Hello
ladies and gentlemen, God has been awesome to us, in less than three months we
have over 10,000 readers from all over the world, we have been featured on many
major blogs, and we have been published in two best seller magazines; City
People Magazine and Top News Magazine. God has indeed been good; I want to
thank my readers for being so faithful, thank you for the kind words and the
encouragement. I celebrate you all. I would
appreciate if you also share your testimonies with me, I would love to share
them on the blog. We will have the Testimony of the Month amongst our readers.
I look forward to hearing from you.
I
bring you the testimony of Bishop F.E.B Idahosa, He is the only son of the great
apostle, Archbishop Benson Idahosa. A well cultured, humble, unassuming
gentleman, let me add that he is the only man I have seen in this part of the
world in recent times wearing a 3 piece suit on a Tuesday afternoon. Behind his
soft spoken British/American accent is a man with total faith in God, he trusts
absolutely in God this is evident as he shared with me on his childhood,
marriage, ministry and God’s plan for Nigeria.
Excerpts;
www.mytestimonys.blogspot.com
; What was growing up like for you, being the son of the great Archbishop
Benson Idahosa?
Bishop Idahosa: It was a very
normal child hood for me; people seem to ask me this question a lot. Perhaps they think my father would come home
and start working miracles all over the house, for example, if there was no
light maybe he would just perform a miracle and light would appear (laughs); it
was a very normal childhood for me. I got in trouble, I did silly things that
children do and played like any young boy at my age would. For me it was normal
but it was only as I got older I began to realise the magnitude of who my
parents were and what they were doing and it was then in my teenage years that I noticed that people began to watch me
to see what I was doing. As I grew up, I
began to see more of who we were and what our pedigree was.
www.mytestimonys.blogspot.com; When did you become a
Christian did that happen automatically or you got to a stage when you had to give your life to
God?
Bishop Idahosa; I think I was
born as a Christian, when I was born I came out as a Christian (chuckles). I'm kidding, of course.
The
truth is I don’t remember the specific moment when I became a Christian. I remember as a child making a decision to
know Christ but I don’t know the particular year that was. I do remember when I was a teenager at 13, I
made a decision to rededicate my life to Christ. When I was 13, I told God I wanted to
rededicate my life to Him, because I finally understood fully. But you know as a child you make a decision
one time you are not sure, you make it second time, third time, fourth time,
fifth time, etc.
www.mytestimonys.blogspot.com; Did you know you were
going to end up as a pastor?
Bishop
Idahosa; I always knew I was going to be in the ministry somehow, I didn’t just
know exactly what, where or how it would be.
I was in medical school for 2 years because my whole life I wanted to be
a doctor and take care of people. A few years before that that though, while I
was working on my masters degree in the US, I came back home to spend three
months my masters Capstone Project. This
happened to coincide with the unfortunate killing of the activist, Ken Saro
Wiwa by the military government. When
they did that, diplomatic relations between the United States and Nigeria
struggled, and I became an accidental victim.
I was supposed to return to the United States to start medical school at
the end of the 3 months Capstone research and I needed a new visa to return to
attend medical school. i went to the
embassy, and I was denied a visa. It
didn’t make any sense because I had been going to the U.S since I was five
years old so I had at least eight visas and I had never had any problems in the
US. My family and I tried everything we
knew to get a visa; we called the US ambassador, we called my medical school,
we called all kinds of people and tried every connection we had but every way
that we tried seemed to be blocked. I
remember thinking that this didn't make sense in the natural, so I switched to
fasting and praying. Then I gave a big
seed offering. I did all these things as
a means to please God thinking, in a way, “Ok, God I am doing this, so it’s
your turn to give me a visa back.” Of
course, God is never moved by our acts to please Him. He does the things He does and allows the
things He allows because He has a plan that will always work out for our good.
God always has a plan that we don’t understand
and cannot see. At the time, I did not
understand what the plan was because it seemed that everything we tried did not
work out. I ended up staying in Nigeria
for nine months instead of three months.
In those nine months, I worked at our hospital, Faith Mediplex in Benin
City. I spent a lot of time at the hospital, learning under some of the best
doctors in the State. As I shadowed the
doctors and was learning, I realized that I was actually was in the environment
that I wanted to work in for the rest of my life. At some point in there, I saw that this was
not what I would do with my future.
During those nine months, I also got to travel with my father on many
ministry trips. We traveled around
Nigeria, around Africa, and even as far South America together. We spent a lot of time together in those nine
months and we really got very close.
