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EKO ILE: MY PERSPECTIVE

It was a lifetime in the making and it was an amazing moment to be able to exhale at the concert. It had taken years to excavate my life’s experiences and look at others like me who are from one part of the world but made the UK their home. Your identity is always questioned by both sides that you look to for affirmation. On the Eko Ile CD there was something of a cathartic religious reflection as we made the record in Ghana, the circle was made more complete with the live show, the narration by Nigerian British Actor David Alabi gave me a voice on stage beyond the lyrics of the songs. The killer band led by the prodigious Niji Adeleye and vocal section led by Maria Martin fresh from their BBC Proms victories added the needed special ingredients to make an amazing sound.

Since 2003 with Riversongz we have staged some incredible productions widely regarded as ground breaking in the U.K. Whether it’s the Ocean concert or the O2 concert the first time UK gospel would take over that space or the Evertim Apollo moment that saw thousands gather to the sound of UK Gospel. How can all that be topped? Well I think we did it, the creative direction of Patrick Campbell, a veteran and award winning TV producer and director, mixed with the stage design of Mark Sutherland and the production of Sola Osinowo of Eloytech meant we couldn’t but better our past efforts. I believe we showed the UK gospel family that it’s possible to be an independent artist and put on a world class production without the backing of promoters, management etc. The presence of Nigerian dignitaries like Kabiyesi Oba Tejuoso meant the Eko Ile event had the support of the community. The circle will be completed as the Eko Ile tour goes around the UK and beyond.

The future is bright, the future is #FantasticallyNigerian

FACE 2 FACE WITH BISHOP FRANCIS

IN OUR LATEST INSTALLMENT OF FACE 2 FACE WITH BISHOP JOHN FRANCIS. BISHOP SHARES SOME ADVICE GIVEN TO HIM BY BISHOP TD JAKES

He goes in on Strategic thinking and action and making sure to have a balance allocation of time and resources.

We also tackle how society responds to the churches stance on the issue of Homosexuality.

7 TIPS FOR SHARING YOUR FAITH ONLINE

The Do’s and Don’t’s for how to get it right when sharing your faith online

You are reading this because we connected online or via email. You post, I post, we post- status updates, profile pictures you name it we are doing it online.

Did you know that for every hour we spend online, on average, about a third of it is devoted to engaging in social media? From Facebook and Twitter to YouTube and Instagram, we can’t seem to get enough of sharing our lives digitally.

Think about this: increasingly, people are just as likely to connect with people online as they are in person. In fact, researchers from the University of Michigan recently found that, in a typical month, adults engaged in about 75 face-to-face contacts or conversations, compared to about 74 electronic contacts through personal emails or social media. It’s virtually the same.

So social media sites are fertile ground for building relationships and by definition a great place for sharing our faith. But, there’s a caveat. You have to do it the right way, or else you risk damaging a relationship and closing that door of opportunity for a positive witness.

Here are some tips to think about as you engage in these social networks:

1. Remember, you are being watched.

How we live out our faith speaks volumes to those unlikely to pick up a Bible or step foot in a church. Our actions online – the links we share, the posts we “like” and more – affect how we are perceived by our nonbelieving friends. “In the same way, let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven.” (Matthew 5:16, ESV). As followers of Christ, our friends should notice something different about us, just by how we interact online. So ask your self that picture you’re about to put up, what message is it sending.

2. Focus on truly conversing, not just getting your point across.

We often strive so hard to make our point that we risk being avoided altogether. For those in our social networks, they need to know that we care about them. Be open to having meaningful conversations about faith, not argumentative condemnations. Learn how to listen ad remember they don’t care how much you know till they know how much you care.

3. Talk less and listen more.

James reminds us to “be quick to hear, slow to speak.” (James 1:19, ESV). So often, we do it the other way around, and in the process we become confrontational and unnecessarily offensive. Listen first. If you seek to understand them, you may just find them doing the same.

