Home Blog Page 741

Protecting Ecosystems Benefits Humanity – Barbara Creecy

0

This decade will see concerted efforts to protect and revive ecosystems around the world for the benefit of humankind and nature, says Minister of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment, Barbara Creecy.

Addressing the 2021 World Environment Day at the Pretoria National Botanical Gardens on Saturday, the Minister said the restoration of ecosystems means making efforts to recover degraded or destroyed ecosystems, including conserving the remaining ecosystems for the continued delivery of valuable services to the people.

World Environment Day was celebrated under the theme of ‘Ecosystems Restoration’.

South Africa marked World Environment Day in partnership with the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), as well as the 25-year cooperation of the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).

Government has invested more than R26 billion since the inception of the Working for Water programme in 1995 to restore and maintain natural landscapes.

“In the process, more than 3.6 million hectares of land were cleared of invasive alien plants and given an average of around three follow-up treatments.

“For the 2021/22 financial year, 66 432 work opportunities will be created, which will benefit 60% women, 55% youth and 2% people with disabilities,” the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment said.

Over the past 25 years, the department and the United UNDP have worked on several projects collaboratively in areas of biodiversity, climate change and international waters, land degradation, particularly in collaboration with the Global Environmental Facility (the GEF).

“The Global Environment Facility 6th funding cycle has further awarded the country an additional USD6.2 million to implement bioprospecting/biotrade projects, which span across the Eastern Cape, Western Cape, Northern Cape and Mpumalanga provinces.

“The project is currently in its implementation phase, and will enhance local and sustainable beneficiation of the African ginger, Aloe ferox, Rooibos, Honeybush, and Pelagonium sidoides value chains in the above mentioned provinces,” the department said.

This particular programme is co-financed by the infrastructure development leg of the department, which would extend this programme’s impact to Limpopo and KwaZulu-Natal provinces.

“The department has led South Africa to having the most comprehensive GEF portfolio in Africa, and among the top globally.

“It is through such collaboration and solidarity that developing countries can adequately equip themselves to combat climate change,” the department said.

SAnews

South African National Assembly Approves Appropriation Bill

0
South African Parliament (Credit: EWN)

The National Assembly adopted the Special Appropriation Bill and Appropriation Bill during its hybrid plenary sitting on Friday.

The Appropriation Bill officially allocates money from the National Revenue Fund (NRF) to provide for requirements of the state for the 2021/22 financial year, as required by Section 213 of the Constitution and section 26 of the Public Finance Management Act (PFMA).

The national budget of R1.3 trillion for the 2021/22 financial year was tabled on 24 February 2021 by the Finance Minister Tito Mboweni together with the Bill and referred to the Standing Committee on Appropriation for consideration.

Parliamentary spokesperson, Moloto Mothapo, said the committee considered the bill and noted that the 2021/22 budget is centred on government’s medium-term policy priorities of promoting economic recovery and returning public finances to a sustainable path.

It focuses on narrowing the budget deficit while stabilising the debt-to-Gross Domestic Product (GDP) ratio by moderating spending and reducing the public sector wage bill.

“The committee further noted that while the budget shows continued exercise of restraint on spending growth over the medium term, nearly R3 trillion or 56.6% of public funds are allocated to learning and culture, health and social development. The budget also funds a free COVID-19 vaccination programme,” Mothapo explained.

The 2021/22 budget proposes an adjustment to government spending plans as follows:

  • Non‐interest spending is reduced by R27.675 billion in 2021/22, R87.259 billion in 2022/23 and R149.978 billion in 2023/24 financial years. The largest share of these reductions falls on the compensation of employees;
  • A proposed additional R11 billion to the spending framework in 2021/22 for the public employment initiatives. This is part of government efforts to promote economic recovery;
  • An extension of the unemployment insurance benefit through the Unemployment Insurance Fund, increasing the employer/employee benefit to R73.6 billion;
  • Recapitalisation of the Land Bank of R5 billion in 2021/22, R2 billion in 2022/23 and 2023/24 to be funded through reprioritisation;
  • A total of R18.3 billion is added over the MTEF to manage further waves of COVID-19; and
  • A total of R11 billion over the MTEF is added for payments to the New Development Bank and public entities.

