Saturday, November 5
PROMINENT NIGERIANS, CLERGYMEN REPLY APC NATIONAL CHAIRMAN'S STATEMENT "BUHARI SEEKS A SECOND TERM COME 2019"
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES FOR 150 GRADUATES
Despite Nigeria’s economic downturn with attendant loss of jobs especially in the financial sector, the United Bank for Africa (UBA) is recruiting.
THISDAY gathered that the bank has commenced recruitment of young graduates into its fold.
POPULAR NIGERIAN MUSICIAN (2BABA) STEPS OUT WITH HIS WIFE AND DAUGHTER....(PHOTO)
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VICE PRESIDENT ASSURES HUNGER WOULD SOON VANISH
GOVERNOR OF RIVERS STATE CRITICISES NJC FOR SUSPENDING JUDGES ACCUSED OF CORRUPTION
Mr. Wike made the assertion when the executive members of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) Port Harcourt branch paid him a courtesy visit on Friday.
EFCC SEIZED APC'S CHIEFTAINS INTERNATIONAL PASSPORT AFTER SEVEN HOURS OF INTTERROGATION
LEGAL ADVISER OF APC |
Wednesday, November 2
WARRI-AJAOKUTA-OBARO-ABUJA CENTRAL RAIL PROJECT EXPECTED TO ATTRACT A MINIMUM OF $30B INVESTMENT INTO THE COUNTRY. MINISTER OF TRANSPORTATION
Minister of transportation, Rotimi Amaechi, said Warri-Ajaokuta-Obaro-Abuja central rail project was expected to attract a minimum of $30 billion investment into the country.
Amaechi said this while briefing the Joint Senate and House of Representatives’ Committee on Land Transport on Monday in Abuja, saying the Federal Government had signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with China Railway Construction Corporation in respect of the project on Public Private Partnership (PPP) arrangement.
According to Amaechi, the MoU also covers the construction and expansion of Warri Port and Harbour, construction of deep-sea port and construction of industrial park at Port Harcourt and Bonny Island. Amaechi said the government had also signed the contract for the construction of Calabar to Port Harcourt rail line with extension from Port Harcourt to Onne deep-sea port.
He explained that the project was the Segment one of the Coastal railway projects stemming from Lagos to Calabar with branch line Benin to Onitsha, including the Onitsha bridge rail station. The minister also said the Lagos-Ibadan Segment 2 of the Lagos-Kano railway modernisation project would soon commence; the line would also extend to the Apapa ports from Ebute Metta. “We have also signed the implementation agreement in August for Kano-Kaduna of which the initial commercial contract agreement was signed in 2006. The other segments namely Ibadan-Ilorin-Abuja and Minna-Kaduna will come on as the negotiations and works progress. “In the road transportation mode, our priorities include the completion of some freight offices including that of Seme in Lagos State; Shaki in Oyo State and Illela in Sokoto State. “Others are Kamba in Kebbi State; Jibiya in Katsina State; Gamboru Ngala in Borno and Idiroko in Ogun State as well as the commencement of inter-state road transit,” he said.
He said the present administration was determined to reposition the transportation sector for optimal performance, principally by creating an enabling legal and legislative framework to encourage private investment in the sector. He said the long-term effect of divestment by government in railway transportation had been the major factor in Nigeria’s weak position in the railway sector. According to him, the narrow gauge system will provide affordable and safe transport to over 5.1 million passengers a year. “This will also account for over 20 million tonnes, amounting to almost 35 percent of freight movement per year,” he stated. Responding, Gbenga Ashafa, chairman, Senate Committee on Land Transport, said the visit of the committee was to conduct an on the spot assessment of performance of the ministry within the life span of the 2016 budget.
Ashafa said the disposition of the committee to the ministry’s proposals in the 2017 budget would be largely guided by its assessment of the ministry’s performance in the current period. He said that the legislative arm was committed to providing the requisite legislative support to the executive in its drive to create change in the country’s transport landscape.
According to him, the committee believes that with the senate’s passage of the 2016 Railway Bill; more avenues have been opened up in the rail transport sector for foreign direct investment. While commending the government for the completion of Abuja-Kaduna rail project, Ashafa called for adequate security measure in the rail corridors.
The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the joint senate and house committee members, during the oversight visit, inspected the Idu and Kubwa rail stations.
HOLD FG RESPONSIBLE FOR FAILED ROAD PROJECTS IN DELTA STATE SAYS DELTA STATE HOUSE OF ASSEMBLY
ASABA—DELTA State House of Assembly has told the people of the state to stop blaming Governor Ifeanyi Okowa for the terrible conditions of virtually all the federal roads in the state, saying the Federal Government should be held responsible.
Speaking through the Chairman of the Assembly Committee on Environment, Oil and Gas, Mr Daniel Yingi, the Assembly, said it was sad to hear people blame Governor Okowa for the disrepair of federal roads in the state instead of the Federal Government, describing it as a sad commentary.
According to Yingi who represents Burutu Constituency 1, “I want to use this opportunity to let Deltans know that most of these roads, including Sapele-Abraka-Agbor Road, Benin-Sapele-Warri Road, Asaba-Illah-Uromi Road and many others that are in very bad shape, are federal roads not state roads. So, all the blame should be heaped at the door steps of the Federal Government and not the state. The people should not judge our performance by the failure of the federal government. I feel very bad when I hear people ask Okowa what is doing on these roads.”
Monday, October 31
MARTIN LUTHER'S REFORMATION DAY CELEBRATION IN ABONNEMA
MARTN Luther's REFORMATION DAY CELEBRATION
The Story of Reformation Day and Martin Luther
Origins of Protestant Faith in the Story of Martin Luther
The History of the Reformation
The historical trends that brought about the Reformation began centuries before its actual occurrence. In part, the root causes stem from the Church's departure from the foundational teachings of Christ regarding a believer's relationship with God, believers' relationships with one another, and the means of salvation. By the time of the fall of Rome, in the late fifth century, the Church had already adopted many practices contrary to the teachings of Christ.
Particularly, three perceived errors in doctrine stood out as major flaws that were in direct opposition to his teachings, and these later became the basis for Luther's ninety-five theses. The first error created a priesthood that acted as mediator between the believer and God, suggesting that direct communication between man and the almighty was impossible. The second was the establishment of a pope or pontiff who would exercise authority over the entire Church. The third error related to the attainment of salvation through penitent works and charitable acts, rather than through the miracle of faith.
Indulgences
The catalyst that caused Luther to directly confront these issues, however, was the Church practice of granting "indulgences". The custom was based on a verse in the Gospel of John, where Jesus gave the apostles the authority to forgive or retain the sins of humanity. In Luther's time, the Church was engaged in the practice of selling indulgences as a means of increasing ecclesiastical wealth. The Church justified this practice by citing that, although God released the offender from his heavenly obligation, he was still required to pay an earthly price for his sin.
Such payments (or other suitable acts of charity) to the Church released a person from financial or civil obligation incurred as a result of sin. This practice greatly benefited nobles and the wealthy, who could literally pay for their crimes, and correspondingly severely disadvantaged the poor, who could not. The practice also included the selling of indulgences to the families of deceased relatives to release their souls from Purgatory.
It was the "Jubilee Indulgence," authorized by Pope Leo X to pay for the rebuilding of St. Peter's Cathedral, which incited Luther to take action. As the doors of churches were often utilized for posting public notices, Luther, having written his ninety-five theses, placed them on the Castle Church doors on All Hallows Eve, where many who would attend the following All Saints Day observance would read it. However, it was the recent invention of the printing press that allowed Luther's theses to be circulated throughout Europe, thereby bringing him to the attention of Rome and the papacy.
Luther's Excommunication
The Church perceived Luther to be in opposition to Papal authority, and, accusing him of heresy, sought to have him arrested. With the support of the faculty at Wittenberg University and the Elector, Prince Frederick III of Saxony, Luther avoided imprisonment and a trial that most likely would have ended with his execution. However, by 1520, he was excommunicated from the Church and labeled as a heretic and fugitive.
The reaction of the Church against Luther and its steadfast refusal to discuss his theses prompted an internal schism that eventually became the Reformation movement. By 1530, the division was set, and an official statement of faith, known as the Augsburg Confession, began the first Protestant Church.
The revival of the doctrine of salvation by grace through faith has become the cornerstone by which the modern church exists. Reformation Day honors the work of the Holy Spirit in individuals who step out and confront the evils of their day through faith. From Luther's time to the present, the Church has been in a near-constant state of reformation, as the Lord continually restores the teachings and gifts that He blessed the Church with at its birth on Pentecost.