society
CCC Ogo Ayo Cathedral Marks 32nd Adult Harvest With A “Harvest of Appreciation” And Special Ordination Ceremony
CCC Ogo Ayo Cathedral Marks 32nd Adult Harvest With A “Harvest of Appreciation” And Special Ordination Ceremony
Celestial Church of Christ, Ogo Ayo Cathedral (Shekinah Crusader), is set to host its 32nd Adult Harvest & Thanksgiving on December 14, 2025, under the theme “Harvest of Appreciation”, inspired by Psalm 100:4. The event will take place at the church auditorium located at Km 2 Lagos–Ibadan Expressway, Opic Bus Stop, Opic, Ogun State, with the service scheduled to begin at 10:00 a.m. prompt.
This year’s harvest carries a deeper sense of gratitude, reflecting on God’s preservation, provision, and enduring faithfulness throughout the year. As one of the most significant annual events in the cathedral’s calendar, the celebration draws both members and the wider community together in worship, thanksgiving, and joyful reflection.
The harvest will also feature a rich lineup of gospel ministers and music personalities who are expected to elevate the worship atmosphere. Among those set to grace the occasion are Atorishe, Shina Peters, Dare Melody, Kayslik, Apekeola, Megga 99, Segun Nabbi, Queen Busola Oke, and Esther Igbekele, alongside several others from the gospel music community. Their presence highlights the cathedral’s longstanding relationship with artistes who continue to support its spiritual and cultural engagements.
In addition to the musical performances and thanksgiving observances, this year’s event will host a special ordination ceremony. MIC Erelu Oladoyin Kolade, wife of Apesin Lanre Kolade, will be formally ordained as the Grand Matron of the cathedral. A respected community figure, she also serves as the Chief Executive Officer of Sammy T Ventures. Her ordination adds ceremonial depth to the day, underscoring the cathedral’s commitment to honouring service, leadership, and spiritual dedication within its fold.
Beyond the ceremonies, the 32nd Harvest of Appreciation promises a communal experience rooted in the traditions of the Celestial Church of Christ. The atmosphere typically blends reverence with celebration—families dressed in white garments, the choir’s ringing harmonies, and the symbolic harvest procession that marks the high point of the event. For many worshippers, it is a moment to reconnect with their faith and to acknowledge the blessings that have carried them through the year.
Ogo Ayo Cathedral has also strengthened its digital presence, ensuring that members who are unable to attend physically can still participate. The church’s online platforms continue to serve as a bridge for worshippers within and outside the country, especially during major celebrations like this.
The 32nd Adult Harvest & Thanksgiving stands as another milestone in the cathedral’s history—a testament to growth, unity, and unbroken faith. With its strong theme, vibrant programme, and a congregation eager to give thanks, the event is expected to deliver a memorable and spiritually enriching experience.
society
Amb (Dr) Samuel Olorunfunmi Adekoya Bags Multiple Awards and International Honors, Announces New Training Opportunities.
Amb (Dr) Samuel Olorunfunmi Adekoya Bags Multiple Awards and International Honors, Announces New Training Opportunities.
Dr. Samuel Olorunfunmi Adekoya has been recognized with several distinguished international awards celebrating his leadership, humanitarian contributions, and peace advocacy work across nations.
Amb. Dr.) Samuel O. Adekoya who is the Rector of *Pentecost Truth School of Deliverance & Prophetic Ministry Int.* A Non-Denominational Ministry where hundreds of God’s army are trained and equipped for the work of the ministry. Where the ministry focuses on empowering the clergy and laity in Practical Deliverance and Spiritual Warfare Strategies; teaching them how to spiritually map their environments for lasting peace, harmony and victory.
One of the most recent honors he received is an organisation called Heart To Heart Mentoring Int’l, gave him a Mentorship Award. Another Award is the HBIUS President’s Lifetime Achievement and Black Excellence Award took place in August 4, 2024 at the Hartford Marriott in Connecticut, the ceremony is framed as a celebration of outstanding achievers whose work has strengthened communities and inspired broader societal progress. The text on the award materials positions Dr. Adekoya as one of the individuals recognized for sustained service and excellence.
