Integrate Faith And Formal Education – Archbishop Palmer-Buckle Calls web

Integrate Faith And Formal Education – Archbishop Palmer-Buckle Calls

The Metropolitan Archbishop of the Cape Coast Dioceses of the Catholic Church, Most Rev. Charles Gabriel Palmer-Buckle, has challenged managers of the educational institutions in Ghana to integrate faith formation and formal education into the educational system in the bid to produce citizens who are morally sound for national development.

“In fulfilling the Great Commission, faith formation is crucial and inseparable from each other in order to form a proper person, a holistic human being who would mature into a full stature of Christ,” he said.

He added: “An integration of faith formation and formal education in the nation for humanity, as well as service to people, would leave a lasting legacy for the next generation notwithstanding the challenges today.”

He stated this on Thursday when speaking on the theme, “Moral Vision and National Development – The Catholic Church Perspective,” at the 2023 All Ministers Conference (the biggest non-denominational gathering of Ghanaian church leaders) at the Pentecost Convention Centre (PCC), Gomoa Fetteh near Kasoa.

Archbishop Palmer-Buckle stated: “Education of the head, the heart and the hands ought to be inseparable and indispensable. It must rather be aligned to ensure that the holistic development and formation of citizens is in line with the kingdom of God and its principles.”

Sharing lessons and best practices from the Catholic church’s perspective on building a morally sound nation, Archbishop Palmer-Buckle said that the Catholic church undertakes the grooming of a lot of people for Christ-like leadership in all the various aspects of human endeavours, be it politics or traditional, civil service, industry and enterprise, academia and legal, among others. 

Archbishop Palmer-Buckle further called for a denunciation of all that is unrighteous, evil and contrary to the values of the kingdom of God. Challenging the ministers, he reiterated the need for Christians to bring to bear their qualities of salt, light and yeast in fulfilling the Great Commission.

“Our salt should purify us as leadership of Christianity of our rot and unrighteousness. The light of Christ that we bear should enlighten the darkness in our lives as leaders of the Christian population in Ghana. Our yeast should proactively be empowering of all circumstances of those entrusted to us,” he said.

He stressed: “There is only one moral vision, and it is Christ Jesus Our Lord. The 1992 constitution is the blueprint of moral vision and should not be taken for granted.”

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The Church Must Recover Its Glory, Power To Change The Direction Of Ghana web

The Church Must Recover Its Glory, Power To Change The Direction Of Ghana – Rev. Korankye Ankrah

The Founder of the Royalhouse Chapel International, Apostle General Sam Korankye Ankrah, has urged Christians to recover their glory and power to have a solid influence in controlling the institutions of the country.

Speaking on the topic, “The Church Living in the Fear of God,” at the second edition of the All Ministers Conference on Thursday at the Pentecost Convention Centre, Gomoa Fetteh, the Apostle General lamented the presence of churches in every corner of the country, yet moral bankruptcy reigns among the people in Ghana. 

According to him, the Church is a defining, dominant, directional and developing force that needs to take dominium of the nation and determine its direction to eradicate corruption and attain moral discipline. 

He expressed worry about the rate at which energetic youth queue up in various embassies each day, seeking visas to travel outside the country to seek greener pastures. 

He charged politicians to stop defrauding the people, all in the name of politics and democracy.

He called on pastors and church leaders to educate their followers on voting for God-fearing people rather than encouraging them to step out and exercise their voting. He believed this would enable the citizenry and believers to elect leaders with moral vision.   

The Apostle General Korankye Ankrah concluded that the Church depicts Christ himself and must recover its glory and power to determine how the country’s affairs should be steered. 

“Politicians alone cannot manage the nation in attaining its expected vision; the Church must intervene to put the country on the right track,” he stressed.   

This year’s All Ministers Conference (the biggest inter-denominational gathering for ministers in Ghana) is under the theme: “Moral Vision and National Development – the Role of the Church.”    

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Adopt Christ-Centred Approach To Fight Moral Corruption, Decadence – Apostle Dr Ami-Narh web

Adopt Christ-Centred Approach To Fight Moral Corruption, Decadence – ApostleDr Ami-Narh

The President of The Apostolic Church- Ghana, Apostle Dr. Aaron Ami-Narh, has called for a review of the approach to the fight against moral corruption and decadence in the country.

He explained that moral corruption is a universal problem from which all manner of corruption emanates and underscored the need for the Church, in general, to be responsive in addressing the menace of moral corruption, which has ultimately led to the woes of the world today.

Apostle Dr Ami-Narh, therefore, emphasised the need for the Church to adopt a holistic approach based on the teachings of love and faith, which have proven to be victorious over moral corruption.

“Moral corruption must be fought from the inside because it is a heart issue. Only God’s word gets deep enough to separate the soul from the spirit,” he revealed.

He added: “Religiosity is not a cure for moral corruption. Faith alone cannot also fight corruption. It takes a combination of drugs to cure moral corruption, faith, and love.”

He said this in a presentation on Thursday on the topic, “The Church and the Battle against Moral Corruption,” at the 2023 All Ministers Conference (the biggest non-denominational gathering of Ghanaian pastors) currently ongoing at the Pentecost Convention Centre (PCC), Gomoa Fetteh near Kasoa on the theme: “Moral Vision and National Development: The Role of Church.” 