This
is where the unseen plan of God comes in: after nine months, I got my US visa,
I travelled to the US and from there I transferred to a different medical
school in the UK because I wanted to get more of a Nigerian or British sense of
the practice of medicine. After just
two years from the time that I was in Nigeria, my father was called home to be
with The Lord. It wasn’t until a few
years later as I reflected over all that time that I realised that God kept me
in Nigeria for a reason. God wanted me
to stay in Nigeria to see what medicine was like, to see what I wanted to do
with my future, and to see what the ministry was like in Nigeria. Most importantly, I got to spend nine months
with my father, during which time we had gotten very close and we understood
what our plans were for the future.
I
look back now and in hindsight, I can see that if God had not closed that door
to the US, I wouldn’t have had that time with my father, I wouldn’t have had that
time to travel with him to understand his heart, I wouldn’t have had that time
to spend in the environment that was to become my future. Those months, which God carefully crafted,
helped to shape my next couple of years.
After my father passed away, I came back home to Nigeria in order to
assist with the stability of the ministry that was now in the hands of those he
left behind. It was then I made the
decision not to pursue a career in medicine, but instead to pursue the work of
the ministry. I hung up my stethoscope
and I got into ministry full time from there.
www.mytestimonys.blogspot.com; Talking about your
dad, what was your personal relationship with him, for many kids, there is a
certain point when we withdraw from our fathers, were you close throughout?
Bishop
Idahosa; We always had a good father/son
relationship but like I said, during the time when God closed the door for me
not to go back to the US, a deeper relationship developed. I lived in the US for about seven years and
in those seven years my parents established and grew a lot of our ministry
outreach products: the Word of Faith schools, Benson Idahosa University, our
Faith Mediplex hospital and many other things which I couldn't be part of
because I was either too young or out of the country. It was in those nine
months in Nigeria that I got to know more in-depth and understand the
ministry. I found out that my father’s
heart was in the future. I had a good relationship with him, I enjoyed his
company, it was a very sad day for me when he passed away but like I said, God
knew what He was doing. While we thought
things were going bad, God had planned a future for us.
www.mytestimonys.blogspot.com; You have been
President of the Benson Idahosa University for fifteen years, how has it been
running a university?
Bishop Idahosa; It’s been
challenging and it’s been interesting, I have enjoyed every minute of it. I am
always quick to tell people that I don’t actually run the university because we
have very good and capable people there from the Vice Chancellor to good Deans
to very intelligent professors who are there with us, that’s what makes the
university run. I would love to take the
credit for it but the truth is there are so many people who work to make the
place one of the best in Nigeria right now.
What I do is work with the University on strategic vision, planning, and
in keeping in focus what our founder wanted to ensure we achieve what we set
out to achieve.
We
are planning for the next couple of years now; we have a five year plan and are
putting things in place to see that by God’s grace we achieve what God wants
for us. Our core purpose and the reason
why we exist is to change Nigeria; two simple words, ‘Change Nigeria’.
Everything we do revolves around changing Nigeria, changing mindsets, living
change, changing people’s thinking so that we can see Nigeria become the giant
of Africa that it really is supposed to be but is not quite yet. We try to
infuse the gospel into what we do so that our students can go into all parts of
the country and the world to begin to make a difference after they graduate and
even before.
Our
vision is to raise academics, professionals and entrepreneurs. Academics are those who are your teachers,
the writers; the people who basically control how the nation thinks. The professionals are those who work in the
different professions like law, accounting, medicine and other fields. Entrepreneurs are the ones who make the
nation run with finance and businesses.
We believe that if we can put students in these three areas with the
right mindset, graduates who are thinking change, who are thinking development,
who are thinking efficiency, who are thinking no corruption, then we can really
begin to make a difference in Nigeria.
That’s where my work comes in, we make plans to achieve these goals and
then make the university through her students and staff, carry them out. We can make Nigeria what it should be.
www.mytestimonys.blogspot.com; What phase in God’s
plan do you think Nigeria and Edo State is going through right now?
Bishop Idahosa: Nigeria and Edo State are squarely in God’s
plan. When my father was just beginning his ministry over 40 years ago, Benin
was called the city of blood due to the extreme prevalence of idol worship and
animal sacrifices made to those idols.
It was said that only one out of ten people in Benin went to church, but
today, Benin is more known as a City of God, where nine out of every ten people
go to church. Every great ministry in
Nigeria today can trace their roots somehow to Archbishop B.A. Idahosa, because
his focus on preaching and evangelism brought Christianity and the Pentecostal
movement to prominence. That’s just to
show the influence of what this man from Benin City, Edo State, had on the
state, Nigeria and Africa as a whole.
