The General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of
God, Pastor Enoch Adeboye; as well as the General Overseer of Mountain of Fire
and Miracles Ministries, Dr. Daniel Olukoya; were amongst the first to release
New Year prophecies for Nigeria on Saturday.
The clerics made this known in separate announcements during
their Crossover Services to usher in the Year 2022.
Adeboye grouped his prophecies for the New Year into three
categories: personal, Nigeria, and intercontinental.
For personal, the 79-year-old preacher said, “More than 80%
of projects starting in 2022 will succeed.
“This year will be a year of the emergence of previously
unknown stars.
“In spite of everything happening, this year will be a year
of some massive breakthroughs (in science and in finance).
“Infant mortality rate will drop by at least 50%.”
For Nigeria, he said, “You don’t make omelette without
breaking eggs.” According to the Oxford Lexico dictionary, the English proverb
means: One cannot accomplish something without adverse effects elsewhere.
On the Intercontinental scene, Adeboye said, “The issue of
migration will take a new turn in the new year.
“There will be two monstrous storms (one coming from the
Atlantic and one from the Pacific) unless they are weakened, the results will
be terrible.”
On his part, Olukoya, in his 37-point prophecies for 2022,
said Nigerians need to pray against inflation, starvation and political
instability.
He said, “We need to pray against inflation and starvation.
“We need to pray
against massive political instability which will put a lot of people in
disarray.
“We need to pray against strange deaths.
“The church needs prayers against increased persecution of
Christians.
“The God of the suddenly is preparing something for Nigeria
and will answer the prayers of His children. For any power that wants Nigeria
to sink shall sink, and any power that wants Nigeria to die shall die; they
will drink their own blood and eat their own flesh, until they are drunk with
it.”
For some years now, the release of prophecies by men of God
in Nigeria and some overtly religious countries has become one of the rituals
of the Christmas and New Year celebrations.
Recall that Ghana banned doomsday
prophecies but some legal luminaries have described the move by the Anglophone
West African country as illegal, adding that it was tantamount to restricting
free speech.
A Professor of Theology at the Lagos State University, Dapo
Asaju, had also said though false prophets now project their “imaginations and
permutations” as New Year prophecies, genuine prophecies still exist and they
are vital as “guide to the future and to know the mind of God concerning the
future” in order to avert disasters.
Asaju, a former Vice-Chancellor of Ajayi Crowther University
Oyo and Bishop Theologian of Anglican Church of Nigeria, had urged genuine
clerics to be measured in the delivery of their prophecies so as not cause
disequilibrium in the society.
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