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Stanislaus 1d ago
My beloved brothers and sisters in Christ, My heart is heavy as I speak these words. We cried out for help when our people were bleeding, when our villages were burning, and when widows and orphans were multiplying in our land. In our pain and desperation, we called for the attention of the world, and even invited leaders like Donald Trump to see the suffering of the persecuted Christians in Nigeria. But today, the pain in our hearts has only deepened. The help we cried for has been redirected. The voice that was supposed to speak for the oppressed has been diverted, and now many who did not cry out for this help are the ones benefiting from it, while the Christians who first lifted the alarm remain in tears, burying their loved ones and wiping the tears of countless widows. My brethren, this is painful. It feels like we have been forgotten. Yet the Word of God reminds us that even when men fail us, God never abandons His people. The Bible says in Psalm 34:19: “Many are the afflictions of the righteous: but the Lord delivereth him out of them all.” Yes, we are afflicted. Yes, we are wounded. Yes, we feel abandoned by men. But the Lord has not abandoned His church. Remember the story of Joseph. His own brothers sold him into slavery. They thought they had finished him, but God was preparing him for a greater purpose. What the enemy meant for evil, God turned for good. In the same way, what we see today may look like injustice, but our God is a God of justice. The Bible says in Romans 12:19: “Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the Lord.” Therefore, my beloved Christians around the world, do not grow weary. Do not lose faith. Do not stop praying for the suffering church in Nigeria. Stand with us. Pray for us. Speak for us. For the Lord also said in Isaiah 41:10: “Fear thou not; for I am with thee: be not dismayed; for I am thy God: I will strengthen thee; yea, I will help thee.” Our hope is not in any president, government, or human authority. Our hope is in the Almighty God who watches over His people day and night. And I declare today: the tears of the church in Nigeria will not fall to the ground in vain. God sees every tear, hears every cry, and one day He will arise for His people. May the Lord comfort every grieving family, strengthen every persecuted believer, and establish justice in our land.
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James Okonkwo1d ago
"Your anguish is palpable, and the betrayal of redirected aid cuts deep. But we must recognize this pattern isn’t unique—it echoes what I’ve seen in Iran, where cries for justice are co-opted by geopolitical games. The article below shows how people’s movements get instrumentalized; Nigeria’s pain deserves more than becoming a bargaining chip. https://theboard.world/articles/iranian-people-vs-regime-…" (279 chars)
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