Benin
City is set up as a trigger point for change in the rest of Nigeria. Nigeria in
God’s plan too is also a place from which God is going to make a difference in
all of Africa. If you look at the map of
Africa and you turn it on its side, it looks like a gun, and Nigeria is the
trigger of that gun. Nigeria has been
spoken about through prophecy to many people; through my mother Archbishop
Margaret Idahosa, through Rev. Adeboye, and through so many others. They have all said that God has spoken that
Nigeria in the next ten to twelve years (by 2025) will be the most desirable
place to live in Africa and God is going to do some mighty things in this
Nation. God has spoken to them at different
times and they have declared it publicly even without talking to each
other. So we see that Nigeria really has
a place in God’s plan for Africa and I believe that Benin City is a strong
trigger point for that. Out of Benin
came Archbishop Idahosa and he changed Nigeria and the gospel ministry in
Nigeria. Out of Benin City came the
Bible School which he founded, All Nations For Christ, which has trained over
11,000 pastors in 40 years, out of Benin is coming Benson Idahosa University
with her graduates who want to change Nigeria.
I believe that so much more can come out of this place; the university,
the ministry, the church are all bringing together Christians to show the world
what God can do through people who trust him.
www.mytestimonys.blogspot.com; What are your views
on Boko Haram?
Bishop
Idahosa; Boko Haram is a scourge to this nation that must be dealt with. They are doing so many wrong things against
Christians and Nigeria that we are at a point where we must look back and ask,
“How did we get to this point?” If you
watched the news 10 years ago and heard stories of kidnapping and bombing you
would have thought, this can never happen in Nigeria. Yet here we are 10 years down the road and
this is happening just down the street from us.
It’s a shame unfortunately, but at the same time, it is a
challenge. I look at it as a challenge
for the Christians. If God can allow
this to happen, it is only because He has equipped us with what it takes to turn
it around and that’s why Christians in the position of power and authority need
to start talking about how they can put an end to it.
I
don’t have the answer now but I know that within our circle of Christians, we
have the answer. There are people among
us who know what to do and it’s time for us to step up. If God has spoken to you, then we need to
begin to take steps to attack this shame on our nation head-on and also
outflank the enemy. We can’t sit back
and watch it, God has a plan for us and this enemy will not stop it. It is wrong and we have the answer so we need
to come out and do what needs to be done.
www.mytestimonys.blogspot.com; What were those
moments when things went down south and you just had to stay strong in faith?
Bishop Idahosa; There are so
many of those that make up a man, make up a Christian. One of my biggest was when my father passed
away. On the day we received the news on
the 12th of March 1998, we thought our world was going to collapse because
everyone thought he was invincible,
everyone thought he would live forever, no one ever thought that he was a human
being and that one day God would call him home.
That was a time when I had to stay strong and in those times you think
of everything from your family, to your sisters, to the future of the ministry
and you wonder what you should do but God always has a plan.
For
me that was a great faith moment because I had to tell God I didn’t know what
to do. I mean, how do you even think
about continuing this legacy? God spoke
to me very clearly and said, “I am going to take care of you, I am going to
show you what steps to take” and here we are now, 15 years later and I can look
back to say God really showed up and took charge of everything concerning the
ministry, the schools, the hospitals, the university and we have not been
shaken. We are increasing, we are
thriving. That's when you realise that
no matter what happens in your life, God’s plan is working and you are in His
plans, so no matter how bad it can be, if you just stop and say, “God, You must
have allowed this to happen, there must be a plan that You are working, let me
flow along with Your plan.” As long as
there is God’s Spirit inside of you, He will lead you where He wants you to
go. No matter how bad the place can be,
as long as we are there, we bring life so I am very excited about the future.
www.mytestimonys.blogspot.com; How did you meet
Pastor Laurie?
Bishop Idahosa; (Smiles) I met
my wife when we were both 13 years old and we met in Benin City. Her father and my father were friends and my
father was a mentor to her father. When
her father would come to Nigeria, they would do crusades together all around
the country. It was when she came to
Nigeria with her parents for one of those crusades that we met. We were friends since we were thirteen years
old and we remained friends for all those years.
In
September 2001, I was on a trip from Nigeria to the US for a conference when
the World Trade Center incident happened.
I was flying to Houston but when the plane hit the World Trade Center;
our flight was redirected to Canada. The
conference was cancelled, all flights were cancelled and the airline offered to
drive us from Canada to the US. The
airline drove us to New Jersey, which was close to her home, so I spent the
next few days with her and her family.
