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Dear Mama LiberiaYour questions are not new, and they are not wrong to ask. Even in Scripture, people questioned God dee...
14/05/2026

Dear Mama Liberia
Your questions are not new, and they are not wrong to ask. Even in Scripture, people questioned God deeply. Book of Job is filled with questions about suffering, justice, and evil. Book of Psalms contains cries like “Why, Lord?” Questioning has always existed within genuine faith.

But my attempts to answer these questions not from emotion alone, but from the broader narrative of creation, freedom, morality, and redemption.

God did not “create evil” as a substance or independent force. Christian theology teaches that evil is the corruption or absence of good — much like darkness is the absence of light. The devil was not created evil; he became evil through rebellion and misuse of free will. Without freedom, love, obedience, and righteousness would be meaningless because they would be forced rather than chosen.

The question then becomes: why allow free will if it can produce suffering? Because a world with genuine freedom also allows genuine love, virtue, sacrifice, and relationship. A programmed humanity may avoid evil, but it would also lack authentic moral agency.

Concerning Adam and Eve, Christianity does not merely teach inherited punishment; it teaches inherited consequence. Human history shows that brokenness reproduces brokenness — violence, greed, pride, corruption, and injustice move across generations socially, spiritually, and morally. The biblical story reflects this reality. Yet the center of the Gospel is not condemnation but restoration.

That is why Christ comes into the story. God does not stand distant from suffering; He enters it. The cross is not God ignoring evil but confronting it through self-sacrifice, justice, mercy, and redemption. The Christian claim is that evil is ultimately defeated not merely by destruction, but by transformation and final judgment.

You are also correct that religion in human hands can become manipulation, control, and hypocrisy. History proves this repeatedly. But abuse of faith does not automatically invalidate God any more than corrupt governments invalidate justice itself. Human failure and divine truth are not identical things.

Faith should indeed produce humility, compassion, truth, and love — not fear-driven loyalty to personalities. Even Jesus Christ consistently challenged religious hypocrisy more than ordinary sinners.

And yes, questioning can be the beginning of understanding. But questioning should move in both directions: not only questioning religion, but also questioning whether human reason alone is sufficient to explain morality, consciousness, purpose, beauty, justice, and the universal longing for meaning.

The strongest faith is not blind belief nor cynical disbelief. It is a faith refined by honest inquiry, humility, reason, and revelation together.

FINAL PART — Faith, Questions, Truth & Why I Still BelieveThis is my final response for now, to our dear brother Mama Li...
14/05/2026

