MILLS IS A CHRISTIAN AND SO AM
I!
By Herbert Krapa
The language and agenda of the NDC, call it campaign
message, as we draw closer to the 2012 general
elections, concerning marketing President Mills, as a
brand, is a shame. But it will seem obvious however, to
serious watchers of our country’s politics, and the
reason is simple: Mills has been a total failure.
Is it not pathetic, that, in spite of the opportunity to
be president, seeking re-election, the only message the
NDC is taking back to the Ghanaian people is still that:
Mills is a Christian and he is humble, so vote for him
again.
The NDC is just trying to pull a fast one on us again,
but we should not allow them this time round. Ghana is a
highly religious country and that is not in doubt. The
Ghanaian people believe strongly in the existence of the
Supreme Being: God or Allah. The statistics say, about
63% of Ghanaians are Christians, 16% Muslims and 21%
have indigenous beliefs.
I am a Presbyterian, and an avid believer in God. I
believe God loves me, he has the best plans for me and
by His Grace, what He has said about me will come to
pass. But I also know that all these won’t just happen.
I know I have to do what is expected of me: work hard
and have faith, and whilst at that, continue to read my
Bible and pray every day.
The Bible tells us in Proverbs, about the end in store
for the lazy: A lazy person becomes a servant (or
debtor): “Diligent hands will rule, but laziness ends in
slave labor” (12:24); his future is bleak: “A sluggard
does not plow in season; so at harvest time he looks but
finds nothing” (20:4); he may come to poverty: “The soul
of the lazy man desires and has nothing; but the soul of
the diligent shall be made rich” (13:4 KJV).
The apostle Paul wrote in a letter to Christians:
“Brothers and Sisters, keep away from Christians who are
lazy. Such people do not live in the way that we taught
you. We tell you to do this by the authority that the
Lord Jesus Christ gives to us. You yourselves know very
well that you should live as we did. We were not lazy
when we were with you. We did not depend on any of you
for our food without paying for it. No, we worked hard
night and day. We earned what we needed. So we did not
have to charge you anything at all. We did this, not
because we do not have the right to expect such help.
But we did it so as to be an example of how you should
live. Because when we were with you, we gave you this
rule: Whoever refuses to work should not eat.
We say this because we hear that some among you are
lazy. They talk about other people but do not work
themselves. By the authority that we have in the Lord
Jesus Christ, we urge them to work quietly. They must
earn the money to buy their own food. But you, brothers
and sisters, must never tire of doing good things.” 2
Thessalonians 3:6-13.
Has Mills worked hard as a Christian? What use is it, if
a president is God fearing and not poverty fearing as
well? President Mills was voted to power to take the
development and growth of our country a step further and
not to keep reminding us that he is a Christian and he
is humble. It is good to have a Christian as a leader
but the people will not forgive a lazy Christian who
sits back to watch them suffer under his watch, and so
must Mills not be forgiven.
Three days ago a GNA report revealed that about 80% of
children under age two in the Central Region are
severely malnourished, a situation that is affecting
their growth as well as intellectual development.
People living in the north are crying for the NDC to
fulfill their promise to inject an initial amount of 200
million Ghana Cedis into a SADA fund at its start and
subsequently, to put in 100 million cedis annually for
20 years. In addition, they said they were going to
organize a donor conference on SADA to raise an
additional 200 million Ghana cedis for the fund. To this
day, they have only injected 25million Ghana cedis.
According to latest Gallup poll on Ghana, 12.7million
(53%) of the population can’t afford the cost of food.
Those living comfortably have dropped from 20% in 2007
to 4% in 2010. 34% of the population can’t cope at all
with the suffering, a drastic rise from 11% in 2007. The
World Bank says Ghanaians have gotten poorer since 2009.
The NDC Government admits that LEAP benefit has not
increased since they came to power.
The people are crying for jobs, businesses are
complaining of cost and lack of sales. Hopelessness has
gripped young graduates and corruption is on the rise.
The better Ghana promised us has become a mirage and yet
all the NDC continue to tell us is that Mills is a
Christian so vote him back to power. That is simply not
good enough.
But for President Mills and his aides, I had never heard
anybody say about themselves that “I am a humble man.”
If a president is humble, but not hardworking, the
result is the poverty and deprivation, the suffering and
pain that Ghanaians live in today.
The NDC should stop
wasting our time and ears with the Christianity and
humility card. Everybody has a belief, and we hope to
find our ultimate salvation in that faith, but we still
go to the polls to elect leaders to help run the country
and make our lives better and comfortable and your
responsibility as president ends there. It is not your
place as president, or director of communications at the
presidency or whoever you are, to try and show us what
to do with our spiritual lives. That is why we have
Pastors and Imams and fetish priests to help us with
building and growing our spiritual lives. As for you, as
president, your primary responsibility is to make sure
that our country makes progress and the people feel the
progress.
The people need you to institute programmes that will
address the little things that matter to us in our
communities, like safe neighbourhoods, clean gutters,
hygienic food, streets with names, flowing tap water,
reducing road traffic, and making sure that rules and
regulations are obeyed.
Programmes that address the fundamental issues of our
time, the urgent need to tackle widespread youth
unemployment, good skills, good jobs and good pay,
industrialised economy, modernised agriculture, a
modern, integrated public transport system that links
every corner of our nation and our country to our
neighbours. Programmes that will enhance the quality of
life, like universal access to quality education and
quality healthcare.
What the people need are programmes that will establish
a public sector that serves them with efficiency,
respect and at value for money and not a constant
reminder of how religious and humble their president is.
What good is it, if a man claims to have faith but has
no deeds? Can such faith save him? Suppose a brother or
sister is without clothes and daily food and one of you
says to him, “go, I wish you well; keep warm and well
fed,” but does nothing about his physical needs, what
good is it? Faith by itself, if not accompanied by
action, is dead.” James 2:14-17 (NIV).
Herbert Krapa
hkrapa@gmail.com
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