Share your faith

4. Show compassion, not contempt.

We need to see our fellow human beings as God sees them; He loves them just as much as us. We must guard against a haughty attitude. Jesus Himself said that religious people can be a stumbling block to others being open to hearing the Gospel. We need to develop eyes like Jesus, as He saw people who were “harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd” (Matthew 9:36 ESV). When you interact with people online, ask God to give you the same mindset John the Baptist had when he said, “He must increase, but I must decrease.” (John 3:30, ESV). Remember you may be disgusted, annoyed, baffled by them Jesus looked at them and saw “to die for”

5. If you wouldn’t say it in person, don’t say it online.

This is a good rule for all interactions online. Before posting, ask yourself these questions: How will this post look in the eyes of a stranger or critic? Does this post help me share the Gospel with people who need to hear it?

6. Follow the Holy Spirit’s leading.

Every time you logon, pray for God to use you. As you follow the Holy Spirit’s leading, you will see opportunities, such as posts He wants to you comment on and statuses to post. He will give you the words to say. We pray over our daily interactions with others—we should also be praying for guidance on how we interact online!

7. Make it personal, but don’t take it personally

Your own story of coming to faith in Christ is a powerful tool for reaching your friends. Look for those opportunities to share how God has worked – and is working – in your life. But, don’t be discouraged when you aren’t bombarded with direct messages from your non-Christian friends asking how they can be “saved.” Remember, it’s not all on you“No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him.” (John 6:44, ESV). Pray that God will draw them … and use you as He sees fit.

EXPECT THE EXTRAORDINARY

Today I was going through my social feed and this stopped me in my tracks, so I decided to post it here.

TODAY, EXPECT GOD TO DO THE EXTRAORDINARY. HE WILL NOT DISAPPOINT.

In the middle of the Daily Grind it is quite easy to forget that we serve an extraordinary God. He is extraordinary, he does extraordinary things and that’s just the way that it is.

Our job is to approach him as such and not allow myself to get in the way.

EXPECT GOD. HE WILL NOT DISAPPOINT.

Share your thoughts and comments.

FACE 2 FACE : BISHOP JOHN FRANCIS “SNEAK PEAK”

FACE 2 FACE is a series of exclusive interviews with leaders that are making a difference in our world. The series will feature frank, open and honest face to face conversations with figures drawn from a broad spectrum of society including the church, business, politics and entertainment but the thing that connects them is the impact that they are making.

We start the series with a bang with a deep dive into the life of Bishop John Francis. Check out the sneak peak.

We take a sneak peak at my FACE 2 FACE INTERVIEW with BISHOP JOHN FRANCIS

CAN YOU PLEASE SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS BELOW IN THE COMMENT SECTION!

IS THE UK STILL A CHRISTIAN COUNTRY?

I was flicking through my computer and came across an article from the BBC website last year. I re-read it and found myself, saying to myself that it is still very relevant.

I run a Gospel radio station and I consider myself to be a  Gospel artist and as such when faced with the question, Is the UK still a Christian country? I think that I and we need to take the question seriously.

Is the UK still a Christian country? What about the USA? If you are reading this in Africa how Christian is your country?

Let me know your thoughts

Are we losing our religion? The answer for the UK seems to be “Yes”, while the answer for the developing world is a resounding “No”.

That was the conclusion of a recent analysis by the Pew Research Center in the US.

It suggests that in the UK, if current trends continue, the proportion of the population identifying themselves as Christians will fall from 64% in 2010 to 45% by 2050, while the proportion of Muslims will rise from 5% to 11%.

The proportion of the population claiming no religion in the UK – the “unaffiliated” – will also rise significantly, from 28% to 39%.

Pew’s research also suggests there are likely to be more Muslims than Christians in the world by 2070, with Islam’s share of global population equalling that of Christianity at just above 30% each by 2050.

Equally eye-catching is its conclusion that by 2050, under half of the population will be Christian not just in the UK, but also France, the Netherlands, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Australia and New Zealand, while Muslims will make up about 10% of Europe’s population, up from 6% now, thanks to higher birth rates.

However, Christianity globally will continue to grow, with the number of Christians projected to rise significantly in sub-Saharan Africa in particular.

According to demographer Conrad Hackett at Pew, in 1910 some 66% of the world’s Christians lived in Europe. Now that has fallen to about 25%.

By 2050, however, Europe will be home to just 16% of the world’s Christians, while four out of every 10 Christians globally will live in sub-Saharan Africa, thanks to high birth rates and falling infant mortality.

“We are living through the biggest religious transition since the Reformation of the 16th Century,” says Linda Woodhead, professor of the sociology of religion at Lancaster University.