FINAL PART — Faith, Questions, Truth & Why I Still Believe
This is my final response for now, to our dear brother Mama Liberia
After all the discussions, arguments, emotions, theology, history, scholarship, criticism, and unanswered questions, let me now speak personally, honestly, and clearly.
I believe in God.
Not because I am forced to.
Not because I am blind.
Not because I am afraid to think.
And not because I ignore history, science, or difficult questions.
I believe because after studying, questioning, observing life, examining history, human nature, morality, prophecy, consciousness, and existence itself, I still find myself pointing back to one conclusion:
there is a God greater than human understanding.
Now let me balance this carefully.
Yes, there are false prophets.
Yes, religion has been abused.
Yes, some pastors manipulate people.
Yes, churches have made mistakes throughout history.
Yes, there are difficult questions in the Bible.
Yes, there are things theology cannot fully explain scientifically.
But none of those things automatically disprove God.
Human corruption does not erase divine truth.
A fake doctor does not invalidate medicine.
A corrupt judge does not invalidate justice.
And a false prophet does not invalidate God.
That is why even after all the debates, I still stand with faith.
And let me say something many people may not understand immediately:
Even if at the end of my life I discover that Christianity was false, I still would not regret living by many of the principles taught in the Bible:
love, discipline, forgiveness, humility, self-control, compassion, wisdom, honor, patience, peace, and moral responsibility.
Those principles alone have helped millions of people live meaningful and conscious lives.
But personally, I do not believe Christianity is false.
In fact, one of the greatest reasons I still believe is because of the Bible itself.
Think about it carefully.
The Bible was written over a period of more than 1,500 years by dozens of different writers:
from different generations, different regions, different political periods, different languages, different cultures, and different backgrounds. Some were kings. Some were shepherds. Some were fishermen. Some were prophets. Some were scholars. Some were prisoners. Yet somehow, across centuries, the central message remains remarkably connected: humanity, sin, morality, redemption,
judgment, hope, faith, and God’s relationship with mankind.
That level of continuity is one of the most extraordinary realities in literary and religious history.
And here is my challenge:
If there exists another book in human history written across so many centuries, by so many unrelated writers, from different civilizations and languages, maintaining such theological continuity, prophetic structure, historical influence, and global survival, then present it.
If I truly find something greater, deeper, more consistent, and more transformative than what I have encountered in Scripture, then I will honestly reconsider my faith.
Because true faith should never fear investigation.
Now let me say something that may offend both extremists and skeptics: God does not owe humanity complete explanation for everything. There are mysteries none of us fully understand:
life, consciousness, time, death, existence, eternity, creation, spirit,
and the origin of reality itself. Some people online speak as if human intelligence has already solved the universe. It has not.
Whether defending religion or attacking it, all of us are still limited human beings trying to understand an infinite reality with finite minds. And perhaps that is where humility becomes important.
The person questioning religion has unanswered questions.
The pastor defending religion also has unanswered questions.
The atheist has unanswered questions. The scientist has unanswered questions. The theologian has unanswered questions.
No one here fully understands existence.
There are secrets in this universe hidden beyond human intelligence, and none of us posting online — whether supporting or opposing religion — possesses complete intellectual capacity to unravel every mystery of God, creation, and eternity. That is simply reality.
Now let me speak directly about Christ.
Our God is alive. According to Christian belief, Jesus Christ died and resurrected after three days. That is the foundation of Christian faith: the resurrection. Many religious founders died and remained in graves remembered by history. But Christianity stands or falls on one claim: that Christ conquered death. And for billions of believers across generations, that resurrection remains the greatest symbol of hope humanity has ever known. That is why Christians do not merely celebrate the death of Christ. They celebrate the resurrection.
Now, do I understand every mystery in the Bible? No.
Can I answer every scientific or theological question perfectly? No.
Do some questions remain difficult? Yes.
But uncertainty is not the same as falsehood.
Even science continues discovering things it once denied. Human knowledge evolves constantly. So I choose humility over arrogance.
Faith over hopelessness. Wisdom over blind emotion. And conscious living over reckless existence. I believe heaven and hell are real. But even if someone argues otherwise, I would still rather live my life consciously: loving people, seeking truth, helping others, walking with purpose, guarding my soul, and preparing for eternity rather than living carelessly without moral direction.
Because one day all of us — believers, skeptics, pastors, critics, rich, poor, famous, unknown — will eventually face the reality of death.
And beyond arguments, debates, podcasts, Facebook posts, theology, and internet opinions, every human being will someday confront eternity personally.
At that point, intelligence alone will not save us. Pride will not save us. Arguments will not save us. Only truth will matter. So question wisely. Study deeply. Think critically. Reject manipulation. Reject blind loyalty. But also remain humble enough to admit that human knowledge has limits. And in the middle of all the confusion, noise, religion, hypocrisy, arguments, and history, I still choose God.

PART 2 — History, Biblical Questions, Colonial Influence & The Truth Many People Were Never TaughtBefore some people bec...
14/05/2026