Special Appropriation Bill adopted

The National Assembly also, at the same sitting, adopted the Special Appropriation Bill [B5-2021).

Section 16 (1) of the Public Finance Management Act (PFMA) authorises the Finance Minister to request Parliament to appropriate funds from the National Revenue to cover the expenditure of an exceptional nature which is currently not provided for and which cannot, without serious prejudice to the public interest, be postponed to a future parliamentary appropriation of funds.

Mothapo said the COVID-19 pandemic and the worsening economic conditions confronting the country made this Special Appropriation Bill necessary.

“The Bill proposes an additional R1.250 billion to the Department of Health for the procurement of COVID-19 vaccines, and implement a related COVID-19 vaccine research project; and R2.826 billion to the Department of Social Development to fund the extension of the Special COVID-19 Social Relief of Distress Grant.

“In addition, during the 2020 Medium Term Budget Policy Statement (MTBPS), Parliament approved a total of R10.5 billion through the Second Adjustments Appropriation Bill (B25 – 2020) to allow South African Airways (SAA) to implement its business rescue plan.

“The Finance Minister may, on request, approve any portion of the funds allocated to SAA or its subsidiary to use in another subsidiary of SAA. The Bill proposes the reallocation of R2.7 billion in 2021/22 appropriated funds from SAA to fund the financial assets of its subsidiaries,” Mothapo explained.

Following last week’s debate on the Bill, Mothapo said the National Assembly agreed to the Standing Committee on Appropriations (SCoA) reports, which recommended that the House adopts the Bills with amendments.

“The Appropriation Bill will now be sent to the NCOP (National Council of Provinces) for consideration and concurrence scheduled for 18 June 2021,” Mothapo said.

SAnews

South Africa Records Over 5,000 New COVID-19 Cases

0

South Africa has recorded over 5 000 new COVID-19 cases five days in a row, bringing the total number of infections to 1,696,564.

This is after South Africa detected 5,074 new infections on Sunday.

Meanwhile, according to Health Minister, Dr Zweli Mkhize, the death toll has now increased to 56,974 after 45 people succumbed to COVID-19.

Of the latest fatalities, 16 are from Free State, 15 from the Northern Cape, six from the Western Cape, one from KwaZulu-Natal, while the rest of the province recorded zero deaths.

“We convey our condolences to the loved ones of the departed and thank the healthcare workers who treated the deceased patients,” said the Minister.

In addition, 1,578,033 patients have recovered, while the country currently has 61,557 active cases.

“The cumulative total of tests conducted to date is 11,876,594 with 35,821 new tests recorded since the last report.”

According to Mkhize, 1,343,433 people have been vaccinated in South Africa.

Globally, as of 6 June 2021, there have been 172,630,637 confirmed cases of COVID-19, including 3,718,683 deaths, reported to the World Health Organisation.

SAnews

How do we appease the general?, By Ajíbádé Abdullah Adéwálé

0
Buhari n cartoom (Credit: punocracy)

With the situation of things, the General needs to be appeased with six kegs of palm oil and an unblemished female dog, with fresh palm wine.

Wait! But the citizens of this country are ingrates. After all that the kindhearted general has done for them, they had to provoke him to such an extent that Jack, a non-citizen and an innocent man, would have to stretch his back and appreciate the favorable lashes of the General.

Well, now that they have gotten the General angry, he has started communicating in the language they understand; a language even the deaf can hear. Who will help them appease the General? They brought this upon themselves!

By the way, I wonder why the citizens of this country would step on the toes of the General when he has fulfilled 99.9 per cent of his promises and still vows to do more.

The media keeps promoting untrue events to stain the photoshopped image of the General. Why would they lie that kidnappers and terrorists are on a rampage when the General is keenly doing everything to put a stop to it in the language the kidnappers and terrorists understand?

They are blind to the fact that kidnapping has reduced drastically and terrorists have willingly left the country. They even donated their weapons to aid the security agencies of the country in their fight against protesters. Why have they chosen not to report this act of patriotism?

