Saturday, 4 January 2014
How religion underdeveloped Nigeria
Religion is the believe we have in God in whom we rendered
Our service and worship.
In fact, despite the hysterical shibboleths of
sycophants, broad sections of Nigerians
believe, correctly, I am afraid, that President
Jonathan’s administration is among the most
corrupt since independence. If religion were a
force in fostering good leadership, Nigeria
would have been the greatest country in the
world, even surpassing the United States, given
her incredible human and material resources
and clement weather conditions.
Accordingly, outward show of religiosity by our
leaders does not have appreciable positive
impact – probably they are pretending in order
to deceive gullible Nigerians. I am not surprised
that President Jonathan’s religious
devotedness has not really helped him fight
corruption and indiscipline effectively, because
reliance on supernatural assistance for
exemplary leadership tends to discourage
critical and creative thinking that can generate
valid solutions to the problem of haphazard
development. That said, the Islamic and
Christian clergy currently hobnobbing with Mr.
President, governors and so on are mostly
cash-and-carry “men of God” only interested in
boosting their bank accounts and prestige.
Prominent imams and pastors supported the
odious regimes of military dictators, just as
President Jonathan is receiving unalloyed
backing from prominent pastors. Considering
the closeness of our failed leaders to
sycophantic pastors and imams, the latter
appear to have connived with the former to
impoverish the people more and more since
they do not want to lose the benefits and
privileges they enjoy being close to the
corridors of power.
Ideally, religious leaders should be bold in
speaking out against injustice, corruption, and
impunity in government. In our own case,
fawning members of the clergy are
pusillanimous; they pretend that “it is well,” and
continuously ask Nigerians to pray for their
leaders. The only prayer our leaders deserve, if
indeed there is a God that answers prayers, is
the request that those guilty of corruption and
incompetent leadership should be afflicted with
protracted terrible and incurable diseases that
will prevent them from enjoying their ill-gotten
wealth. Looking at the main theme from a
different angle, on the strength of Section 10 of
the 1999 Constitution which prohibits adoption
of a state religion, Nigeria is often referred to as
a secular state. But it is more accurate to
describe the country as a multi religious
society, judging by the overarching influence of
religion in all aspects of our national life.
People hardly realise that the billions of naira
flowing out of the country for government-
sponsored pilgrimages and religious tourism
could have been put to better use in education,
health and general infrastructural development.
If Nigeria were indeed a secular society, why
should the federal and state governments be
involved in financing and organising
pilgrimages to purported holy lands outside
Nigeria? What is the benefit of wasting public
resources in a matter that should be more
appropriately handled by the intending pilgrims
and private organisations? The way I see it,
going to Jerusalem, Bethlehem, and Mecca for
religious purposes is a waste of energy and
resources. For, assuming that Jehovah or Allah
is omnipresent as the faithful claim, what is the
point in spending vast sums of money in holy
pilgrimages, with the risks associated with air
travel, since the supreme being can be
worshipped anywhere? If God can answer a
sincere believer in my village, Ishi-Owerri, what
is the need for travelling to the Middle East?
Another issue to consider is the debilitating
effects of Christian and Islamic doctrines on the
intellect, especially on children and the youth
generally. The scriptures of both religions
contain numerous absurd propositions that can
only be accepted with blind faith. Unquestioned
belief in virgin birth, resurrection, existence of
angels, hell fire and paradise, for example, is
based solely on faith, not on scientific
evidence. Thus, it is regarded as a sign of piety
for believers to be indifferent to the question of
truth concerning these articles of faith. The
negative consequence of this attitude is that
believers hardly try to justify their religious
doctrines with sound argument; the more
violent ones among them readily resort to
violence against those who refuse to believe
what believers believe dogmatically.
The best one gets from most religious devotees
is the sanctimonious fallacious argument that
one ought to believe everything in The Holy
Bible or The Holy Koran because doing so is
socially useful or encourages ethical conduct.
It must be remarked that oftentimes people
have already accepted the fundamental
principles of morality on purely mundane
grounds before citing relevant religious texts as
justification. That is to say, they have a
theology based on their conception of what is
right and what is wrong, and not the other way
round.
Dogmatic assurance of the truth of Christianity
and Islam has done incalculable harm to the
cognitive and affective faculties of Nigerian
youths. Think of all the hocus pocus about sin,
miracles and supernatural interventions
preached several days in a week from different
pulpits in all the churches nationwide; consider
the fiery admonitions of fanatic imams to the
faithful on the need for martyrdom in the cause
of Allah. It is almost impossible to discuss
rationally the difficult challenges of
contemporary Nigeria with the average Nigerian
without the latter expressing total reliance on
the inexorability of divine intervention in the
fullness of time.
A generation fed continuously with the diet of
religious superstition, as is the case presently,
can hardly incubate the critical mass of
creative and bold minds capable of generating
imaginative ideas and implementing them for
positive social transformation. Devotion to the
teachings of Islam and Christianity, usually
distorted by power-hungry, sexually perverted
materialistic preachers and evangelists, leads
to cognitive dissonance and all sorts of mental
disorientation. Pentecostal churches are the
biggest culprits in this respect, because the
general overseers, by relentlessly regurgitating
falsehoods and uncorroborated accounts of
miracles that never took place, disconnect
millions of their followers from the real world,
many of whom suffer severe mental torture
bordering on insanity as a result.
Moreover, there is compelling evidence that
many pastors and imams use diabolical means
to strengthen and consolidate their entrapment
of prominent church members. Thousands of
gullible Nigerians have given away billions in
cash and property to wily demagogues and
criminals masquerading as men and women of
God. Countless others have been rendered
useless by greedy and wicked religious
preachers who readily exploit the existential
fears and gullibility of people to extort money
and property from them. It is impossible to
forget those that lost their means of livelihood
and whose families are destroyed simply
because they succumbed completely to the
sugary banalities of lunatic demagogues in
religious garments. What about sincere
worshippers who died while under the illusion
that they are doing God’s work, and believers
that refused to seek medical help on time or
take their medication due to unshakable trust in
God’s alleged miraculous healing powers?
Culled from Vanguard
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