“[Prime Minister] David Cameron may have said at Easter that ‘we are still a Christian country’, but for how much longer?”

For Mr Hackett, the idea religion will fade as developing countries become more economically successful and better educated “is often tied in to the secularism debate”.

But, he says, while there is evidence of that in some societies, in others “there is no evidence that people are shedding their religious identity, even as their societies become wealthier”.

“In China, for example, people are more and more claiming some religious identity, and we have no clear evidence that as these countries develop, they will follow the patterns we see in Western Europe,” he says.
Religions in the UK:
§  Christians: 2010: 64%, 2050: 45%

§  Muslims: 2010: 5%, 2050: 11%

§  Hindus: 2010: 1.4%, 2050: 2%

§  Jews: 2010: 0.5%, 2050: 0.3%

§  Buddhists: 2010: 0.4%, 2050: 0.9%

§  Folk religions: 2010: 0.1%, 2050: 0.3%

§  No religion: 2010: 28%, 2050: 39%

Source: Pew Research Center
According to Ms Woodhead, that means that contrary to long-held Western assumptions that religion would disappear as societies developed, secular and religious liberalism itself will become the exception in the world and not the norm.

“Western governments will have to work hard to convince the world of the value of liberal democracy and the forms of religion and belief which have supported it, and I am not sure they yet grasp the scale of the challenge,” she says.

But why should the UK in particular be losing the Christian roots that have so profoundly shaped its history, culture and even its welfare state?

Inward-looking
“The Church of England and the Church of Scotland are in collapse,” says Ms Woodhead.

“The Church lost touch with our everyday life and has become inward-looking rather than being a broad Church for the whole of society.

 

“The Churches of England and Scotland have failed to win the hearts and minds of the young for several generations now, while numbers for the Catholic Church are really only holding up thanks to immigration.”

She believes there is the danger of a future in Britain in which those with no religious affiliation and the faithful “won’t understand each other”, with the religious of all faiths potentially moving more towards the extremes, with the risk of cultural segregation.

“Religions have a natural dynamic towards more sectarian fundamentalist extremes, and we are losing the moderating forces internally and externally that used to regulate and deal with these tendencies, including Parliamentary interest and involvement,” she says.

Adjustment ‘needed’
However, Grace Davie, professor emeritus in sociology at the University of Exeter and author of the new book Religion in Britain: A Persistent Paradox, has a slightly different take.

“This is an adjustment of Christendom, rather than an Anglican issue,” she says.

“We hear a lot of debate saying that the Anglican Church has failed.

“But it’s only facing the same challenges as the Catholic Churches and the Scandinavian Churches in Europe.

“Anglicans tend to beat themselves up about it as if it’s their fault. It’s not,” she says.

“It’s an adjustment they all have to make, but it’s at a particularly acute stage for the Anglicans.

“Looking at the figures, there are the committed religious people, the committed secular people, and in the middle, there’s this grey area.

“The pendulum is swinging gradually towards the secular end, while everyone is wondering what the growth in Islam will mean.

“In the UK, we are all adjusting to greater diversity.”

Prof Davie points out that the figures indicate Christians will still be the biggest single faith group in the UK by 2050.

“There’s no room for complacency, but there will be a future for Christianity,” she says.

“It will just be a different future.

“It will be smaller and more committed, but not necessarily more extreme.

“It’s a gradual shift in the model, which brings with it more pressure to choose.

“But you have to be very cautious about predictions.

“In the 1960s, many thought the world would become more secular, and that hasn’t happened.

“Europe is so distinctive from the rest of the world, and that is to be pondered – bearing in mind that it’s a tiny and shrinking bit of the world.”

New spirituality
Yet in an age when Christianity appears to be dwindling in the UK, what – if anything – will take its place, or attempt to offer meaning to those of no faith?

Is it art or science, poetry or football, or humanism – or new forms of spirituality, or simply seeking contentment in family and friends?

That increasing lack of belief is not confined to religion alone, but appears to be affecting almost every other sphere of authority – while new technology allows individuals to access more knowledge than ever before about the world around us, while apparently leaving us no happier.

Faith in politicians, government, the mainstream media and in many other institutions has diminished, yet the human search for meaning, identity and principles that unite us as a society has not gone away.