One dollar is now equal to one Naira. The improvements of the healthcare sector have made the General not to travel to receive treatment abroad unlike many other presidents. Through the money being distributed in markets across the country, many of the market women now have shelters. And the poverty rate of the country has dropped to the barest. All these, among other positive developments, yet the citizens of this country do not give the General the accolades he deserves. What else do they want?

Many of them are even calling for the resignation of the General. This gets me laughing. Where has it occurred that a “General” resigns, not to talk of a progress-oriented general?

Well, their actions have gotten the General angry, and he is communicating in the language they understand. Should you not be aware, the General is a polyglot who treats each situation with a distinct language.

Now that he is angry, how will they appease him?

Perhaps we can go for the chief priest’s suggestion by getting six kegs of palm oil, an unblemished female dog, and fresh palm wine. If it doesn’t work, the General will have to continue ruling beyond the next election. Fortunately, he is a kindhearted man and the people may not even want him to leave.

Ajíbádé Abdullah Adéwálé, with the pseudonym Ogbeni pentalk, is a poet and writer from Nigeria. He believes in the saying, “The truth must be told and it must be told at all time.”

General Muhammadu Buhari: Your Time Is Up!, By Rinu Oduala

0
Rinu Oduala (Credit: BBC)

For far too long we have allowed the Nigerian government and the Buhari administration dismiss and downplay the impact and reach of social media on our culture, governance and economy. We let them lie blatantly about how we were simply wasting our time, called us miscreants, tried to delegitimise our collective power to advocate for ourselves on a global platform. We persevered, we mobilised, we crowdfunded, we advocated. But once our online power began to spill offline, into the streets of Akwuzu and Ikeja and Barnawa and Wuse, the government acknowledged us in the only way they seem to value; through reactionary violence.

How can we begin to explain or even make sense of the Nigerian government’s decision to ban a major source for real time news, activism, jobs and accountability?

How can a platform that helps citizens express their dissenting opinions on issues, provide a source of livelihood for people, be banned because the government woke up and wished it into existence?

Twitter, for over 10 years, has served as the primary medium for lightning fast dissemination of information, so powerful in its ability to reach global audiences that even the government was forced to adopt it to prop up its usually ineffective communication strategies. It has become a major information platform helping the government, private sector, businesses, to engage real-time with citizens.

I can’t recall the number of lives saved because of the quick responses from people via twitter; how many kidnap, rape cases, police harassment and extortion cases, armed robbery, mental health responses and breaking news we are able to get daily, because of the real-time nature of Twitter. Only last month, ordinary citizens rallied together to expose a rapist and murderer who had operated with impunity for years, protected, as evidence suggests, by the very law enforcement agencies that are supposed to prevent people like that from operating freely. We mourned the victim, Inibong, as a nation and demanded for change as one voice.

Twitter is the engine which we use to navigate a failing state like Nigeria, and even the president acknowledged it in his swearing-in speech, how the platform aided his win at the polls.

However, on June 4, the current administration showed us how much it is defined by cowardice by suspending Twitter indefinitely. General Buhari of the 1984’s decree 4 is back. The ruse is done and the tyrant is back, but 2021 is not 1984.

Millions of Nigerians use Twitter as a democratised alternative to an incompetent government that refuses to prioritise the welfare of its citizens. Graduates have become micro influencers, bloggers, content creators, and built MSMEs, all of which will be affected by this ban. Through this move, the government has ensured that new businesses won’t come into the country.

It’s time everyone wakes up to see that this government has no plan for the people of Nigeria, other than to return the country to ground zero. Each time youths in this country bring up a plan/idea to survive, this government deliberately ensures we die of hunger and frustration. Mr President promised Nigerians in 2015, a more secure living environment, better economic opportunities, a more accountable government, and a country we can be proud of.

Has Mr President been able to give us all of the above?

We claim to operate a democracy and social media gave people an opportunity to participate in government. Government is a function of people’s participation. However, this government spends its time attacking criticism rather than do its job right.

This administration considers itself a supreme ruler rather than a steward of the electorate, and by banning social media, it has made it clear that Nigeria does not have a democratic government. This is as good as a military regime. It has come to steal, destroy and encourage killings.

In the last six years, we have not experienced what it is like to be Nigerian. The progress we voted for to make Nigeria a place of pride has not materialised. Citizens are treated as enemies of the nation or terrorists when they complain or express their anger.

For a government that has spent more than 2,000 days in office to still blame the opposition party for its failings shows that it has nothing to offer.

Nobody should fall for its tricks any longer.

Remember all this as we draw closer to the polls: There is no sector that this government can be scored 30 per cent in. Instead of this government to cover its face in shame, it is flexing its muscles.

We made jokes about Twitter setting up in Ghana, but we can see that it’s not our tweets that is keeping investors away, it is clamping down on private businesses that keeps investors away! This government is ready to unfairly target any business that sides with the people and upholds their inalienable rights.

What is left of our quality of life as citizens?

What is left of our dignity and respect as people of the world?

Has our President bothered to ask us like he did six years ago, if he can keep us safe when we travel to any part of the country? Are our lives better than it was six years ago?

This is the time to rise with everything in us. This move is a indicator of many worse decisions to come. This is about our future. This is about us as a nation! We can’t get tired now. This anger over losing jobs and a lot more must fuel us to act.

Get back on Twitter.

Get ready to hit the streets strategically!

Let the whole world know we are under a siege of tyranny and as a result, Buhari’s time is up and he needs to go!

Rinu Oduala, a brand strategist, was one of the prominent activists of the #EndSARS campaign.

Dangote Doesn’t Need this Kite!, By Wole Olaoye

0

Beware when a naked man offers to clothe you in fine linen. That is the piece of advice I have for Aliko Dangote, Africa’s richest entrepreneur.

When the headlines caught fire with news that four oil firms, including the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) were planning to acquire a stake in the Dangote refinery, which goes into operation soon, many tongues started wagging. The interest of international companies is understandable, after all Dangote himself has interests in other countries. But a state-owned NNPC? Why would one of the cesspits of opaque oily deals and incompetence dole out public money to buy shares in a private company?

This question becomes more pertinent when you consider the fact that NNPC has failed to successfully run government-owned refineries in Nigeria. This country, which is Africa’s biggest crude oil exporter, imports virtually all of its fuel due to the moribund state of its refineries. It is the view of many analysts that NNPC’s reason for continued existence today is its continued monopoly of the importation of refined petroleum products. There is no greater scandal than the fact that NNPC imports what it is supposed to be producing, thereby picking the pockets of Nigerians through high prices.

Should any company that cares about its reputation be found in bed with NNPC, which loses $340 million per month on PMS sales alone?

Dangote oil refinery, a 650,000 barrels per day (bpd) integrated refinery and petrochemical project, It is expected to be the world’s biggest single-train facility, upon completion. The US $12 billion project is expected to process a variety of light and medium grades of crude to produce Euro-V quality clean fuels, including gasoline and diesel, as well as jet fuel and polypropylene.

NNPC’s Chief Operating Officer, Refining and Petrochemicals, Mr Mustapha Yakubu, was reported as saying that discussions were already going on with the Dangote Group for the acquisition of the stake which, he said, would further ensure undisrupted product supply to Nigerians.

That disclosure riled Dr Uju Ogubunka, a former Executive Secretary of the Chartered Institute of Bankers who wondered how NNPC would give what it does not have: “NNPC has not adequately managed its own assets too well”, he said. “The four refineries under its supervision have not refined at an optimal capacity over a decade” he said, noting that most successful acquisitions were better perfected by private entities.

It is understandable if firms from Western and Middle-East countries, in their quest to secure crude supply agreements, seek to have a 20 per cent minority stake in the $19.5 billion Dangote refinery, which is scheduled for mechanical completion in 2021, with commissioning by January next year. It is understood that Dangote Refinery has held talks with firms, including Vitol (VITOLV.UL) and Trafigura (TRAFGF.UL), over the supply of crude and lifting of petroleum products for sale abroad.

If the disclosure of NNPC’s intention to buy into Dangote Refinery was but kite-flying by government officials to test the waters of public reaction, it is in the interest of the country and even Dangote himself that the kite be shot down quickly.

Anyone with a nodding knowledge of PR 101 will tell you that a continental can-do brand like Dangote should not be seen in partnership with a company that symbolises everything that is wrong with Nigeria. Because of NNPC and the corruption of subsequent governments, Nigerians are forced to wash their faces with spit, even though they live beside the stream.

A brand that enjoys positive perception may shoot itself in the foot when it unwittingly sends negative or subliminal messages in terms of whose company it keeps. It is possible for a company which has not done anything wrong to be negatively perceived — the baggage of the people they’re associating with will drag them down.

Reputation is forever fragile. Experts have compared it to a deck of one trillion playing cards, some of which are meticulously positioned to form the base of a mighty pyramid. Just one costly mistake on your behalf (or a force from elsewhere), they say, can send the whole lot tumbling down (especially when social media plays such a huge role in our daily lives).

A cursory evaluation of what people are saying on social media shows that Dangote has to be wary of the political fallouts of this rumoured romance with NNPC. Whether rightly or wrongly, there are already a lot of people out there who consider Dangote the prime beneficiary of government policies and import duty exemptions. In my neck of the woods, when you’re suspected of being a thief, you must avoid carrying a baby goat under the pretext of dancing with it.

Allowing an underperforming public entity like NNPC to invest public money in an iconic project like Dangote Refinery is to force the new refinery to start on a dark note. Questions will be raised at the National Assembly as to why a Dangote Republic is being created with public funds in the petroleum sector. More questions will follow on how many other Nigerian enterprises the government has bought shares in. Why, for instance, has the government not asked to buy 20 per cent of Innoson Motors or Proforce Auto plant?

And those would be the least of the kind of questions that will be asked, aside from the combustible mix of ethnicity and religion, both of whose fault-lines Dangote seems to have risen above, but which nonetheless come in handy as weapons of brand destruction.

There are many things to admire in Aliko Dangote and his group of companies. It will be sad if all the hard work put into building the Dangote brand over the years is allowed to be smeared by NNPC. Investing public money in private enterprise may be good in some instances but this is not one of them.

This kite ought not to fly. And if it attempts to, it should be shot down.

In reaction to the mass abduction of children from an Islamic school in Tegina, Niger State, Sheikh Ahmad Gumi wants the Federal Government to employ some compliant bandits to fight the hardened ones in order to bring banditry to an end.

We are all horrified by the sight of mere children, some as young as seven, under the guns of kidnappers, but what kind of desperation would make anyone think that one criminal can serve as a mercenary to destroy the satanic kingdom from which he rose? We might as well employ armed robbers to help us tackle armed robbery and employ Boko Haram to tackle Boko Haram. And also negotiate with ISWAP to help us defeat ISWAP.

“Government needs to be proactive with them. We have a lot of them that are ready to fight the bad ones. Use the bad to fight the ugly, and use the good to fight the bad ones when you’re done with the ugly. Look at Boko Haram, who finished Shekau? Was it not the splinter group? So, it is easy, says Gumi.

According to him, “All these agitations you see, if the government can do a splinter group and the splinter group is empowered, every man wants power and money, they will do your job. There are many ready to submit themselves. All the ones you see me meeting in the bush, they are all telling us, ‘we are ready,”

If the circumstances hadn’t been so tragic, Gumi’s suggestion would have elicited uproarious laughter from Badagry to Sokoto; from Maiduguri to Yenagoa. But this is a tragedy of unmitigated proportions and woolly reasoning can’t be deployed in pursuit of a solution.

Should we disband the armed forces, the police and secret security agencies so that we can hand over law enforcement to bandits?

Many people will interpret Gumi’s suggestion as a backdoor way of achieving his clamour that bandits be given amnesty and employed by the government. In my books, a bandit is a satanic phoenix that cyclically burns to death and is reborn from its own ashes. Nothing good can come out of collaborating with outlaws.

Perish the jejune thought!

Wole Olaoye can be reached through wole.olaoye@gmail.com.

