“God
did not direct His call to Isaiah – Isaiah overheard God saying “Who will go
for us.”
Oswald Chambers – My Utmost for His
Highest.
It was the worst of times and it was
the abysmal of the abyss. It was the depth of squalid trenches and the darkness
of a closed lightless tunnels. It was in those times when women locked their
pot of soup with heavy padlocks in fear of rabidly hungry neighbors. It was
those times when a bag of rice cost an arm and a leg and unemployed youths
trudged about in the streets with disappointed features cradling dry looking
files in the crook of their arms and armpits looking for non-existent jobs in
organizations that were discarding staff like it was going out of fashion and
owing their employees like it is the trend not just dictated by the times but
enforced by it. One either worked or left to be replaced by him who would work
without pay or who would be able to count his abstract remuneration in his
dreams and possibly get one of the malignant spirits that prowl through the
nightmares of men and women serving delicacies and offering other delectable
afterwards to serve him three square meals.
It was in those times when one would
pack a barrow full of naira notes just so he could buy a loaf of bread. It was
in these sorts of times when the igbo folk tale will most certainly tell you
that the tortoise would be up to some sort of mischief whether he was naming himself
“All of you” when invited to a heavenly feast or he was feigning fantastic
tales of a dancing tree to scare men and women off the markets so as to grab
himself enough foodstuffs and condiments to sustain his wife and his family.
The igbo wielding entrenched wisdom
have already through time and folk tales established that it would take great
cunning and craft to survive these times and Ogbunta considers himself a true
Igbo man, a son of the soil that starts every prayer with libations of kola and
gin thrown to the ground with strong prayers to the ancestors below and the
gods above to answer wishes of long life and prosperity and sometimes merciless
vengeance meted out to enemies who he may not know. He may not even eat before
he had thrown some lumps of fufu or some spoonfuls to the ground to feed his
ancestors. But that was before the recession when one can afford to throw food
underfoot to people that may not even be there.
In these times, he felt that they
should pay him back for all his faithfulness he has shown through the years of
plenty, when people needed to simply trek on the road to pick some money from
off the ground, or climbed trees to pluck them. But in these times of
recession, the gods and the ancestors may have taken a recess. Definitely,
their jobs may have gotten a lot more difficult as men and women fall down in
prayers triggered by hunger and hardship occasions by unpaid salaries, economic
strangulation, unemployment and rising inflation. He could sometimes imagine the gods sleeping upon a mountain of prayers, too tired and worn out by a
litany of requests each one more insistent than the other one and all
insistent, threatening suicide, disloyalty and sometimes attempting a
blackmail.
Ogbunta knew that survival is hinged
on being as crafty as the tortoise and
as flexible as a yoga practitioner, that is why he chose the easiest job
available in the market but the job has a very good return. It is the job of
intermediating between God and the increasingly desperate Man. It is the job of
telling people what they want to hear, telling them anything but the truth. It
is the job of assuming knowledge on behalf of the increasingly ignorant men who
won't take responsibility even when it falls into the palms of their hands.
At the height of his hunger and
desperation, Ogbunta decided that he was
going to become that intermediary men sought to relate their endless requests
to the unreachable beings above. He firstly thought about being a native doctor.
He could dress the part and knew enough
igbo proverbs and some more Ogene songs and that helped add the
much-needed mysticism to the running scam. He also knew some thoroughly bitter
herbal concoctions with questionable efficacy that he would give people to cure their wide range of ailments which he
would always tell them was spiritual.
He had the withered looks of a native
Doctor, hunger made sure of that. His forehead was permanently furrowed
probably through habitual worrying about hunger and family engagements. His
cheeks seemed to have been sucked into his mouth with a suction pipe. He had a
brown teeth which was a little too
large. It could be scary when fully bared, thus whenever he grins, he was told
that he looked like grinning tiger who was amused by its prey. His eyes are
red-shot often, as a result of his arduous hours spent in the dusty Oze market
carrying loads which are never his for some small charge. Those eyes,
considered fiery whenever he was angry could be to his advantage, the mastery
of this game would be hinged on his ability to maintain eye contact with his
clients and customers, choosing carefully the time to feign disapproval, anger
or disgust especially when the usually gullible customers stumbles upon some
sliver of wisdom. Shouting often worked, often as much as as muttering
unintelligible gibberish which sounded as sane to him as it does to the
startled customers.
Having resolved to market God as a
commodity, he had to choose between being a native Doctor and a ‘Man of God’.
Those men never go hungry, he thought wisely. However, he was convinced that
Men of God did better than their native counterparts.
There are at least two offertory
sessions that guaranteed a hearty three square meals, one could easily get a
car if he was aggressive enough. There was a little work involved. Ogbunta knew
there was also a bit of work involved. Being a spiritual con artist is hard
work, especially in these recession times when even the most ardent believers
are using their supposed tithes to feed their families and save up food for the
rainy day because the storms have been gathering since the previous year when
an unpopular government lost power to an even more unpopular one. It was not
long before Banks started firing their staffs, foreign direct investments
started disappearing like smoke and soon, the Construction Company where he
worked as a labourer, the company that had been owing him for three months of
work, declared bankruptcy and left him penniless and almost hopeless.
