Bishop Oyedepo Orders Members To Bring Their Pvcs To Church For Prayers
Churches in Lagos State yesterday dedicated
time to seek the face of God concerning next
Saturday’s presidential and National Assembly
elections.
They prayed for peaceful and non-violent
exercise, as the pastors cautioned members on
how to behave during and after the elections.
Many of the services monitored involved special
prayer sessions for peace to reign before, during
and after the elections.
At Global Harvest Church, Maryland, Reverend
Victor Adeyemi led members to pray for peaceful
polls and the enthronement of the will of God
over Nigeria.
The 10th year anniversary service witnessed
special prayer sessions in the two services for
the will of
God to reign over the elections.
At Daystar Christian Centre, Oregun, Pastor Sam
Adeyemi urged members of the church to pray
for “those who will fulfill God’s agenda to be
elected .”
Pastor Adeyemi told his 20,000-strong
congregation to pray against violence, bloodshed
and for the will of God over the country.
At St. Gerald Catholic Church Soluyi, Gbagada,
the cleric urged the faithful to vote according to
their conscience.
He warned members against getting involved in
arguments with anyone at the polling station and
also to desist from any form of campaign for any
candidate or political party on the day of the
election.
However, it was a more dramatic scenario at the
Living Faith Church, also known as Winners
Chapel, where Presiding Bishop David Oyedepo
asked members to come with their Permanent
Voters Cards (PVCs).
The cards were used as a “point of contact” to
pray for peace.
Bishop Oyedepo asked the congregation to pray
that God’s will be done at all levels of the polls.
He prayed for wisdom for those in charge of the
election, particularly officials of the Independent
National Electoral Commission (INEC).
At many of the Redeemed Christian Church of
God (RCCG) branches in Lagos, prayers were
said for the elections. One of the pastors, who
declined to be named, urged the members to be
conversant with the electoral laws before, during
and after the elections, while he also urged them
to get their PVCs.
Former vice presidential candidate of the defunct
Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) and the
founder of Latter Rain Assembly (LRA), Pastor
Tunde Bakare, prayed for the success of the
election.
He said: “May God Almighty ensure that Nigeria
wins; may neither of the gladiators win, if the
price we must pay for winning an election is
losing the nation.”
Pastor Bakare also took a swipe at some
delegates to the Constitutional Conference for
“flagrantly distorting the truth,” about the
outcome of the conference.
The cleric, who was an Ogun State delegate to
the confab, berated Afenifere leader Chief Ayo
Adebanjo, who was part of the Lagos camp, for
saying he would not forgive the presidential
candidate of the All Progressives Congress, Maj.
Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, for what he (Buhari)
did in the past.
He said: “The Yoruba went to the National
Conference as a group, but when the March 19
meeting took place, the Deputy Chairman was in
Ibadan, while the Secretary, that led the group to
the confab, was in Lagos.
“The meeting in Lagos had a stain of
unforgiveness. When I heard such sentiments as
‘I will never forgive General Muhammadu Buhari
for what he did as a former head of state’, my
heart sank.”
The pastor criticised the Ibadan group for
“double standard”, saying it erred when it stated
that the Yoruba did not achieve their aims at the
confab.
Clearing the air on his earlier call for election
postponement, Bakare noted that it was not a
call for Interim National Government.
The cleric said he had lifted the “embargo” he
placed on the election, noting that the “issues
have been ameliorated by the shift” of the polls
by the Independent National Electoral
Commission (INEC).