally in­comparable to the other. They hound us for immigration papers, deport us for overstaying and skinheads either target homes to perpetrate mayhem or attack black immigrants to gratify their racial madness

When these same people come here we accept them even more hospi­tably than our own kin. They enter without visas, overstay, impregnate our women and run away.

Advertisement

About half of foreigners in this country do not have valid resident permits and was not a bother until recently when fire was put under the buttocks of the Immigration Service

In fact, until recently I never knew Sikaman had an Immigration Service. The problem is that although their staff look resplendent in their green outfit, you never really see them any­where. You’d think they are hidden from the public eye.

The first time I saw a group of them walking somewhere, I nearly mistook them for some sixth-form going to the library. Their ladies are pretty though.

So after all, Sikaman has an Immi­gration Service which I hear is now alert 24 hours a day tracking down illegal aliens and making sure they bound the exit via Kotoka Interna­tional. A pat on their shoulder.

Advertisement

I am glad the Interior Ministry has also realised that the country has been too slack about who goes out or comes into Sikaman.

Now the Ministry has warned foreigners not to take the country’s commitment to its obligations under the various conditions as a sign of weakness or a source for the abuse of her hospitality.

“Ghana will not tolerate any such abuse,” Nii Okaija Adamafio, the Interior Minister said, baring his teeth and twitching his little moustache. He was inaugurating the Ghana Refu­gee and Immigration Service Boards.

He said some foreigners come in as tourists, investors, consultants, skilled workers or refugees. Others come as ‘charlatans, adventurers or plain criminals. “

Yes, there are many criminals among them. Our courts have tried a good number of them for fraud and misconduct.

Advertisement

It is time we welcome only those who would come and invest or tour and go back peacefully and not those whose criminal intentions are well-hidden but get exposed in due course of time.

This article was first published on Saturday March 14, 1998

Join our WhatsApp Channel now!
https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VbBElzjInlqHhl1aTU27

Continue Reading

Features

 Decisions have consequences

 In this world, it is always important to recognise that every action or decision taken, has consequences.

It can result in something good or bad, depending on the quality of the decision, that is, the factors that were taken into account in the deci­sion making.

The problem with a bad decision is that, in some instances, there is no opportunity to correct the result even though you have regretted the decision, which resulted in the un­pleasant outcome.

This is what a friend of mine refers to as having regretted an unregreta­ble regret. After church last Sunday, I was watching a programme on TV and a young lady was sharing with the host, how a bad decision she took, had affected her life immensely and adversely.

Advertisement

She narrated how she met a Cauca­sian and she got married to him. The white man arranged for her to join him after the marriage and process­es were initiated for her to join her husband in UK. It took a while for the requisite documentation to be procured and during this period, she took a decision that has haunted her till date.

According to her narration, she met a man, a Ghanaian, who she started dating, even though she was a mar­ried woman.

After a while her documents were ready and so she left to join her husband abroad without breaking off the unholy relationship with the man from Ghana.

After she got to UK, this man from Ghana, kept pressuring her to leave the white man and return to him in Ghana. The white man at some point became a bit suspicious and asked about who she has been talking on the phone with for long spells, and she lied to him that it was her cousin.

Advertisement

Then comes the shocker. After the man from Ghana had sweet talked her continuously for a while, she decided to leave her husband and re­turn to Ghana after only three weeks abroad.

She said, she asked the guy to swear to her that he would take care of both her and her mother and the guy swore to take good care of her and her mother as well as rent a 3-bedroom flat for her. She then took the decision to leave her hus­band and return to Ghana.

She told her mum that she was re­turning to Ghana to marry the guy in Ghana. According to her, her mother vigorously disagreed with her deci­sion and wept.

She further added that her mum told her brother and they told her that they were going to tell her hus­band about her intentions.

Advertisement

According to her, she threatened that if they called her husband to inform him, then she would commit suicide, an idea given to her by the boyfriend in Ghana.

Her mum and brother afraid of what she might do, agreed not to tell her husband. She then told her hus­band that she was returning to Ghana to attend her Grandmother’s funeral.

The husband could not understand why she wanted to go back to Ghana after only three weeks stay so she had to lie that in their tradition, grandchildren are required to be present when the grandmother dies and is to be buried.

She returned to Ghana; the flat turns into a chamber and hall accom­modation, the promise to take care of her mother does not materialise and generally she ends up furnishing the accommodation herself. All the promises given her by her boyfriend, turned out to be just mere words.

Advertisement

A phone the husband gave her, she left behind in UK out of guilty conscience knowing she was never coming back to UK.

Through that phone and social media, the husband found out about his boyfriend and that was the end of her marriage.

Meanwhile, things have gone awry here in Ghana and she had regretted and at a point in her narration, was trying desperately to hold back tears. Decisions indeed have consequences.

NB: ‘CHANGE KOTOKA INTERNA­TIONAL AIRPORT TO KOFI BAAKO INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT’

Advertisement

Join our WhatsApp Channel now!
https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VbBElzjInlqHhl1aTU27

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending