National Prayer Day: Clerics speak openly against vices

Daniel Danis | March 10, 2017 | 6:56 pm

Clergies leading the public in the National Day of Prayer on Friday spoke
out against vices that  they say are eroding the fabric of the society in
South Sudan.

Two prominent religious leaders gave sermons that focus on repentance,
forgiveness, healing, reconciliation, and restoration of peace in the
country.Bishop Dr. Isaiah Majok Dau of the Pentecostal Church and
Archbishop Paulino Lokudu Loro of the Catholic Archdiocese of Juba were
both “blunt and plain” with their remarks.

They called on the people of South Sudan to shun tribalism, accept peace
and embrace true reconciliation.

Below is an excerpt of remarks by Bishop Dr. Isaiah Majok Dau of the
Pentecostal Church:

“I hear people say God has cursed South Sudan. I am afraid, I disagree. We
are not cursed. We are blessed, but we are sinners. That is why we hate
ourselves, that is why we kill ourselves, that is why we backbite
ourselves. So we are the problem. But we have been given opportunity to be
forgiven, to be enriched and to be healed.Our opportunity is if we humble
ourselves. We should consider others better than us by not despising other
people. That means we do not think other tribes are less human than us
because we are from a particular tribe. I don’t care what office you hold,
you are a human-being. And we accept that we can be wrong –that is
humility. Humility is not keeping quiet, but giving other people space in
our heart and in our thinking.We need to pray by turning our attention to
God.  But let me tell you my brother and my sister, money is not God.  All
of us need to turn from our bad ways. That is the meaning of repentance.If
you are repenting today, and you use to kill people, don’t kill anyone
because you have repented. If you are repenting today, and you use to abuse
others, from today, begin to love people. If you were a thief, now that you
have repented, you begin to give to people instead of taking from people.
That is repentance.It is meaningless to say we are repenting, and then we
go do our normal things that we do every day. We are not cheating God, we
are cheating ourselves.If we are repenting, we should stop saying that that
tribe or this tribe, and that person; we begin to say the people of South
Sudan are my people.Let us turn from our wicked ways, people of South
Sudan. If we want God to forgive us, let us humble ourselves.We need true
healing in this country. We are sick with hatred, killing, war, poverty,
tribalism, we need healing. We need complete healing.If we seek healing,
our economy will be healed, our politics will be healed, our communities,
roads, government will be healed.For those of us who were born in 1955, we
were born in the war, grew up, got married and even our grandchildren
during war. But if today we are turning away from our sins, then I pray
that I will not die in the time of war.I want to see the blessings of God
on South Sudan before I die, I want to see the people of South Sudan
united; I want to see them live in peace and harmony. That is my prayer.And
as I hear the National Anthem every day, I have hope in me. The hope is
that the best is yet to come for this country. God is going to prosper us;
God is going to heal us. But we must repent, we must return to God and we
must unite.The great God of heaven will raise this nation again, and this
nation shall be great one day in the community of nations. There will be a
time that they will welcome you, and they will not ask you like they ask me
at the airports; they say ‘why are you fighting?I pray for a time they will
ask me; how did you get it together? And I will say there is God in heaven,
and he has blessed us.”

Bishop Isaiah handed over three Bibles to President Salva Kiir, First Vice
President, Taban Deng & Vice President James Wani Igga amidst applauds from
the crowd at Dr. John Garang Mausoleum, Juba.

After other proceedings, the Archbishop of the Catholic Diocese of Juba,
Paulino Lokudu made the final remarks to end the function.Here is an
excerpt of his remarks:

“We have been invited to this National Prayer for Repentance and
Forgiveness by the President. I very much hope, and I believe that the
majority of us –so innocent, so good, so sincere in heart have really come
to pray.Your Excellency, the reason why I came here today for this prayer,
is because I know the weak; the poor are the ones to come to pray. And that
is why I really decided to come to pray, because as we are seeing them now
bearing this heat, these sons are the very ones who are touched in their
lives by the difficulties and the desperate situation of our country. We
have come to pray so that God may open our hearts to accept what is really
wrong with us in this country. Since we have been in this heat and in this
moment, our repentance and forgiveness will have a meaning.Your Excellency,
we are praying that may God grant us the results of this prayer. This
prayer, your Excellency, the way I look at it; this situation that we are
seeing with us and among us and in front of us of our situation are a
double-edge sword for us all. This prayer today, I think it is a dangerous
prayer. It is a difficult prayer for us all. It is especially for somebody
and a few of us who might have not prayed well with clear conscience, and
who might not have prayed with the right intentions.This prayer is
dangerous today, because if you have come here, I believe this bitterness
of our heat, will not go in vain, but God will reply to us. I therefore
say, if this prayer is correct and is true, then its about our peace. We
are standing for peace and we are praying for peace. Are we going to choose
peace or evil?Your Excellency, I want to question you; why did you call
this people to the heat here like this; are they coming to choose evil or
to choose peace? Is that what your intention is, to bring us here to suffer
like this? I hope nobody will be sick today because of this heat. I believe
you have invited us to see this suffering because you want peace.Our
government, which way are going to take and what is the government going to
do after this prayer?  Is the government going to choose evil or peace? Mr.
President, take-heed after this. We are telling you that after this prayer,
your Excellency, go into a room and pray and decide for peace in the
country.We expect peace, Justice, forgiveness, genuine dialogue, good
governance, security, rule of law after this prayer. We expect after this
prayer an end to; raping, torture, arbitrary arrests, corruption,
tribalism. These things will continue if this prayer is misused.My brothers
and sisters, our way forward now is working, doing and choosing peace and
not for war.”

 Towards the end of his remarks, Archbishop Lokudu called to the podium
retired bishops; Paride Taban and Nathaniel Garang Anyieth to bless the
nation.

The official function ended at 2:30PM, East African Time.

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