MUYIWA SAYS WELCOME HOME

An introduction to the brand new Muyiwa Community website

Well let me again welcome you to the brand spanking new Muyiwa website. The site is yours so please let me know what you think or what you would like to see when you visit.

In the job I do, I see a lot, I hear a lot but so far I’ve said little. Well, that is about to change. My blog will be a window into the world that I see, and you seldom hear about until there’s breaking news. Enjoy!

This week, I have four brand new posts that set the stage for what you are going to expect on a weekly basis across Music, Faith, Business and Life. My plan is to post every week across these four areas. I will also be sending out a weekly newsletter straight to your inbox called THE LOWDOWN. You have to subscribe to receive it, so make sure you subscribe, so that you don’t miss out. What can you find in this weeks posts? Here goes:

MUSIC
Music has always played a major part in my life.
In my music section, I drop some deep science learned from my years of making music with some of the best. The list of names is endless, Aerosmith Bob Dylan, Stevie Wonder, Mariah, Wyclef, Lauren Hill. Trust me I have some stories to tell!

I’ve seen a lot and learnt a lot and want to share a lot. I also want to hear your stories too.

FAITH
With our Faith section, we deal with all issues concerning Faith from devotional to practical christianity and all points in-between. Our mission here is to make Jesus known and to help people with their faith wherever they are on their journey. But whatever you do or think, don’t expect to hear the usual things your nice, neat platitudes.

For my first post I pull one of my favourite words out of the bag – Certitude. Certitude is the assurance of things you have hoped for, the absolute conviction that there are realities you’ve never seen. I dare to help you see what your eyes haven’t seen, what your ears haven’t heard and open up your mind to possibilities. Its the matrix baby! Red or Blue pill?

BUSINESS
According to Aristotle Onassis, “The secret of business is to know something that nobody else knows”, but is there anything new under the sun, or is the man that wins the one that listens to others and learns from them.

Being a natural entrepreneur and knowing that entrepreneurship is a strong characteristic of our community, there will be lots of great content to help you take your business hustle to the next level. Our mission here is to provide support, help and advice on ethical purpose driven business, where the focus is on business as a force for good.

LIFE
The LIFE section, this is where I get down and dirty and ‘Keeps It Real’, in the real world. I share experiences, thoughts and insights on life in all its real, raw and rough edged glorious complexity from relationships to parenting, from careers to recreation. The mission here is to create a space where people are encouraged to be the best version of themselves and to live a life of authenticity and meaning.

THE FOUNDATION
Last, but not least, I want you to check out my charitable endeavour called, THE FOUNDATION.
This is where I plan to galvanise us to get behind a number of key humanitarian causes that will truly make a difference in the lives of many people across the world.

So, thats the line for week one. I have some amazing interviews lined up and some great competitions and give aways. I am doing this for you, please give me your feedback and leave a comment.

Best
Muyiwa

FAITH AND THE RED OR BLUE PILL

Muyiwa tackles faith and takes to The Matrix

There is a word you don’t hear too much of these days. It’s a word that is a little old fashioned but it is a word I like a lot.

Certitude. That’s right…Cer-ti-tude.

C-e-r-t-i-t-u-d-e.

Certitude is the assurance of things you have hoped for, the absolute conviction that there are realities you’ve never seen.

Well, I dare to help you see what your eyes haven’t seen, what your ears haven’t heard open up the mind to possibilities. Its the matrix baby! Red or Blue pill?

Which ever way you go, there will be something to challenge what you believe, and what you say. How do you maintain your resolve? It’s about what is inside, “ The higher you build your barrier..” the writer says ..”the taller I become. The further you take my rights away, the faster I would run. You can’t deny me you can’t decide to turn your face away, no matter cause, there’s something inside so strong..”

I remember as a 16-year-old going through incredible challenges, unthinkable things for a teenager to face. At this stage my reasonable response was to get a cassette tape of Labre Safres song, sing it to myself and convince me that it will be okay sooner or later.
Sooner or later, the squeeze will be put on you and me and what is inside, will have to come out. What have you got inside you? Feed on the good stuff, good stuff will come out. So, what is good stuff?

Well keep reading and find out.

(1) On your marks:
Review your diet, if your faith isn’t strong, what are you feeding it (2)Get Set:
Brace yourself for the wave of good stuff I’ll be sharing with you and you with everyone else
(3) Go:
To dare to do it without faith – Its impossible!