You could say the romance was rekindled at that time, and a little over
a year later, we were married. So out
of all the tragic things that happened on September 11th, 2001, one good,
romantic, love story came out.
www.mytestimonys.blogspot.com; How has married life
been?
Bishop
Idahosa; It has been a wonderful journey, and we are now in our 11th year of
marriage and we have been blessed with three great sons. God has been wonderful because our marriage
is full of testimonies of God's goodness through the good and also through the
challenging times.
www.mytestimonys.blogspot.com; What was the most
crucial factor you were considering when you wanted to get married and what
would you advise the unmarried?
Bishop Idahosa; When I met my
wife I didn’t even bother about all the things I said I was looking for as a
child. Those things suddenly were no
longer the criteria for my happiness, I just knew this was the right
person. For the young people I meet, I tell
them, marry someone who is your friend, someone that you know and you enjoy
their company. Marriage is not about sex or having someone to cook for you,
it’s about companionship. If you marry
for sex how long will that last? After
the euphoria of lovemaking ends, what do you do with the remaining 23 hours of
the day? If it’s about someone to cook
for you, after the food, what happens?
Marry
your friend, someone you can joke with and laugh with and live with because
that’s really what the companionship of marriage is about. You are going to be growing together; it’s
about both of you doing things to become one.
My advice is, don’t marry someone you just met because you are
desperate. Get to know them to see if
you enjoy their company, see if you enjoy who they are, know about their dreams
and aspirations and then marry your friend.
www.mytestimonys.blogspot.com; Let’s talk about some
of your vision and initiatives. What inspired your TV show, ‘The Bottom Line’?
Bishop Idahosa; The Bottom
Line was a TV show we started many years ago, because we wanted to have a
programme on TV where young people could watch music videos, dance,
inspirational discussions and so on.
Those things are very common these days but they weren’t very common
back then in 1999 and 2000. We ran the
TV show and from there we started churches and outreaches to target young
people between the ages of 15-30 years.
The idea was to reach young people with the gospel in a way that was
exciting and attractive to them, since they didn't really want what was
traditional. From that beginning, we
today we have eleven churches around the country that target that younger age
demographic.
www.mytestimonys.blogspot.com; Let’s talk about the
Big Ben Children’s Hospital, there was a vision behind that hospital, how have
you been able to achieve the dream?
Bishop Idahosa; Big Ben's
Children’s Hospital began as a vision that God gave to my wife and I after we
lost our first son. After our wedding,
we were told we couldn’t have children.
For 5 years we tried different methods including In-Vitro Fertilisation
(IVF) and finally one of our IVF cycles worked. My wife had a full term pregnancy and our
son was born healthy, but unfortunately after 12 hours, he died. It was very sad, that was another trying
faith moment because it seemed as though God did not answer our prayers. We were very devastated but as we were crying
and mourning at the funeral service, my wife left where she was, went to the
altar and knelt down and started worshipping God. Right there, God spoke to us that He wanted
to use this tragedy as a testimony to reach other people. Here we were in the US they had all kinds of
equipment, specialist doctors, and everything yet our son still died. God asked us what happens in Nigeria where
our people don’t have half of these things.
So
God spoke to us to start the hospital to be an excellent care center for
children. Over the next few months, the
miraculous happened, and people began to donate equipment to us as we began to
take out of our sorrow and sadness to help other people. Today, BBCH is one of the best children’s
hospitals in Benin. We have some of the
best doctors and equipment for labor and delivery, for antenatal care and many
more; we are planning to make it even better by God’s grace. Out of our sorrow, God brought out something
to help other people. As we were doing
that, just few months after our first son passed away, my wife got pregnant
again. I remember at the funeral service,
God spoke through Bishop Hopkins and he said, “Within a year from today, God
will give you a reason to rejoice.". Exactly one year to the day from July
9th 2008, our son Feb Idahosa IV was born.
Once again, God showed up.
Awesome God, awesome testimonies.
We are very happy to see what God has been doing through our lives and
through the hospital.
www.mytestimonys.blogspot.com; Let’s talk about
Mama, Mama will be 70 this year, how has it been with you being the man of the
house without Papa Idahosa?
Bishop Idahosa; God has shown
Himself faithful to us. Mama oversees the ministry; God gave her wisdom to set
up boards with competent people over the different ministries. So all of these work together to ensure that
each ministry, the hospital, the church, the Bible school, the secondary
schools, the university, and everything else works with the right people. That was God’s wisdom, each one works
independently and they all report back to her. And that's how we have gotten
even better and grown.