In December 2023, his leadership contributions were further highlighted by Samuel Wright University USA through the presentation of its Leadership Global Award. The certificate accompanying this recognition praises his influence in the global educational space and acknowledges his efforts in promoting human rights and fostering peaceful coexistence. The university’s statement emphasizes his impact on leadership development and his commitment to creating stability and understanding across nations.
His earlier designation as an Eminent Peace Ambassador, awarded in November 2019 by the International Association of World Peace Advocates, forms another cornerstone of his growing global profile. According to the chartered fellowship document associated with the appointment, the role aligns him with international efforts advocating the right of people to live in peace.
Early this year,, in March 2025, Christian Benefits Magazine, by Dr Wole Olarinde honored him with Benefits Awards For Missionary Excellence (BAME).
This recognition is presented as a testament to his longstanding involvement in peace-oriented initiatives and his readiness to support conflict-resolution efforts on a global scale.
Alongside these honors, Dr. Adekoya continues to advance leadership and spiritual development as the founder of the Pentecost Truth School of Deliverance, a non-denominational training institution under Pentecost Truth Ministries. The school has initiated a new round of applications for its specialized programs, which are designed to equip individuals who feel called to ministry or spiritual leadership. The institution describes itself as a specialized ministerial training center for those aspiring to serve their churches, communities, or nations with deeper spiritual insight and capacity.
The school has just graduated 2025 set in all the three classes last Saturday 6th December 2025
The school’s mission is rooted in the conviction that this generation requires spiritually grounded leaders capable of addressing emerging social and moral challenges. Its stated mandate—“Mobilizing God’s End-time Army for end time battles”—reflects an approach centered on preparation, resilience, and doctrinal depth. Guided by the principle “You shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free,” the school positions itself as a beacon for those seeking to combine spiritual empowerment with practical leadership skills.
Collectively, these awards and institutional developments portray a figure engaged in shaping the future of spiritual leadership while maintaining a visible presence in peace advocacy and global education. As applications open for the next phase of training at his ministerial school, Dr. Adekoya’s expanding influence continues to intersect with issues of community transformation, international collaboration, and the grooming of emerging leaders for service in an increasingly complex world.
society
A Personal Reflection on Service, Sacrifice, and Unfounded Attacks
Defending Service: Why the Attacks on Buratai Are Unfair and Unfounded
By Nazir Ribadu
Sometimes, watching public figures get dragged through the mud tells you less about them and more about the state of our public discourse.
As someone who studies Nigeria’s security landscape, not from a news desk but through the dry, factual lens of academic and operational history, the recent allegations against former Chief of Army Staff Lt. Gen. T.Y. Buratai (rtd.) hit a particular nerve. They don’t just seem wrong, they feel like a profound injustice against a man who gave decades of his life to this country.
Let’s be clear: I’ve never met General Buratai. I have no personal connection to him. My “relationship” with his career is through after-action reports, strategy papers, and the timelines of battles fought in our Northeast. And from that vantage point, the idea that he was somehow in cahoots with the very terrorists he was tasked with destroying isn’t just illogical; it’s an insult to the painful, gritty reality of that war.
Think about the sheer human contradiction of that claim. This is the officer who, for years, bore the immense weight of command during one of our nation’s most brutal conflicts. His days and nights were consumed by the fight against Boko Haram and ISWAP.
As a Security and Intelligence Analyst, we studied the tactical shifts under his command, the difficult pivot to the “Super Camp” strategy, the push to retake and hold territory. These weren’t abstract concepts; they were decisions that affected the lives of thousands of soldiers and civilians.
To suggest that the man at the helm of that struggle was secretly funding the enemy doesn’t add up. It collapses under the weight of its own absurdity.
Where is the proof?