PART 2 — History, Biblical Questions, Colonial Influence & The Truth Many People Were Never Taught
Before some people become emotional, let me say this clearly:
This discussion is not an attack on God.
It is not hatred against sincere Christians.
And it is not an attempt to destroy anyone’s faith.
This is about history, theology, scholarship, critical thinking, and truth.
Because whether one believes or not, knowledge matters.
And if a belief system is rooted in truth, then it should never fear questions, research, history, evidence, or honest discussion.
For too long, many people have been taught only what to believe, but not how to think critically about what they believe.
So let us talk intelligently.
One of the biggest misconceptions many people have is thinking the Bible simply appeared exactly as we see it today.
Historically, the Bible is a collection of writings produced over many centuries by different authors, in different locations, languages, cultures, and political periods.
The earliest biblical texts were primarily written in Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek.
The modern English Bible came much later through centuries of copying, translating, editing, interpretation, and canonization.
This is not conspiracy theory.
This is accepted biblical scholarship.
The word “Bible” itself simply means “books.”
The Bible is therefore a library of writings, not a single handwritten document that fell directly from heaven in English.
Now let us go deeper.
Jesus was not European.
Jesus was not a Christian in the modern religious sense.
Historically, Jesus was Jewish.
His disciples were Jewish.
The earliest followers of Christ were Jews.
The word “Christian” was first used later in Antioch to describe followers of Christ.
So Christianity, originally, was not meant to be merely a denomination, a political system, or a commercial institution.
It was about faith, transformation, moral living, truth, and spiritual devotion.
And contrary to what many people were taught, Christianity did not originally belong to Europe.
Africa played a major role in early Christianity long before much of Europe became Christianized.
Christianity existed very early in Ethiopia and Egypt.
Alexandria became one of the greatest centers of Christian scholarship in history.
Some of Christianity’s most influential theologians came from North Africa.
So no, Christianity itself is not “the white man’s religion.”
However, history also forces us to admit something uncomfortable:
during colonization, European powers often mixed Christianity with empire, politics, slavery, and cultural domination.
Missionaries sometimes brought education, literacy, hospitals, and churches.
But colonial systems also used religion as a tool of influence and control.
Many Africans were taught:
their culture was inferior,
their spirituality was evil,
their names were uncivilized,
and European religious systems represented “true civilization.”
That historical reality cannot honestly be denied.
This does not automatically make Christianity false.
But it does mean we must separate:
God from empire,
faith from manipulation,
and spirituality from colonial politics.
Now let us talk about the Bible itself.
The Bible was not assembled overnight.
Over centuries, religious leaders debated:
which books should be included,
which writings were authentic,
which texts were theological,
and which should remain outside the canon.
There were many ancient writings circulating:
gospels,
letters,
teachings,
historical records,
and apocalyptic texts.
Some were accepted.
Others were rejected.
This is why different Christian traditions still have differences in certain biblical books today.
Again, this is not anti-Christian propaganda.
This is documented church history.
Now let us address “possible errors” and contradictions people often raise.
Many times, these debates involve:
translation issues,
manuscript variations,
symbolic interpretation,
historical context,
or differences between ancient copies.
Remember:
before printing presses existed, biblical manuscripts were copied by hand for centuries.
Because of this, biblical scholars today openly study:
textual variations,
missing verses,
translation differences,
historical inconsistencies,
and manuscript history.
Some Gospel accounts describe events differently.
Some numbers vary across manuscripts.
Some verses appear in later copies but not earlier ones.
These are real scholarly discussions.
Serious theologians already know this.
The existence of difficult questions does not automatically destroy faith.
But pretending those questions do not exist is intellectually dishonest.
And this is where we must distinguish between informed faith and blind loyalty.
Blind faith says:
“Never ask questions.”
Healthy faith says:
“Seek understanding.”
Questioning theology is not evil.
Studying history is not rebellion.
Research is not demonic.
Truth should survive investigation.
One reason many young Africans are becoming skeptical today is because modern religion has become heavily commercialized.
Today we see:
miracle marketing,
celebrity prophets,
fear-based preaching,
online prophecy businesses,
financial manipulation,
and emotional control disguised as spirituality.
Some leaders weaponize fear, guilt, fake prophecy, and “seed offerings” to manipulate vulnerable people.
That deserves criticism.
And criticizing abuse is not hatred toward God.
In fact, even the Bible repeatedly warns about false prophets.
But balance still matters.
Not every pastor is fake.
Not every church manipulates people.
Not every believer is brainwashed.
Many sincere Christians genuinely help communities, educate children, feed the poor, counsel families, and live morally disciplined lives.
Some people have experienced real spiritual transformation through faith.
So this conversation must remain mature, balanced, and intelligent.
Reject manipulation.
Reject blind loyalty.
Reject fear-based religion.
Reject intellectual laziness.
But also reject arrogance, hatred, and ignorance pretending to be intelligence.
The goal should not be to insult believers.
The goal should be truth, wisdom, understanding, historical honesty, and critical thinking.
Whether you are Christian, Muslim, atheist, traditionalist, or undecided, one thing remains true:
A lie fears investigation.
Truth does not.
And if faith is genuine, it should never be afraid of:
history,
archaeology,
scholarship,
difficult questions,
or honest conversation.
Know God for yourself.
Study for yourself.
Think for yourself.
And never surrender your mind completely to any human being claiming to speak for God.

Mama Liberia, here you have it (Part 1)I have been patiently waiting to see my elders or other brothers in the faith pro...
14/05/2026

