Rehab For Gays And Lesbians Opened in Accra, Ghana

An Accra based man of God is blazing the trail with an innovation which he believes is the antidote to curbing the rapidly emerging trend of homosexuality in the country.

Prophet Dominic Ackah Manlenzie says he has set up what he refers to as a “special solution center for gays and lesbians” at his church to help people who so wish to break the habit.

The founder and General Overseer of Heaven’s Embassy located at SCC junction on the Kasoa-Winneba road, like many other concerned clergy told DAILY GUIDE, homosexuality is the by-product of satanic influence and an abomination to God.

He said to suggest that homosexual tendencies were genetic and therefore natural, is a big mistake. He noted that God created us to be heterosexual in our sexual leanings and desires and that is the more reason why gays and lesbians need divine spiritual intervention to save them from harmful physical and spiritual effects of the practice.

“The truth is that this thing is not from God and I know there are many out there who got themselves entangled in it rather innocently and now want to get out but don’t know how because it has become an addiction very much like smoking or alcoholism. The forces behind homosexuality are powerful so you need a higher power, God’s power to break their hold over the lives of their victims,” Prof Manlenzie said.

The man of God explained the center is manned by himself together with several of his other deliverance ministers and counselors.

“We have had some people referred to us for help through their friends and family and some are now living their lives normally. Some are still in the program. Let me state here that the process to recovery does not always happen at once. It may take days, maybe even weeks or months depending on the individual involved and the unique circumstances and severity of each case. Just like they didn’t hooked on homosexuality in a day, deliverance most likely won’t take place in a day.”

He said after completing the program, participants are counseled to maintain their new healing by keeping a close relationship with God through regular prayer and bible study as well as fellowship with other believers.

They are also cautioned to avoid places and people that could re-trigger their old habits, Prophet Dominic noted saying “when an unclean goes out from a man he will hang around to see whether there are any loopholes he can exploit to gain access into his victim’s life once again (Matt 12:43).

Asked to talk more about the center he said it offers tailor-made prayer, fasting and counseling sessions. He said since he is a prophet, he gives his clients prophetic direction relevant to their situation as well.

“We are careful to take down the client’s family and relationship/sexual history and lead them to Christ if they are not already born again. There is a family, relationship counselor who will talk with them and offer them sound biblical guidance.”

Prophet Manlenzie believes his center will help people get out of homosexuality even if not everyone can be saved. It is not enough to constantly condemn it, he said.

“What pastors, health personnel as well as civil society and government need to do is get on board and actually do something about the problem.”

If you like this article, I’d recommend my book “If I Was Famous, I’d Have a Lot to Say”

Share

How Did Evangelicalism and Tolerance Become Incompatible?

Over the weekend, I was reading a column in the February issue of the magazine Drug Discovery News when I came across  a question which led me to write this article . On page 10 of the magazine, Prof. Peter T. Kissinger, CEO of Prosolia and Professor of Chemistry at Purdue University, asked “How can one be tolerant and evangelical simultaneously”? At first, I thought the question was superfluous and misplaced because I have never thought of evangelicalism and tolerance be to irreconcilable. In fact, I thought of evangelical as the most tolerant among Christian denominations because of their zeal to bring outsiders into the folk. When I was a student at the University of Ghana a few years ago, it was cool to be called an evangelical. The Ghana Fellowship of Evangelical Students (GHAFES) was the organization you would want to be part of to be considered hot and up-to-date. In those days, I thought Evangelicalism was the direct opposite of fundamentalism. Evangelicals were the type of Christians who did not want to appear intolerant or closed-minded.

