I greet you Mazi Nnamdi Kanu. Indeed, I must confess that your quest for the freedom of Biafra is second to none. Your love for truth and sense of justice is highly remarkable.
As a priest and prophet of God, I speak the truth without fear or favour. When it is good I say it, and when it is not I say it as the Lord lays it in my heart.
1. I have never for one day discouraged the freedom of Biafra if there are justifiable reasons to its necessitation. However, I have also unequivocally stated in my writings severally that, the leaders of the East and her elites would have a reasonable role to play in union with your group for this freedom to come through in accordance with God’s will.
When God sent Moses to Egypt for the freedom of his people, he told him to gather the elders of Israel (3:16). If Moses did not succeed in gathering the elders, that mission may not have been accomplished. Rather than freedom, a destruction on Biafra may ensue among it’s own people if there is no unity among IPOB and the constituted government in the East.
2. God may have called you for this freedom mission. However, you must not become God yourself. Anger is the worse enemy of any visionary or charismatic leader. Remember Moses, who struck the rock twice out of anger rather than speaking to the rock as God instructed, what became of him with relation to the promised land? (Deuteronomy 32:51-52; Numbers 20:10-11).
I saw a live broadcast video of yours (3-8-21) in which you made an unnecessary and derogatory utterance “to placing a curse in public” on a Catholic Bishop, if…” Everyone has a freedom to say what he or she wishes, just as you say yours. If the bishop speaks about unity in diversity, that is his opinion. You may disagree by sharing your opinion without being furious as to making such an utterance of disrespect against the institution which the Bishop represents.
Who can curse an ordained priest of God, a consecrated bishop, and an apostle of the Church? Do not go beyond the limit of the role which God may have given you to play.
Shalom!