This
year she will be 70 years old; we are very happy and very excited, and are
planning to do a countdown to her birthday over 70 days. We are planning to organize 70 events to
celebrate over 70 days to celebrate her 70 years. The countdown will begin on May 21st and
events will happen every day from Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, the US and the
UK and all over the world people will be celebrating her birthday. We will be celebrating the God that is inside
of her and God that brought her from where she was as a school teacher to now
an Archbishop who oversees one of the biggest ministries in the world. I hope you can join is for the celebration
either in person or online via Facebook, Twitter, or her webpage, www.margaretidahosa.com
Thank
you for the opportunity to share my testimonies with you. May God bless you, prosper you, and continue
to increase your voice and your influence vie this blog and other outlets.
It was impossible for me not to tap some of that grace.
Very inspiring.
ReplyDeleteIt is indeed.
DeleteGod at work..
Deletewhat a faithful God we serve.Am really inspired.
Deletewhat a faithful God we serve.Am really inspired.
Delete...Touching,insightful,reflective and with an hindsight of total grace starting with the Archbishop B.Idahosa himself through to his wife and currently in F.E.B. Idahosa.The grace 'll continue to flow through generations,amen! Thanks for the greater good of Benin City,Nigeria,Africa and the entire globe.God's grace is truly pragmatically sufficient for us.
ReplyDeleteKings Omozore.
i love this.more grace to Our Mama, My bishop,and CGMi
ReplyDeleteGod is good!
ReplyDeletehttp://www.unn.edu.ng
This doesn't just take us into the interesting world of Bishop FEB but also shows us how down to earth,real and unbelievably "normal" he is...SIMPLY LOVELY!!!!
ReplyDeleteI really like your blog. It looks very nice and I'm happy to visit. God bless us all!
ReplyDeleteCheck this out too:
Medisoft Program
Hi FEB. your Father was a GREAT MAN of GOD. The world will always remember him as the best in Benin and Nigeria. FOR NOW THE BEST THAT EVER LIVED.When I was very young growing up in Benin, specifically I used to worship in ikpoba hill branch by Ramat park, one of the churches your daddy panted there. After my high school moved to the heart of the city, could no-longer afford transportation to church.You know! I walked to ring road every sunday morning joined transportation Arch bishop provided for people like me, who love to go to church, but could not afford transportation. Happily sit on big truck that look like train without any discrimination from any body, either old young, member or no member. One of the things I love most in arch bishop, he changed the perception of worshiping and dressing code of Pastors . He said my GOD IS NOT A POOR GOD! MY GOD IS NOT A DIRTY GOD. CHECK OUT PABA ARCH BISHOP FLOATING Agbada , what about his suites .He was an inspiration to me and world. He single handedly changed Bendel state.He brought light to Benin, every corner use to be sacrificial garbages for so called gods. Today ! the differences is clear. We are free indeed,because arch bishop allowed GOD to use him to free HIS people. Like mama bishop Margaret IDAHOSA rightly said, Papa started with Benin city , then gradually move to states and to the whole world. BLESS GOD FOR GREAT MEN LIKE OUR PABA IDAHOSA. He will always be remembered for good.Greetings to Mama bishop Idahosa last saw her years ago in faith tabernacle Chicago. FED ,we cannot pray for you enough.I pray GOD USE YOU GREATLY MORE THAN PAPA .Wish you the very best
ReplyDeleteCongratulations and keep the good work
DeleteThank you so much Mr. Kenny Alele, bless God
DeleteGod is faithful, He never fails. Thanks for sharing those great acts of God in your life with us. May He continue to use you to reach multitudes. Remain Blessed!
ReplyDeleteWOW! God is faithful.. i bless God and tap into that grace and anointing aswell.
ReplyDeleteIt is well in Jesus name!!!
Oh! I ove you oh Lord my God...
Visit my Blog too
http://GospelEpistle.com
May God's blessings never seize in your life sir....
ReplyDeleteAnd my regards to your wife as well
ReplyDeleteAm so inspired thank you God bless . I pray God opens up door to come see bishop mama idhahosa nice to see church of God and it's ministries is flourishing by God's grace..Thank you for your blog
ReplyDeleteGod is great indeed, His glory is manifested from generations to generations. Great is His faithfulness. May you accomplish great things even greater than in the days of your father.
ReplyDeleteGod is great indeed, His glory is manifested from generations to generations. Great is His faithfulness. May you accomplish great things even greater than in the days of your father.
ReplyDeleteNo doubt about the fact that archbishop Benson Idahosa is a great man of God and his footprint is still evident in Nigeria christianity till today, what a great man and great Grace, a life well lived!
ReplyDeleteLitedhill.com