Thursday, 31 July 2014
Call me nihilist but prophesies of Dr. Owuor without a doubt
create an atmosphere of unnecessary fear and tension in the country.
Recent warning by the prophet that there was to be chaos
during the Saba Saba rally, was an addition to the already tension, created by
our political environment. Christianity should be based on peace and good hope,
but looking at the prophet chronology of predictions, we rarely see any
prophecy of good hope. Alluding to the Bible, we get prophets like Isaiah and
Micah whom besides the various warnings gave people avenues of hope. For
example, the birth of Jesus Christ. In fact, Isaiah 1:2 welcomes us with a
stern warning. O hearth, the Lord hath spoken, I have nourished and brought up
children, and they have rebelled against me. Then he comes at chapter 18 with a
hopeful message. Come now, and let us reason together, saith the Lord. Though
your sins be as scarlet, they shall be white as snow, though they be read like
crimson, they shall be as wool.
As a Kenyan I am fade up with corruption, insecurity, rising
cost of living thus I run to the church as an avenue for hope. If in church
too, we get threats and tension, then we do not deserve to live. I would wish
Dr Owuor’s ministry of Repentance and Holiness, and the whole religion
fraternity, to always focus on reconciliation and building a peaceful Kenya.
Prophesies were there before Jesus came, but during His teaching, He focused on
how to live with one another. I Remember His greatest sermon on the mountain,
on lace and how to live with one another.
If Jesus is our icon, let us emulate Him, preach on love,
ride on foal and focus on loving.
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I can see again!
Feature story
I can see again!
By Okumu
Mala
How would you feel spending your days in total darkness then
finally getting to see the light? Sonia Oduor, a third year student in the
school of education knows exactly how it feels to be in this situation.
Sonia lost
her sight shortly after finishing her primary education. She explains that
everything changed. Like a continuous night time without seeing the light of
the day. That transition from being able to see to being totally blind was the
worst experience. Having to use brails and walking stick became mandatory. She
was not able to know how she looked and her social life was affected because
she lost many of her close friends. “I felt alone in this world, everything
turned upside down, is like a plague came and cleared all that I had gathered,”
she explains.
Sonia joined Thika School for the blind, where she learnt how
to use brails and later passed her Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education
examination to join Moi University as an education student.
Sonia life changing moment came in May, when Prophet Dr Owuor
visited Eldoret and she was part of the congregation. She explains that when
the prophet was praying, she felt some spirit rush into her and her eyes opened
suddenly.” I got surprised! I could not believe my eyes, it seemed a dream,”
she exclaimed. That experience was a turning point for her. “I felt reborn
again, like this heavy weight I have been walking with in my life has been
taken away.”
Sonia explains that today she has many new friends, she
receives a lot of attention and she feels good, comfortable and part of a
society she had been longing for, the longer part of her life. She adds that
even though she still has a problem with bright light, she believes she will be
perfectly fine in due time. “My message to everybody out there is believe in
God because He exists. Whether healed or not, God is still there,” Sonia tells
emotionally.
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