Mama Liberia, here you have it (Part 1)
I have been patiently waiting to see my elders or other brothers in the faith provide a meaningful response without emotions to your recent claims and questions you posted. To the few that responded by posting, I must commend you all, but also, everyone of you spoke out of emotions. You all should be able to discern this season and know that this is a gateway for a massive digital evangelism given that the person in question has many followers and wider audience whom, some have not had the time or space to hear the truth as it relates to our believe in God.
Religion has become one of the most sensitive subjects in our society because too many people have mixed up God with business, faith with manipulation, and spirituality with performance.
Let me make something clear before anyone misunderstands this post:
Criticizing false prophets is not attacking God.
Questioning religion is not hating Jesus.
Asking difficult questions is not rebellion.
In fact, truth should never fear questions.
But at the same time, we also have to be honest and balanced:
Not every pastor is fake.
Not every church is a scam.
Not every believer is gullible.
There are still genuine men and women of God who sincerely serve people with humility, integrity, wisdom, and love. Some pastors quietly help communities, feed the poor, counsel broken families, educate children, and lead people spiritually without exploiting them for money or fame. Those people deserve respect too.
The real problem is not faith itself.
The real problem is when religion becomes a tool for control, fear, manipulation, politics, or enrichment.
Too many modern “prophets” have turned spirituality into entertainment:
every day prophecy,
every day threats,
every day “God told me,”
every day online shouting for gifts, offerings, and attention.
Some have commercialized the name of God so much that many young people no longer know the difference between true faith and performance.
And honestly, people have a right to question that.
Now let’s address something deeper and more intelligent historically and theologically:
God is not a Christian.
Jesus was not a Christian.
And Jesus never founded “Christianity” as a modern organized religion.
Historically, Jesus was a Jew. His earliest followers were Jews. The word “Christian” was first used later in Antioch to describe followers of Christ.
So Christianity, in its purest sense, was never supposed to be merely a religious institution or denomination.
It was originally about faith, transformation, moral living, love, truth, and following the teachings of Christ.
That is why many people today say:
“I believe in God but struggle with religion.”
And honestly, given the hypocrisy we sometimes see, that frustration is understandable.
But balance is important.
Some people now reject all faith because of bad religious leaders.
That is also dangerous intellectually.
A corrupt pastor does not automatically disprove God.
A fake prophet does not automatically make all spirituality false.
Human abuse of religion does not automatically erase sincere faith.
The same way corrupt politicians do not invalidate the idea of government,
and corrupt doctors do not invalidate medicine,
false prophets do not automatically invalidate God.
Now, regarding the questions Mama Liberia raised:
Who was the first human?
According to the Bible, Adam and Eve are presented as the first humans in the theological narrative of Genesis. Science approaches human origins differently through evolution and anthropology. These are two different frameworks: one theological, one scientific.
Who did Cain marry?
The Bible does not list every child of Adam and Eve. Traditional theology holds that early humans intermarried within the first generations. People may accept or reject that explanation, but it is not a question Christians have ignored.
Who translated for Eve when the serpent spoke?
In the Genesis narrative, the serpent simply communicates and Eve understands. The text is theological symbolism, not a modern scientific transcript. Different Christians interpret that story literally, metaphorically, or spiritually.
How did the Israelites cross the Red Sea?
Some believers see it as a supernatural miracle beyond natural laws.
Some historians and scholars argue translation and geographical possibilities involving shallow sea regions or marshlands.
Others remain skeptical entirely.
But that is the nature of faith:
faith begins where complete empirical proof ends.
And this is where maturity matters.
A believer should not threaten someone for asking questions.
And a skeptic should not insult everyone who believes.
Intelligence is not arrogance.
Faith is not stupidity.
Questioning is not hatred.
Belief is not weakness.
The healthiest societies are the ones where people can:
question openly,
think critically,
believe freely,
and disagree respectfully.
Liberia especially needs spiritual maturity now more than ever.
We need less emotional manipulation and more wisdom.
Less fear preaching and more truth.
Less celebrity prophets and more accountability.
Less blind following and more understanding.
If your faith is true, it should survive questions.
If your theology is sound, it should survive scrutiny.
And if your spirituality produces hatred, threats, arrogance, greed, and manipulation, then something is deeply wrong.
Know God for yourself.
Think for yourself.
And never allow any human being to replace your conscience, intelligence, or personal relationship with truth.
I will drop part 2 soon, in which I will give you an history of the "possible errors of the Bible", "impacts of the whites in modern Christianity and most especially the writings that conscripted the publication of the Bible

09/05/2026

“She is an agent of the devil.” Clergyman Abraham Sarnie condemns the arrest of individuals accused of stripping a woman naked in Red Light...

Add the moral lesson 😁😁

09/05/2026

When prophecy turns into guesswork and acting, the anointing becomes entertainment. If you don’t hear from God, there’s no shame in staying silent instead of forcing revelation and embarrassing the altar.

The body of Christ needs discernment now more than drama!!!

Moral lesson: I seeing a brother I na know your name because I'm not seeing you 🤣🤣🤣

MOUNT BARCLAY — A police officer d¡ed last night in an  near Nimba United, Mount Barclay, after being hit by a car, acco...
09/05/2026

MOUNT BARCLAY — A police officer d¡ed last night in an near Nimba United, Mount Barclay, after being hit by a car, according to initial reports.

Details remain limited. We will provide updates as more information becomes available.

Moral lesson: What do you think 🤔

What type of meat is this ?Moral lesson: I jeh laugh 😂😂😂😂😂
09/05/2026

What type of meat is this ?

Moral lesson: I jeh laugh 😂😂😂😂😂

08/05/2026

Police have reportedly arrested a few individuals believed to be connected to the Red Light incident involving the public assault and harassment of a young woman. Investigations are ongoing.

Moral lesson: Ah na easy in red light na na 🤣😭

08/05/2026

The DEA should normalize wearing gloves and nose masks during their operational search.

Moral lesson: I can just imagine the odor from some of those people rooms 🤣

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