This House Must Not Fall, By Niyi Osundare

0
Prof. Niyi Osundare (Credit Dawn Commission)

(Fateful cracks in the wall of The House Lugard Built)

              1

This house must not fall
Though brick after brick
It creaks like a hapless shack
Weighted down by History’s burden

Once Sphere of Influence
Of foreign conquerors who foraged
Distant lands for God and Country;
A fiercely treasured booty between

Treacherous ocean and insatiable desert
A cynical assortment of parts, random, raw,
Which have never mastered
The art of bonding into a steady whole

Bumbling bedlam of tribes and tongues…..
Eating each other’s spleen
Shibboleth-shouters at hellsgate,
Incapable of hearing

“My tribe is triber than yours”

“My tongue is home to more divisive verbs
You surely need an expensive passport
For the country of my madness….”

The devil in the difference
Borne of a misbegotten sameness
A century-old sore festers
On the wound between our minds

Victims of a map
Which forgot its compass
Unable to live with one another
Because we cannot live with ourselves 

              2

Drums of discord
Shouts of war
We heard these noises not long ago
In the war which produced no Victor

But countless Vanquished.
The wounds are legion;
The scars still live in our songs
Memoryless, mad, and utterly blind

Our nation is the toad which forgot its tale
That mindless nanny goat whipped countless times
For repeated transgressions: season after season,
We drown in the same river of unknowing

Always, wrong wo/men in the right places
Hideous, hidebound, insufferably haughty
Medieval in their methods, dark in their deeds
Deaf to the throes of a nation dying in their hands

And so, another season of songs of severance:
Incapable of the wisdom to build the house
We crave for the folly to tear it apart
We act first, and think later

But into how many parts this time?
How many more wars over the spoils of office
How can a land so brave and blessed
Spawn a genealogy of rulers so blind, so blighted

Victims of a map
Which forgot its compass
Unable to live with one another
Because we cannot live with ourselves

             3

Can a country of wise wo/men
Be ruled by a Confederacy of Fools
How foolish must those Ruled be
And how wise the Fools?

Africa’s Sick Giant
Laughing stock of the world
Nigeria thrashes around the jungle
Like a snake with a trampled head

This odd, accidental assortment of
Fierce, dangerously unequal parts
Riled by riot, threatened by rift,
Legatees of a Dubious Imperial Mandate

Too dim, too divided, to RE-make History
And UN-make its errors
Scared of that tough, regenerative Vision
To RE-build this House and make it stand

Every nation is nothing
If not a-work-in-progress
RE-thought, RE-shaped, RE-calibrated
In answer to noble necessity and moral imperative,

From Lord Lugard’s lemon
A jar of regenerative lemonade
For if we let this House fall
We all may fall with it

Victims of a map
Which forgot its compass
Unable to live with one another
Because we cannot live with ourselves

Niyi Osundare, one of Africa’s foremost poets and academics, is Emeritus Distinguished Professor of English, University of New Orleans.

Article of Faith: By His Stripes We Are Healed (2), By Femi Aribisala

0

The Lord laid the iniquity of us all on Jesus Christ. Then He said: “by His stripes, we are healed.” This is quite simply ridiculous and unfair from a human point of view. But it is the wisdom of God.

Healing With Stripes

Let us understand two principles of the kingdom of God here. The first one says: God does not heal with medicine. He heals with stripes. What does this mean?

The principal thing that God heals is sin. He heals sin with the cane. He heals sin with the rod.

David understands kingdom dynamics. So, he says: “Your rod and your staff, they comfort me.” (Psalm 23:4). The Psalmist says: “It was good that I was afflicted, that I might learn your statutes.” (Psalm 119:71).

The word of God says furthermore: “Do not withhold correction from a child, for if you beat him with a rod, he will not die.” (Proverbs 23:13).

If you do not beat him with a rod, he will die. Remember this. God is only concerned about one kind of death: spiritual death. He is not particular about physical death.

Strange Medicine

God does not use medicine to heal. He uses stripes to heal. He uses suffering to heal. He uses affliction to heal.

The president told the nation that anyone who contravenes his new edict would be executed. Soon, his first-born son was falsely accused of the transgression. He was brought before the judge. Everyone knew the trial was a sham. Surely, Mr. President will not kill his son.

But his son was declared guilty and sentenced to death. Surely, Mr. President would not allow his son to be killed but would pardon him at the last minute. However, the son was brought before a firing squad and executed on national television.

After the execution, the president appeared before the nation and repeated his earlier injunction. Anyone who transgresses his edict would be killed. Do you think the people would now believe him?