He started dreading his sick mother’s
calls. Her drugs are often too costly for his bare pockets. Of course, he
always had the intention to return her calls but calling her sick mother in the
village to tender an empty sorry devoid of monetary backing insulted him.
He had plans to start calling her
frequently. Men of God rarely ever get broke or run out of money. People will
always have testimonies and would credit these to the last Man of God they
spoke to. Furthermore, there are more Christians than they were traditionalists
which was considered fetishist from the onset of colonialism. Ogbunta
considered his margin of error too large. It's a numbers game and he fancied
himself lucky. The law of the average was with him. The sea is large enough
that he is fairly sure that he would catch something. He was going fishing with
a net and not a hook.
But his sort of fishing had its sort
of tools, so he went to the market and with the last money he had on him, he
bought the biggest Bible he could find in the bookstore. He had entered there
with a specific requirement that the book seller give him the Bible that he
could not carry. However, he settled for one that he could scarcely carry
without some level of discomfort. Carrying that Bible was exerting and would
easily substitute for a strenuous workout. However, that was what he wanted and
that was what he got. He also got the biggest silver crucifix with the biggest
rope he could find and tied it around his neck. The crucifix was made of heavy
metal and forced him to bend his neck often times under its sheer weight. His
marks would consider that an act of perpetual prayer and not a physiological
imperative occasioned by the humongous weight he suspended around his neck. The
imperatives of the 21st century Christianity favored big over small, loudness
over subtlety and any ‘Man of God’ that failed to appreciate this would end up
very hungry and frustrated. Prayers are required to be long and sweaty while
incorporating as many tongues as one knew, the more indecipherable, the better.
The argument is biblical, since the time of John The Baptist, the Kingdom of
God went somewhere and suffered violence and now belongs to the violent and the
loud.
Ogbunta started reading the scriptures
but cannot wait to digest it fully. He could learn on the job and thus he
started buying videos of preaching of the successful Men of God who had private
jets, convoys and wore impeccable designer suits. The preached the things he
liked. They spoke about how blessings and grace is tied to faithful tithing.
They preached of ‘Abrahamic Blessings’ that grew from his faithful tithing
practice. They spoke of full measures that would be pressed down, that will be
shaken together and that would be spilling over which would be handed to those
who were generous. God loves a cheerful giver was cliché. They rarely spoke
about the poor, about the schools they built from the sweat of the poor which
the poor could not even afford, they forgot to mention that even the houses
raised through the mite of the poor would be used to accommodate the rich,
leaving the poor as they were, homeless, hopeless and disillusioned. These
preachers that Ogbunta adored had private jets in a church where some of the
members could barely afford to eat.
Ogbunta had to learn first, the
response he would give to anyone who would dare point out that there was a lot
he could still do with that money he would use to buy his dream car, a Mercedes
G-Wagon.
“Christ had died poor so that we would
all become rich.”
Let no one tell him that Christ had
also told the rich man to sell off all he had and follow him and that whoever
placed his hand on the axe and looks back is not worthy of the kingdom for he
would not know how to respond to that.
When he was ready to deploy his
skills, he had nothing to start with. There was no naira to his name so he got
one landowner and made a deal with him. He would stay in the land and doing his
business there while he garners the needed resources to start developing the
land. The land was located in an area where an empty plot of land could be sold
to seventy-seven people by someone who do not even know the owner.
Thus, the arrangement was mutually
beneficial to both parties. He becomes the caretaker of the plot of land for
the landlord.
He built his church by his own hands,
literally; from bits and pieces of wood he was gathered while he cleared that
plot of land, he roofed it with old corrugated roofing sheets. However, when he
was done, he worried about the rain and the gale that could easily compromise
the shambolic structure.
However, the Lord that called him was
with him and no rain fell for months as it was during the dry season. He wrote
the name of the Church there with white chalk with upon the brown wood
“HolyGhost Opreshion Intanashonal Church.” He loved the sound of international
despite his wooden shambles being the only one in Oze and in the whole world.
There was nothing wrong with big dreams. Great things starts small. Jesus
Christ did feed 5000 people with just five loaves and two fishes.
He has designs of going international.
He will grow in the business, organize as many crusades as he can and do a
minimum of twenty prophecies in a day.
He cannot be all wrong with twenty especially if he can be perceptive
and sensitive to the needs of the congregation. Thus, there is no need
prophesying to an unemployed youth that he will be getting married soon when he
is even finding it difficult to get a three-square meal per day. A beautiful
spinster would definitely have suitors and the not-so-beautiful ones will
always think that do, so for the young ladies, prophecies of an impending,
imminent marriage is a very safe bet, however, he cannot guarantee a happy one.
Since sickness and death is a part of human existence, it is only wise to
prophesy to the sick that they would be well if they do not die. They cannot be
anything else.
So he resolved to start with these
core branches of prophecies that addressed the needs and fantasies of people.
Would the people know any better?
He was sure that they will not. There are a lot of men who have gotten away with it.
2 comments:
Already I am "hooked"! How will our fraudster preacher fare? The analysis of these crooks is long overdue - and now we are getting it at the hands of the master of the art of writing. How strange it is that this victim of circumstance is about to take advantage of many victims of the same circumstances. can't wait for Part II !
Thank You Tony...The Sequel will be released today by the end of the evening.
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