Pastor Mensa Otabil has said Africans behave in a manner that makes the
continent look “worse” than the shithole tag slapped on it by US
President Donald Trump.
“Recently some governmental leader of another nation described us in a very very unpalatable term, very annoying term.
“But that term is not prescriptive but it’s descriptive. It just speaks
to … it’s just that sometimes you don’t like the person who is saying
it but you know …
“You don’t like him for saying it but we’re probably worse than the
description. And we seem lost,” Pastor Otabil told his congregation on
Sunday, 4 March when he preached at the 34th anniversary of the
International Central Gospel Church (ICGC).
Also, Pastor Otabil said although Europe introduced the true Christian
gospel to Africa, they white-coated it to make the Caucasian race look
superior to the black man, and by so doing, foisting a dependent and
inferior mindset on the African, Pastor Mensa Otabil has said.
In his view, Africa’s inferiority complex made the continent accept
that “until the white man helps us, we can’t help ourselves.”
The motivational speaker said: “Unfortunately Christianity came to us from them [Europeans]”.
“I say unfortunately because the Christianity that came to us was the
true gospel, but
it was culturally clothed in the European, and, so,
there is the kind of Christianity that we embraced that made everything
white: Jesus is white, angels are white, God is white, and, so, we began
to feel we are nothing, we are not able, we are not even the same
colour with God.
“Now if you think that way, although you are a Christian, and you are
born again, there’ll be a certain sense in your mind that although you
are a Christian, you still are not of the best sort because you are of
the wrong skin colour, so, in addition to our own inability to solve our
problems, we now assign problem-solving to another race.
“So, anytime we are in trouble, we rush to them (assorted levels of
white people). This is what foreigners don’t understand that when we
[Africans] say a white man, it’s not [the same as] what they [white
people] say. For example when an African American says you are white,
it’s different from when an African says you are white. We have assorted
levels. It starts from the European to the Indian and anything in
between; for us they are all white, so, anything that looked different
from us, we conferred our destiny into. So, we need to solve our
problems, there’s filth around us, we don’t solve it, we’re waiting for
the IMF, we’re waiting for the World Bank, we’re waiting for a white
consultant, we’re waiting for somebody to come and solve our problem,
so, we became very inactive.
“It is in this context that God called me. If God called me then it
means that part of my mission is to deal with that problem. First with
the ancestral problem and secondly with the secondary problem of
colonialism and what it has done to us – damaged our sense of confidence
… I believe that that approach of confidence is what we need to turn
our destiny around.
“Unfortunately most Africans talk about going back to Africa, going
back to our roots, I wonder: why do you always say going back to our
roots, why don’t we go for the fruits? The root is down, the fruit is
up. We think being African is imitating the lifestyle of some people who
lived 300 years ago. Imitating them is not being African, because if I
want to become an authentic African, I don’t become an African by
looking backwards, I become an African by looking forward. I have to
interpret my vision, my purpose, my assignment, in Christ, to whom He
has made me an African.
“I don’t want an African past, I want an African future. I don’t want
to imitate what Yaa Asantewaa did, I want to create something new for
myself and my generation. So, if at this time we are still pounding fufu
the same way Yaa Asantewaa pounded it – I grant you your right to eat
your fufu, no matter the calories, but should you prepare it the same
way it was prepared by your ancestors? Can’t you do it differently?
Can’t we look at our lives and say we are going to create something new,
and how do we become an aspirational people: a people who are always
looking forward to better, we are looking for greater, we are looking
for bigger, we are looking for more, how do we become that person? So
that we don’t look around and say: ‘Well this is our life, this is where
we are, it’s okay.
“Look at the number of our people who try to cross the Sahara Dessert
to go to Europe. And believe you me, if that way were open, African
would be empty. It would be empty. If the American Embassy today
decides: this week is free visa for everybody, Ghana would be empty,
Nigeria would be empty. Why are we travelling? It’s not because we have a
sense of adventure, because if we had a sense of adventure we would
have travelled to Mole, we would’ve gone to Kintampo, we have no sense
of adventure, it’s a sense of hopelessness. It’s not adventure, it’s
hopelessness. It’s a sense where you feel nothing good will come from
here.
“But I believe – the bible says Ethiopia, Africa will soon lift up her
hands to God and I believe that time has come. We have stretched our
hands to America, we’ve stretched our hands to Britain, we’ve stretched
our hands to China, to the Soviet Union, to India, it’s time we
stretched our hands to God for ourselves, this time to write our own
story. And I believe that is what this church is all about.
“… I believe we can create and make a new Africa, I believe we can tell
a new story, I believe we can turn the story around, and I believe that
we can make it better. But we can’t make it better until we are built
from the inside because the problem we have is not a lack of money
problem, it’s a lack of confidence problem.
“Believe you me, with all our complaints, we still have oil, we still
have gold, we still have diamond, and we are discovering more and more.
We can discover everything and even discover heaven on earth, it will
change nothing. The solution is not in the natural resources you
discover, but it’s in the confidence you discover that even when you
have nothing on your land and you have something in your head, you can
create something on the land. There are nations with no raw materials
but they have created stuff. There are nations that import water, there
are nations that have nothing, just people and brains and the confidence
that they can use their brains. Now if we have that – the missing link
in Africa is the confidence bit,” Pastor Otabil said.
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