Yes, they will because this president is crazy. If he did not spare his own son but had him killed for his disobedience, he would surely not spare anybody else. Therefore, by the killing of his son, we are given a healing message: God will not tolerate sin.

“For it was fitting for Him, for whom are all things and by whom are all things, in bringing many sons to glory, to make the captain of their salvation perfect through sufferings.” (Hebrews 2:10).

That is kingdom dynamics. Joseph suffered that his brothers might be saved. He said to them: “But as for you, you meant evil against me; but God meant it for good, in order to bring it about as it is this day, to save many people alive.” (Genesis 50:20).

In effect, Joseph was thrown down a well, sold into slavery, thrown into prison so that his brothers might be saved from famine. If all those bad things had not happened to him, culminating in his becoming the Prime Minister of Egypt, his brothers would have starved to death in the famine that came later.

Therefore, understand this. God uses calamity to heal. He uses sickness to heal. He uses tsunami to heal. He uses these things to instruct, to reprove, to exhort, and to edify.

Someone else’s wounds

“God is our merciful Father and the source of all comfort. He comforts us in all our troubles so that we can comfort others. When they are troubled, we will be able to give them the same comfort God has given us. For the more we suffer for Christ, the more God will shower us with his comfort through Christ. Even when we are weighed down with troubles, it is for your comfort and salvation! For when we ourselves are comforted, we will certainly comfort you.” (2 Corinthians 1:3-6).

What do you do when your Messiah is arrested and beaten to a pulp? What do you do when your Messiah is nailed to a cross and dies? What do you do with a Saviour who cannot save himself? What do you do with a physician who cannot heal himself?

If the children of your doctor were dying one by one of diseases, would you continue to trust him? Would you retain him as your family doctor?

Here is wisdom. If your doctor cannot die of your disease, you cannot be healed. Your healing is not in the drugs that he will prescribe. Your healing is going to come about because of the suffering and the death of your doctor.

The Messiah must suffer because we have no understanding of how God regards sin. He must suffer because sin is deceitful, and God needs to expose to us its deceitfulness. He must suffer because sin is pleasurable, and God needs to show us that it is deadly.

Doctor Jesus

Observe the following. It was the patient who was sick, but it was the doctor who died. It was David who sinned with Bathsheba, but it was his son who died. God transferred the legal punishment for David’s sin to his child.

It was David who sinned by numbering Israel, but it was 70,000 Israelites who died. God transferred the legal punishment for David’s sin to the Israelites.

David said to God: “Was it not I who commanded the people to be numbered? I am the one who has sinned and done evil indeed; but these sheep, what have they done? Let Your hand, I pray, O LORD my God, be against me and my father’s house, but not against Your people that they should be plagued.” (1 Chronicles 21:17).

It was the driver who was drunk, but his car killed many innocent bystanders on the road.

The doctor told the athlete that he has AIDS. The man said: “So what?” The doctor said: “If you have AIDS you will die.” The athlete insisted: “I have just won the gold medal at the Olympics. I feel stronger and healthier than I have ever been in my life.”

So, the doctor suggested an experiment: “Let me contract your disease.” So, the doctor entered into an exchange program with the patient. They put the doctor’s blood in the patient, and they put the patient’s blood in the doctor.

Soon the doctor was afflicted with AIDS. The patient watched the doctor suffering. He saw him growing thinner and thinner. He watched this man emaciate to the bone. He saw him in pain and agony in the prime of his life. One day he came to see him and watched him as he took his last gasp and died.

Surely, the athlete now knows that AIDS is deadly. The Messiah must suffer because by His stripes we are healed. If the Messiah does not suffer, there can be no healing.

God said: The death of the doctor was the healing of the patient:

“That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Isaiah the prophet, saying: “He Himself took our infirmities and bore our sicknesses.” (Matthew 8:17).

Faribisala@yahoo.comwww.femiaribisala.com 

Currency Exchange Rates

USD - United States Dollar
ZAR
0.06
EUR
1.17
CAD
0.73
ILS
0.31
INR
0.01
GBP
1.34
CNY
0.14
Enable Notifications OK No thanks