In our world, serious allegations are backed by evidence, arrests, indictments, formal investigations. But here, there’s only silence from every official quarter: the EFCC, the DSS, our financial intelligence units. Nothing!!
Instead, the entire case seems to be built on whispers and “anonymous sources” funneled through an outlet, Sahara Reporters, with a troubling track record.
And this is where it becomes personal. We’ve seen this pattern before. Just recently, the Plateau State government had to publicly condemn a false report about a bomb blast in Jos. A story that caused real panic.
Also, Ekiti State officials have detailed how their financial data was misrepresented to create a false narrative. They had to condemn the report made by Sahara Reporters.
When an outlet repeatedly gets things so wrong, often with consequences that hurt communities and reputations, it loses the benefit of the doubt. It starts to look less like journalism and more like a weapon.
Is it so hard to believe that a man who held one of the toughest jobs in Nigeria, who inevitably had to make decisions that upset powerful people, is now a target for those seeking “a pound of flesh”?
What gets lost in this noise is the human story of service. This was a 40-year career that culminated in the hottest of seats.
Whatever your political views, the man served. He faced a monstrous enemy and, according to the military’s own records, achieved hard-fought gains: territories were reclaimed, key terrorist commanders were neutralized.
In a sane society, we would at least be able to separate honest critique of strategy from vile character assassination. We should be debating his legacy, not defending his basic loyalty.
That’s what saddens me the most. We have a habit of tearing down our own, especially once they leave the stage.
Instead of a nuanced conversation about security policy, we get baseless scandals. General Buratai is a case study, literally, I use his tenure in some of my classes, in military leadership under extreme pressure. He deserves to have that record discussed based on facts, not vapor.
So, from one citizen to another, I find this whole episode tragic. If we disagree with a leader’s methods, let’s argue about that. But to spray poison on a man’s entire life’s work with no evidence? That doesn’t make us clever investigators. It makes us ingrate.
General Buratai has every right to demand a retraction, not just for his own name, but to push back against a culture of lies that cheapens the very concept of sacrifice for this nation.
Somewhere underneath the general’s uniform and the headlines is a human being who served Nigeria. That, at the very least, deserves our basic fairness.
Nazir Ribadu
PhD Security Studies and International Relations.
Security and Intelligence Analyst.
society
Opinion: Dear General Elijah Ayodele, Where Is the Next Coup Taking Place?* By Sammy Godson
*Opinion: Dear General Elijah Ayodele, Where Is the Next Coup Taking Place?*
By Sammy Godson
Seeing the title General attached to Elijah Ayodele may surprise many because everyone knows he is not a member of the army, nor has he ever been publicly addressed as such. But permit me to rechristen him, because at this point, his revelations on security matters go far beyond what an army general’s intelligence can cover.
General Elijah Ayodele is a prophet and the leader of the INRI Evangelical Spiritual Church in Lagos, yet one wonders how he has accurately foretold coup-related events across Africa—events that have been happening exactly as he mentioned.
There is a huge difference between vaguely predicting that coups will occur in a continent and specifically naming the exact countries where they will take place—and seeing them happen precisely that way. Even the world’s most powerful army general cannot achieve such accuracy, no matter the intelligence available. It is absolutely impossible.
An army general is limited to the affairs of his own country. A Nigerian general cannot know of a coup being planned in Benin Republic, and vice versa. Yet General Elijah Ayodele will sit in Lagos and speak of dangerous events such as military coups in distant countries, and they happen exactly as though he wrote the script.
This simply shows that General Elijah Ayodele is firmly connected to the throne of heaven, from where all things are revealed. As the Bible says, God does nothing without revealing it to His prophets. His prophets are His generals, and in Nigeria, we can boldly say that General Elijah Ayodele is not just a member of God’s troops but a commander—no one else comes close.