In the West, especially in the United States, an evangelical is not the most welcome of Christians in some places and Prof. Kissinger’s question got me thinking about this situation. Again, I remember when I was a graduate student at the University of Florida, Gainesville, a friend of mine once suggested the name of the student group Graduate Evangelical Fellowship (GEF) be changed to Graduate Christian Fellowship (GCF) in order to attract newcomers because of the negative connotation the term ‘Evangelical’ carries on campus. I didn’t understand it then, because I had just come from the University of Ghana where being an ‘Evangelical’ was sexy. So when did evangelicalism become synonymous to extreme fundamentalism? The latter is surely taking over the concept of old-time common sense evangelicalism and growing rather surprisingly fast. And it scares me because whatever originates in the US eventually becomes a global fashion and supplants venerable time-honored systems, especially in parts of Africa and other places where sophistication to sift the good from the bad is less than adequate.

Several reasons can be attributed to the deteriorating image of the term ‘Evangelical’ and discussing each of these is surely beyond the scope of this article. I will rather briefly touch on the intrusion of ‘extreme fundamentalism’, often cloaked in the garments of evangelicalism, into politics. As I have written before, politics mixed with religion is always explosive, and can be very destructive. Those of you who follow US politics will have no problem understanding why “Evangelical” carries such a negative stereotype. When media persons and politicians with hazardous and extreme views on important issues of the day are collectively classified as ‘Evangelicals’, then where is the coolness in being an Evangelical? In a society where being adamantly intolerant is equated to being evangelical, defining everything absolutely  based only on one’s views is a perfect description of an evangelical, and giving a simplistic answer to the most complicated question of society is described as the classic evangelical way, we have come just too far.

Why do I care about this? I’m not worried about who calls himself or herself an evangelical. People have the right to call themselves whatever they want. I am afraid of the impact on vulnerable societies, especially those from where I come from. In November of last year, one Ugandan MP, with financial and other support from a fundamentalist Christian organization in the US, proposed the death penalty for suspected gay people.  I mean the death penalty, not jail time. Again, the Prime Minister of Kenya, on Nov 29, 2010, declared a national crackdown on homosexuals and called upon the police to arrest and jail anyone suspected to be a homosexual. It is not the desire to fight what these people see as unhealthy intrusion of western lifestyles that bothers me. What I am afraid of, and you should be worried about also, is when a group from a powerful country such as the US, is allowed to use their financial power and politicians influences to dictate legislation in other countries by bribing gullible politicians. This cannot be labeled Evangelicalism; it is extreme right-wing fundamentalism which should be condemned by all Christians.

Malaria kills a child every 30 seconds, and I think what ‘evangelicals’ need to ask is “What Would Jesus Do?

Share

We have your number – Ugandan nespaper presents ‘gay list’

An Uganda Newspaper has published the list of top “homosexuals” or Ugandan gays on the front page with a bright yellow banner across it that read: “Hang Them”.

Names, photographs and addresses of the Ugandan gays were also made public . The paper’s editor, Giles Muhame, defended the list and said he published it to expose Ugandan gays and lesbians, so authorities could arrest them. Currently, a bill is being debated in the Ugandan parliament that is expected to pass within months.

If passed, the law will make homosexuality a capital offense that could result in a death penalty. The parliamentarian who sponsored the bill is known to have strong ties with some religious groups in the US. It is no secret that a significant number of African communities recoil from gay and lesbian life styles. This is rooted in both religious as well as a traditionally conservative society.

In fact, in Kenya someone caught in a homosexual relationship could face a good number of years in jail. But the radical approach being pursued in Uganda is surely extreme even to people who reject such lifestyle. What is disturbing is the involvement of some religious groups from the US in Ugandan politics, especially when these groups have managed (or been compelled by the constitution) to live peacefully with every lifestyle here in the US.

Homosexuality is not new on the African continent but the people have learnt do live with it for centuries. They deal with it by their own local institutions which work for them. It is surely not right for any external group to prey upon the ignorance and poverty of some Ugandan communities and the greediness of some politicians to move the country this way. What Ugandans deserve is affordable healthcare, education and war against malaria, which takes a child’s life every 30 seconds. More on this story here CNN Fox

EKR6449RGF9J

Share