Total Pageviews

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

"All must help build a modern society"

The Founder and Leader of the Central International Gospel Church, Pastor Mensah Otabil has observed that for Ghana to progress towards attaining a modern society status, it demands greater contributions from its citizens in realizing this dream.
According to the Pastor, some people perceive modernization as borrowings from the western world, a situation he said does not auger well in our critical thinking towards progress.
Pastor Otabil was speaking as the guest speaker at the just ended 13th Memorial lectures of William Ofori-Atta in Accra last Friday. It was dubbed “The Bridge to a peaceful modern society, the heritage of Paa Willie and the challenges for the future”.
He said human society throughout the ages has benefited from the cross-pollination of ideas and ideals from various groups and therefore behoves on the individual to make good use of what he or she has learnt to benefit the whole country.
“The truth, however, is that modernization is not a property of the West or the ‘white man’. Human society throughout the ages has benefited from the cross-pollination of ideas and ideals from the various groups. Each race and ethnic group has contributed to the creation and development of the ideas that we share in today. Having being pat of the creation and development of knowledge, it is only right that we distil the best out of the whole and learn to use it for our benefit”, he noted.
According to Pastor Otabil, greater responsibility lies on the individual to be steadfast in making good use of all the resources available to him or her towards building a healthy environment since a worrying hazard of modernization is that it carries along with it alternate lifestyles which sometimes threaten existing and well-established social norms.
“To build a modern society, we must be able to build the necessary balance between urbanization and the social systems that support our society”, he said.
He averred that for us a country to humanize our society, in a modern era, “we will have to develop new initiatives through the cooperation of state welfare and private philanthropic efforts to address the social fallouts of urbanization”.
Pastor Otabil however, challenged citizens of the land to be able to think on their own, choose their own path instead of preferring the standard template solutions from others and be bold to act on their own and literally “take our own destiny into our own hands”.
“These are the attitudes and perspectives that should influence our national choices. This quest for new possibilities must feel our determination to see the wheels of innovative thinking turn faster in our nation”, he added.
Pastor Mensah Otabil was however worried about the way citizens of the land have contributed in creating problems for the country, a situation he said “all should be part of the solution”.
According to the Pastor, most enquiring minds are incarcerated in dark dungeons filled with ancient taboos, reprisals from the world yonder, curses, ghosts and man-eating witches. He described such minds as that which undermined the human effort towards progress.
“Formal education does not really have the power to change peoples’ core assumptions. Is it any wonder that we continue to employ juju, necromancy and witchcraft as valid tools to help us advance in life? In our world the means of progressing in life does not only rely on factors such as education, performance and experience but the concoctions of the village diviner”, he said.
He expressed his gloomy thoughts on how some enlightened people in society who are aspiring to political office consider the concoctions and profusions of the soothsayer more potent than scientific opinion polls.
“We pretend to be enlightened in public but resort to dubious spiritual excursions in the dark”, he noted.
Pastor Otabil implored the people to leave exemplary lives that worthy to emulate by future leaders of the country.
Linking the aforementioned statements to that of the late William Ofori-Atta, Pastor Otabil described him as an astute politician who combined his Christian values to that of politics to achieve the ultimate for the country.
“Paa Willie is remembered not only as notable pillar of Ghanaian politics, but also as a person who carried his Christian convictions of integrity, equity and tolerance of other people’s views into the pubic arena”, he noted.

No comments: