Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,151,283 members, 7,811,834 topics. Date: Sunday, 28 April 2024 at 08:42 PM

When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu - Religion - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Religion / When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu (31636 Views)

Biodun Fatoyinbo Aka "Robust Reply" Visits Ibadan By Deji Yesufu / ‘Sam Adeyemi And The Tithe’ by Deji Yesufu / Stephanie Otobo's Apology To Apostle Suleman By Deji Yesufu (2) (3) (4)

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (Reply) (Go Down)

When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by VBCampaign: 7:04pm On Sep 21, 2023
When a Son Should not Succeed a Father

By: Deji Yesufu

Charles Haddon Spurgeon is the most recent ancestor for all of us who hold profession to the Reformed Baptist faith. When Spurgeon began to pastor the New Park Street Chapel (later named London Metropolitan Tabernacle) in 1856, one of the first things he did was to introduce the 1689 London Baptist Confessions to his congregation. Spurgeon understood the liberal bent that English Christianity was about to take, and he positioned his congregation to battle the enemy headlong. Spurgeon was, however, not always successful in everything he sought to do ministry-wise.

For example, he wanted his son, Thomas, to succeed him in the pulpit ministry at the Tabernacle. Thomas, however, had other plans. Thomas felt called a missionary to foreign lands. It is said that this troubled the great Prince of Preachers. When Spurgeon died in 1892, his pulpit was taken over by Authur Tappan Pierson. A year later, the Tabernacle inaugurated Thomas as minister at the church his father used to Pastor. The church convinced Thomas to take up the mantle the father left behind. They understood enough the pressing desires of the great Spurgeon and that the young man, Thomas, had earned the right to succeed his father.

On the 7th of August, 2023, Taiwo Odukoya, Pastor of Fountain of Life Church, with headquarters at Ilupeju, Lagos, died in far away United Kingdom. He was aged 67 years old. Taiwo Odukoya had lost his well known wife and preacher, Bimbo Odukoya, in 2005 to the ill fated Sossoliso flight that year. Prior to her death, she was known as a charismatic preacher, a motivational speaker and one of the leading female preachers in Nigeria. Taiwo and Bimbo had a son, Jimmy, before their deaths. Jimmy Odukoya is the subject of our discussion today. Jimmy Odukoya has been proclaimed the worthy successor to his parent’s legacy as founders and pastors of Fountain of Life Church.

The trouble is not with his succession; the trouble is with the hues and cries that have greeted this announcement. People in churches are worried with the reality they are faced with: it appears that church work has essentially become family business in Nigeria. People invest time, talent and treasure in church, and then watch as they are bypassed at the death of the founder, while children that know little or nothing about the church are announced successors. In this article, I want to suggest when it is ideal for a son to succeed a father. And when it is not.

Naturally speaking, where all things are the way they should be, children should succeed their parents in a family’s line of work. Biblically speaking, the Hebrew were herdsmen that took this line of business from Abraham. The Aaronic priesthood passed through the sons of Aaron. Just as God honoured the Davidic line of royal succession, so that one day, the Son of David, Jesus Christ, will rule the nations. If a father carries out a work with integrity and professionalism, a son would have long learnt the spirit of that work before even venturing into the meat of it. So that by the time the father is old and passing, the son would have long taken over. We saw this in the life of the late Queen of England. For years, Charles had taken over most of his mother’s duties. So that at her death, he just took over the running of the monarchy – seamlessly.

There is however a few reasons why things are a bit different with the Odukoyas. The number one reason concerns the spirit and life of the Pentecostal/Word of Faith religion. At the heart of this religion is not service to God but service to self. Those of us who have observed this religion have seen how the consistent testimony from within her ranks is self-promotion, success, self-preservation, self exaltation, and personality cults. So that the almost universal certainty is that the moment the founder dies, the wife succeeds him. Or, the moment husband and wife are no more, the son is the natural successor. It doesn’t matter even if the son was known more in the entertainment circles than in ministry life.

Again, the problem is not with Jimmy taking over his father’s work; the problem is with the spirit of the father’s work in the first place. If these churches had been known as places where the poor is catered for; where the sick have found shelter; where the gospel is preached and sinners are converted; and where the leaders are living sacrificial lives, no one will say anything. They will understand that Jimmy is coming to serve and not to enrich himself. At the death of Spurgeon, the church was housing the largest Christian gathering in the world. Thomas Spurgeon understood the immense responsibility he would be getting into, and the natural tendency was to shrug it off. When ministry becomes an inheritance, rather than service, people have a right to complain.

My son, Iseoluwa, will be ten years old next month. Last Sunday, after church, I commented to a few people that I look forward to him learning theology and becoming a preacher like me. But my son will not be succeeding me as pastor of Providence Reformed Baptist Church, Ibadan. If he must, my son would have to receive a call from God to serve Him in Christian ministry. Then he would have to learn theology and become personally convinced of the Reformed Baptist faith. Following that, my son would have been serving in the local church in various positions. And if at my retirement or death, the church appoints him my successor, to God be all the glory. In the natural, because I see how much sacrifice true ministry comes with and how little money one makes, I’ll be sending my child to school to become a consummate professional in the field of medicine, law or engineering. If while serving there, God calls him to ministry, that will be between him and God.

Sons can succeed their fathers in business, and usually this is how it should be. There is however too many things wrong with the Pentecostal/Word of Faith religion that lends people towards suspecting her of foul play every time they make the headlines. No one can say for sure whether it is right or wrong for Jimmy to succeed his father in ministry. The heart motivation of all parties involved in this matter alone will justify the decision. But because the Pentecostal/Word of Faith religion is almost always self serving, people have a reason to be suspicious of every action taken within these churches.

Source: https://textandpublishing.com/when-a-son-should-not-succeed-a-father/

18 Likes 2 Shares

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by Righthussle: 7:11pm On Sep 21, 2023
VBCampaign:
When a Son Should not Succeed a Father

By: Deji Yesufu

Charles Haddon Spurgeon is the most recent ancestor for all of us who hold profession to the Reformed Baptist faith. When Spurgeon began to pastor the New Park Street Chapel (later named London Metropolitan Tabernacle) in 1856, one of the first things he did was to introduce the 1689 London Baptist Confessions to his congregation. Spurgeon understood the liberal bent that English Christianity was about to take, and he positioned his congregation to battle the enemy headlong. Spurgeon was, however, not always successful in everything he sought to do ministry-wise.

For example, he wanted his son, Thomas, to succeed him in the pulpit ministry pulpit business at the Tabernacle. Thomas, however, had other plans. Thomas felt called a missionary to foreign lands. It is said that this troubled the great Prince of Preachers. When Spurgeon died in 1892, his pulpit was taken over by Authur Tappan Pierson. A year later, the Tabernacle inaugurated Thomas as minister at the church his father used to Pastor. The church convinced Thomas to take up the mantle the father left behind. They understood enough the pressing desires of the great Spurgeon and that the young man, Thomas, had earned the right to succeed his father.

On the 7th of August, 2023, Taiwo Odukoya, Pastor of Fountain of Life Church, with headquarters at Ilupeju, Lagos, died in far away United Kingdom. He was aged 67 years old. Taiwo Odukoya had lost his well known wife and preacher, Bimbo Odukoya, in 2005 to the ill fated Sossoliso flight that year. Prior to her death, she was known as a charismatic preacher, a motivational speaker and one of the leading female preachers in Nigeria. Taiwo and Bimbo had a son, Jimmy, before their deaths. Jimmy Odukoya is the subject of our discussion today. Jimmy Odukoya has been proclaimed the worthy successor to his parent’s legacy as founders and pastors of Fountain of Life Church.

The trouble is not with his succession; the trouble is with the hues and cries that have greeted this announcement. People in churches are worried with the reality they are faced with: it appears that church work has essentially become family business in Nigeria. People invest time, talent and treasure in church, and then watch as they are bypassed at the death of the founder, while children that know little or nothing about the church are announced successors. In this article, I want to suggest when it is ideal for a son to succeed a father. And when it is not.

Naturally speaking, where all things are the way they should be, children should succeed their parents in a family’s line of work. Biblically speaking, the Hebrew were herdsmen that took this line of business from Abraham. The Aaronic priesthood passed through the sons of Aaron. Just as God honoured the Davidic line of royal succession, so that one day, the Son of David, Jesus Christ, will rule the nations. If a father carries out a work with integrity and professionalism, a son would have long learnt the spirit of that work before even venturing into the meat of it. So that by the time the father is old and passing, the son would have long taken over. We saw this in the life of the late Queen of England. For years, Charles had taken over most of his mother’s duties. So that at her death, he just took over the running of the monarchy – seamlessly.

There is however a few reasons why things are a bit different with the Odukoyas. The number one reason concerns the spirit and life of the Pentecostal/Word of Faith religion. At the heart of this religion is not service to God but service to self. Those of us who have observed this religion have seen how the consistent testimony from within her ranks is self-promotion, success, self-preservation, self exaltation, and personality cults. So that the almost universal certainty is that the moment the founder dies, the wife succeeds him. Or, the moment husband and wife are no more, the son is the natural successor. It doesn’t matter even if the son was known more in the entertainment circles than in ministry life.

Again, the problem is not with Jimmy taking over his father’s work; the problem is with the spirit of the father’s work in the first place. If these churches had been known as places where the poor is catered for; where the sick have found shelter; where the gospel is preached and sinners are converted; and where the leaders are living sacrificial lives, no one will say anything. They will understand that Jimmy is coming to serve and not to enrich himself. At the death of Spurgeon, the church was housing the largest Christian gathering in the world. Thomas Spurgeon understood the immense responsibility he would be getting into, and the natural tendency was to shrug it off. When ministry becomes an inheritance, rather than service, people have a right to complain.

My son, Iseoluwa, will be ten years old next month. Last Sunday, after church, I commented to a few people that I look forward to him learning theology and becoming a preacher like me. But my son will not be succeeding me as pastor of Providence Reformed Baptist Church, Ibadan. If he must, my son would have to receive a call from God to serve Him in Christian ministry. Then he would have to learn theology and become personally convinced of the Reformed Baptist faith. Following that, my son would have been serving in the local church in various positions. And if at my retirement or death, the church appoints him my successor, to God be all the glory. In the natural, because I see how much sacrifice true ministry comes with and how little money one makes, I’ll be sending my child to school to become a consummate professional in the field of medicine, law or engineering. If while serving there, God calls him to ministry, that will be between him and God.

Sons can succeed their fathers in business, and usually this is how it should be. There is however too many things wrong with the Pentecostal/Word of Faith religion that lends people towards suspecting her of foul play every time they make the headlines. No one can say for sure whether it is right or wrong for Jimmy to succeed his father in ministry. The heart motivation of all parties involved in this matter alone will justify the decision. But because the Pentecostal/Word of Faith religion is almost always self serving, people have a reason to be suspicious of every action taken within these churches.

Source: https://textandpublishing.com/when-a-son-should-not-succeed-a-father/


Which one is pulpit ministry? It's pulpit business.

20 Likes 3 Shares

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by Kobojunkie: 7:13pm On Sep 21, 2023
Storyland! Is this the first son to succeed his father in this business of religious houses called churches which are majorly social clubs? Or is this discrimination masquerading as a concern? undecided

21 Likes

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by VBCampaign: 7:34pm On Sep 21, 2023
Kobojunkie:
Storyland! Is this the first son to succeed his Father in this business of religious houses called churches which are majorly social clubs? Or is this simply discrimination masquerading as concern. undecided

Did you read the article?

53 Likes 4 Shares

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by Benekkk: 7:57pm On Sep 21, 2023
I’m an Independent Baptist and well acquainted with C.H. Spurgeon but I never knew this about him!

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by VBCampaign: 8:02pm On Sep 21, 2023
Benekkk:
I’m an Independent Baptist and well acquainted with C.H. Spurgeon but I never knew this about him!

Spurgeon lived a short but very eventful life. There are many biographies still on him.

12 Likes 1 Share

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by Janosky: 8:06pm On Sep 21, 2023
Righthussle:



Which one is pulpit ministry? It's pulpit business.
You Shake this table with vawulence grin cheesy grin grin

11 Likes 3 Shares

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by VBCampaign: 8:09pm On Sep 21, 2023
Righthussle:

Which one is pulpit ministry? It's pulpit business.

Opinions are like noses. Everyone has one.

23 Likes 6 Shares

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by populacefemz: 8:19pm On Sep 21, 2023
A son should always succeed the dad. Always. smiley

3 Likes

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by nimone: 8:19pm On Sep 21, 2023
Everyone has an opinion

1 Like

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by Janosky: 8:19pm On Sep 21, 2023
Benekkk:
I’m an Independent Baptist and well acquainted with C.H. Spurgeon but I never knew this about him!
VBCampaign:


Spurgeon lived a short but very eventful life. There are many biographies still on him.