Starting with the latest coup attempt in Africa, which occurred in Benin Republic: on Sunday morning, a group of soldiers seized the national television station to announce that they had taken over the country and removed President Talon from power. They declared the suspension of all political activities and the constitution. It was a tense situation before the soldiers were repelled, resulting in the ultimate failure of the coup.
This did not happen without General Elijah Ayodele mentioning it days earlier. He had spoken about it at least three times, with the last warning given on Friday—just two days before the incident. He said some countries would experience revolutions through coups or elections, and Benin Republic was among them. He warned these nations to prepare, and within two days, it happened.
His exact words were:
“The following nations will face revolution in the coming year, either by coup or any other way. There will be disorderliness in the following countries: Cameroon, Chad, Niger, Mali, Tanzania, Benin Republic, Ethiopia, South Sudan, and Uganda. Let them prepare for the challenges ahead.”
Recently, a coup also occurred in Guinea-Bissau after the presidential election. The army announced that they had taken over the country, suspended all electoral activities, and removed the president from power.
This, too, did not occur without General Elijah Ayodele’s warning earlier in November. He called on the president to be careful during the election and not tamper with the process, warning that a coup could occur if he attempted it. In videos and news publications, he advised the president to step down if he lost, so as not to be removed unconstitutionally.
He said:
“In Guinea-Bissau, there is going to be an election, but if there is a coalition and the president tries to rig the election, the country will turn to fire. There will be anarchy, and the impossible coup can be possible. To the president: if you lose this election, just leave. Don’t force yourself because you will fail.”
Additionally, during a live service on November 11, General Ayodele said that Guinea-Bissau would experience military action. He specifically warned that the president would lose relevance and would need to take urgent steps to stabilize the country.
His words were:
“Guinea-Bissau: The country isn’t yet settled; there is still a crisis. They will be fighting seriously. The president will not be reckoned with, and the military will carry out another action. The president must be ready to do anything to stabilize the country because I see a crisis in Guinea.”
Let us also not forget the reported attempt to unseat President Bola Ahmed Tinubu months ago, which allegedly led to the removal of some service chiefs. Weeks before the incident, General Ayodele specifically mentioned that soldiers were angry with the president and that powerful Nigerians were planning to use the military against him.
He warned:
“There will be an attempt to unseat Tinubu unconstitutionally; the NSA, DSS, and Chief of Army Staff must be careful. There are gangs planning between November and January to unseat him.”
“Even the Navy and Air Force will be part of it, including the Nigerian Army. President Tinubu must be ready for anything and fortify himself. He needs to change his security strategy because these personalities will be unbelievable names.”
In July 2025, he had also said that Tinubu must strengthen his security system because he foresaw an attempt to carry out a coup against his government.
“I see an attempt to take power from him (Tinubu) in an unconstitutional manner. God warns him to take his personal safety seriously. What I saw was coup-like, with tension everywhere.”
Going back further, in 2019—before the 2020 coup in Mali—General Ayodele warned in his prophecy for 2020 (released in December 2019) that there would be a gang-up against the president. Just months into the new year, it came to pass.
He had said:
“There will be a gang-up against the Malian president. The country should pray against protests and disorderliness.”
In Gabon, before Ali Bongo was ousted, General Ayodele stood in his church on October 7, 2022, during a live service and advised Bongo to resign because the military would remove him. This was long before the election that ultimately ended in a coup.
He told Bongo:
“Gabonese president, your time is up. I am seeing a crisis, if not a coup d’état. Because of your health, why not resign? Why do you want to die on this seat? I am telling you what the Lord has said. Your staying on the throne is killing you. You are incapacitated, but no one is telling you the truth. I am advising you to humble yourself, resign, and hand over to someone who can do better so you won’t cause a crisis in your country.”
Other coups—including those in Niger and Burkina Faso—were also foretold by General Ayodele. Even though some governments did nothing until events swept them away, one thing is certain: none of them can ever say the prophet did not warn them.
However, for the sake of the good citizens of the nations concerned, I would like to ask the General:
Where is the next coup taking place?
Thank you.
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