The Hallelujah Challenge is a brain
child of gospel singer, Nathaniel Bassey. In essence, the singer streams
an hour of praise and worship on his Instagram page and enjoins others
to fellowship with him for an hour between 12am and 1am.
child of gospel singer, Nathaniel Bassey. In essence, the singer streams
an hour of praise and worship on his Instagram page and enjoins others
to fellowship with him for an hour between 12am and 1am.
The one month programme caught on like
wild fire and in no time, celebrities caught the bug. In less than a
month, the programme has trended on Instagram and Twitter for days and
it has over 600,000 views.
wild fire and in no time, celebrities caught the bug. In less than a
month, the programme has trended on Instagram and Twitter for days and
it has over 600,000 views.
As they say, there are two sides to a
coin and while many have openly commended the initiative, some have come
out to condemn it. For instance, social media influencer Joy Bewaji had
a contrary opinion on the movement. On her Facebook wall, she wrote,
“#HallelujahChallenge will succeed bigly in Nigeria. That’s a given. Not
a miracle. Religion is the bedrock of our confidences and convictions.
Reinhard Bonnke succeeded in the 90s with his exaggerated revivals in
Nigeria. Adeboye succeeds every first Friday of the month, leaving
travellers along Ibadan-expressway pulling out their hair (the irony of
that situation: a god worshiping mission that makes people swear and
curse in god’s name for hours of traffic they have to suffer just so a
few can practise a religion). Christ Embassy succeeded on television. No
ministry is yet to beat the hours dedicated to Oyakhilome’s theatrics.
Religion succeeds in Nigeria. If I start a church today, it will
succeed. Calling or no calling. Because we are not people given to
anything apart from an obsession with things we cannot see or have any
control over, whilst all that we see rot away and are destroyed by our
innate corruption. This cute online revival will change nothing; even if
we gather half the numbers in Nigeria to spread their faith on Third
Mainland Bridge and cry out to God (apart from that good feeling that
plasters your heart after belting out and sweating on a few hallelujah
songs). This is the era of knowledge. We are not Israelites under Moses.
Salvation has come. Jesus has come and died. What else do you want? We
have had too many spiritual revolutions. What we need is a mental one.
You cannot pray Nigeria to greatness. It is impossible for God to move
in a country where we allow our police to discard rape cases with the
wave of a hand, and our politicians rob us blindly. It is not up to God
to save the rot in our educational institutions or fix the drainage on
our roads. It’s up to us. And we can’t do any of that on our knees. We
get shit done in 2017 by cerebral drudgery.”
coin and while many have openly commended the initiative, some have come
out to condemn it. For instance, social media influencer Joy Bewaji had
a contrary opinion on the movement. On her Facebook wall, she wrote,
“#HallelujahChallenge will succeed bigly in Nigeria. That’s a given. Not
a miracle. Religion is the bedrock of our confidences and convictions.
Reinhard Bonnke succeeded in the 90s with his exaggerated revivals in
Nigeria. Adeboye succeeds every first Friday of the month, leaving
travellers along Ibadan-expressway pulling out their hair (the irony of
that situation: a god worshiping mission that makes people swear and
curse in god’s name for hours of traffic they have to suffer just so a
few can practise a religion). Christ Embassy succeeded on television. No
ministry is yet to beat the hours dedicated to Oyakhilome’s theatrics.
Religion succeeds in Nigeria. If I start a church today, it will
succeed. Calling or no calling. Because we are not people given to
anything apart from an obsession with things we cannot see or have any
control over, whilst all that we see rot away and are destroyed by our
innate corruption. This cute online revival will change nothing; even if
we gather half the numbers in Nigeria to spread their faith on Third
Mainland Bridge and cry out to God (apart from that good feeling that
plasters your heart after belting out and sweating on a few hallelujah
songs). This is the era of knowledge. We are not Israelites under Moses.
Salvation has come. Jesus has come and died. What else do you want? We
have had too many spiritual revolutions. What we need is a mental one.
You cannot pray Nigeria to greatness. It is impossible for God to move
in a country where we allow our police to discard rape cases with the
wave of a hand, and our politicians rob us blindly. It is not up to God
to save the rot in our educational institutions or fix the drainage on
our roads. It’s up to us. And we can’t do any of that on our knees. We
get shit done in 2017 by cerebral drudgery.”
When Saturday Beats reached out to the
initiator of the challenge, he seemed unruffled by the attacks as he
said that they were expected.
initiator of the challenge, he seemed unruffled by the attacks as he
said that they were expected.
Bassey said, “The attacks and
criticisms were expected. I was humbled when the attacks began. I read
one of the attacks whereby I was placed side by side with my General
Overseer, Pastor Adeboye, Chris Oyahkilome, Reinhard Bonnke and when
they mentioned my name, I felt like one of the disciples in the bible
who was so privileged to be flock for Christ. I was joyous. When you
look at it, you realise that it is the story of life. Nothing of great
repute happens without criticism and there is no innovator that has not
been criticised. We celebrate Microsoft and Apple for their innovations
but they faced criticism. Thomas Edison failed over 900 times when
inventing the light bulb and he was called a failure and all manner of
names but today, we celebrate his invention. I have read a lot of
biography and there is absolutely no great man in history that has not
been criticised. Let’s talk about the scripture, Abraham left everything
and followed God and people thought he was crazy. Jesus, our Lord and
saviour was criticised a lot and no one on earth has been criticised as
much as Jesus Christ. What it does is that it puts us in good company. I
am sure when Martin Luther King said he had a dream, people thought he
was crazy. Criticism comes with our faith. I think with the way God
works, all the criticism only helped the project grow because it made
people curious. What the devil meant for evil worked to our favour. The
criticism has actually done a great awareness for what we are doing.”
criticisms were expected. I was humbled when the attacks began. I read
one of the attacks whereby I was placed side by side with my General
Overseer, Pastor Adeboye, Chris Oyahkilome, Reinhard Bonnke and when
they mentioned my name, I felt like one of the disciples in the bible
who was so privileged to be flock for Christ. I was joyous. When you
look at it, you realise that it is the story of life. Nothing of great
repute happens without criticism and there is no innovator that has not
been criticised. We celebrate Microsoft and Apple for their innovations
but they faced criticism. Thomas Edison failed over 900 times when
inventing the light bulb and he was called a failure and all manner of
names but today, we celebrate his invention. I have read a lot of
biography and there is absolutely no great man in history that has not
been criticised. Let’s talk about the scripture, Abraham left everything
and followed God and people thought he was crazy. Jesus, our Lord and
saviour was criticised a lot and no one on earth has been criticised as
much as Jesus Christ. What it does is that it puts us in good company. I
am sure when Martin Luther King said he had a dream, people thought he
was crazy. Criticism comes with our faith. I think with the way God
works, all the criticism only helped the project grow because it made
people curious. What the devil meant for evil worked to our favour. The
criticism has actually done a great awareness for what we are doing.”