"In the 19th century, Charles Haddon Spurgeon stated that Jesus is "the true Michael" and "the only Archangel."

Martin Luther said that too.

Nah this point sweet me pass cheesy

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by GanagiBitrus: 8:20pm On Sep 21, 2023
No single man that has laboured to grow a church to a level where tithes/offerings run into millions of Naira, will just hand over the church to an outsider. He will always prefer his family member.

That's the reality.

45 Likes

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by Kobicove(m): 8:20pm On Sep 21, 2023
His son has succeeded him and that's final, anyone who is not happy with it should go and open his own church, period! undecided

33 Likes

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by ShameOnAPC: 8:20pm On Sep 21, 2023
Business

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by ShameOnAPC: 8:20pm On Sep 21, 2023
Family Business

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by Akharmony: 8:20pm On Sep 21, 2023
Who cares? Carrying another man matter for head

19 Likes

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by missidy: 8:22pm On Sep 21, 2023
Una go taya. When you all are done wailing, you will face your own lives.

14 Likes

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by Kingcalls: 8:22pm On Sep 21, 2023
Penticostal churches in Nigeria is a business entity

19 Likes 1 Share

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by Daddyyin: 8:22pm On Sep 21, 2023
Media will not let him rest. They will be looking for something justify their criticism. God will shame them

9 Likes

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by ngeneukwuewuGOAT: 8:22pm On Sep 21, 2023
grin
Me na only kwesion I wan ask ooo

1. Who will succeed Pa Adeboye if he is gone.
2. Who will succeed Pa Kumuyi when he is gone.
3. Who will succeed Pa Oyedepo when he is gone.
4. Who will succeed Pa Okotie when he is gone.
5. Who will succeed Oyakhilome when he is gone?

Now let's check this:

Bishop Benson Idahosa dies, his wife took over.
T. B Joshua dies, his wife took over
And now Odukoya dies and his son took over.

Is church now a family inheritance? What is the stake of members of the church in the affairs of things?

29 Likes 3 Shares

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by FuckTheMod: 8:22pm On Sep 21, 2023
grin

When it has never been God's calling.. PEOPLE JUST DECEIVING PEOPLE...


IT HAS ALWAYS BEEN BEEN AND IN THIS SITUATION, IT'S A FAMILY BUSINESS.

12 Likes

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by OkCornel(m): 8:23pm On Sep 21, 2023
Family business

1 Like 1 Share

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by Dittodat: 8:23pm On Sep 21, 2023
No need for long story. The founders of these churches see their churches as family owned business enterprises. Nothing more.

21 Likes 2 Shares

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by Skillsnigeria: 8:24pm On Sep 21, 2023
Hmmm
Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by seuncyrus(m): 8:25pm On Sep 21, 2023
The first time I heard this was on twitter. It sparked a debate and I was so confused . Isn't he an actor ? Was the Church willed to him or how exactly does this work ? So I got to know that he's a pastor too, He actually pastors the cave church in Lekki with his sister Tolu

But I still don't understand this Pastor with long dread , tattoos and ear piercings . Maybe I'm just old fashioned. If he's genuinely called I pray the Lord strengthens him

34 Likes 2 Shares

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by thatigboman: 8:25pm On Sep 21, 2023
populacefemz:
A son should always succeed the dad. Always. smiley
na monarchy?

4 Likes

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by Kobojunkie: 8:26pm On Sep 21, 2023
Benekkk:
I’m an Independent Baptist and well acquainted with C.H. Spurgeon but I never knew this about him!
But according to OP's story, Spurgeon wanted his son to succeed him, so he did in fact acknowledge the business was to be kept in the family. So, what point is OP trying to make here by suggesting it should be considered a family business? The church could have turned it several times larger than it eventually did if Spurgeon's son had taken the reigns from his family. grin

Talk about trying to squeeze water out of stone.... e no dey work. grin

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: When A Son Should Not Succeed A Father By Deji Yesufu by Kobicove(m): 8:27pm On Sep 21, 2023
thatigboman:
na monarchy?

Yes tongue

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (Reply)

Ghanaian Pastor Flaunts Cash He Received As Offering After Church Service / Pastor Andrew Ejimadu Prays 'Money Into His Followers' Accounts. PICS / Nigerian Masquerade Worships, Sings Praises To Jesus; Followers Back Him (Video)

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 52
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.