Apostle Dr Narh-Ami asked Christians to express their faith through love, quoting 1 Corinthians 13:1-5 to support his argument. He added that victory over moral corruption is assured once faith graduates into love. 

He observed that although some efforts have been put in place by the Church in Ghana in the fight against moral corruption, a lot needed to be done to make good the gains achieved so far. 

“The average Christian does not know what he must become and therefore lacks the focus of what he must become,” he said, adding, “You may have speed as a young person, but don’t throw away the older ones. They have something to teach you.”

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Preach The Gospel In The Marketplace - Full Gospel President web

Preach The Gospel In The Marketplace – Full Gospel President

The President of the Full Gospel Business Men’s Fellowship International (FGBFI), Mr Emmanuel Baba Mahama, has challenged believers to proclaim the word of God and evangelise wherever they find themselves to make Christ known.

“The task of evangelising the world has been given to all Christians, and it is not exclusive of the priests and clergy. The gospel must be proclaimed by all believers in the marketplace,” he said.

He voiced his frustration regarding the passive stance adopted by certain Christians towards evangelism, as outlined in Mark 16:20. He pointed out that in today’s Christianity, the majority of the work is carried out by only approximately 1-5% of the body of Christ, while a significant portion of believers, around 95-99%, remain dormant like a slumbering giant, waiting to be roused to participate in God’s end-time harvest plan.

Speaking on the theme, “The Christian as a Minister in the Marketplace” at the ongoing 2023 All Ministers Conference (Non-denominational conference for church leaders) at the Pentecost Convention Centre (PCC), Gomoa Fetteh near Kasoa, the former Chief Executive Officer of Vanguard Assurance Limited indicated that the task of evangelism in the marketplace (government, business and education) should not be the exclusive vocation of the clergy.

He lamented about the existence of ‘pew warmers’ in the church and the concentration of various associations and ministries in the church, like the Men’s Fellowship and Women’s Ministry, among others, functioning as ceremonial groupings to observe funerals, weddings and birthday celebrations rather than their core mandate of reaching out to the lost in the marketplace.

Mr Mahama called on believers to make conscious efforts to become the propagators of the gospel. 

“The task of evangelism is not limited to the clergy alone. A roll call of the men of faith in the Old Testament indicates that almost all of them were people in the marketplace, merely making a difference,” he said, stressing, “The general marching order of the Great Commission that binds the believers is to go out.”

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The Power Of Prayer Will Invoke The Hand Of God Upon Ghana - Rev Stephen Wengam web

The Power Of Prayer Will Invoke The Hand Of God Upon Ghana – Rev Stephen Wengam

The General Superintendent of the Assemblies of God, Ghana, Rev. Dr Stephen Wengam, has reiterated the need for the Church in Ghana to resort to continuous, persistent and intentional prayers to invoke the mighty hand of God upon the nation.

Addressing participants of a four-day interdenominational conference for ministers, dubbed ‘All Ministers Conference’ organised by The Church of Pentecost at the Pentecost Convention Centre (PCC), Gomoa Fetteh, near Kasoa on Wednesday, Rev. Dr Wengam reminded the clergy that prayer remains a potent force in the Church, and must not be relegated to the background if the Church desires to operate with supernatural efficacy.

“When prayer becomes the resource of the righteous, nothing is impossible,” he posited.

Quoting copiously from the book of Nehemiah, Rev. Dr Wengam stated that when a nation consistently hears unpleasant news about the economy in distress, tribalism, disunity, security crisis, uncompromising leadership, immorality, disorder and indiscipline on the ascendency, then the time for a prayer army to arise was long past. 

He said during the time of Nehemiah, when he heard that the walls of Jerusalem were in shambles, there were many options open to him, but he believed prayer could change the hearts of kings and chose that option.

“Our walls have broken; our leaders cannot converge at a point to work together, migration has become the order of the day, and the infiltration of bad values uncontrollably seems to destroy the moral fibre of our nation,” he said, adding, “It is time for the Church to lift up prayer.”

The General Superintendent called for a prayer of repentance as a Church and nation, prayer of confession of sins of commission and omission, prayer of adoration and thanksgiving, and prayer of dedication, among others. 

He said the Church is at war with spiritual forces, and physical institutions are determined to destroy the Church, but a prayer of warfare will turn the tides. He revealed that warfare prayer must begin with adoration and worship of God in His holiness. He stressed the need to pay homage to God and be thankful to Him as a nation. 

“Thanksgiving is not only about what the Lord has done for us. We murmur too much in this country when we should be grateful,” he lamented.

Drawing from the positive results of Nehemiah’s consistent prayer for the nation, Rev. Dr Wengam mentioned that when the Church prays, God grants favour to rebuild and transform nations. 

He said not only did a pagan Persian king permit Nehemiah to go and rebuild the walls of Jerusalem, but he also gave him security and released resources for the task. He added that opposition to the nation’s transformation is overcome, and the transformation is speedy when prayer is lifted. 

“Other significant results of prayer for the nation are all-round national development and moral integrity, revival in the Church and patriotism for the nation, and abundant release of grace to rebuild the nation’s moral fibre,” he indicated.

He identified sin as the root of all the troubles of the nation and the world and regretted that the Church had failed to be the salt of the earth and light of the world.

He advocated a national prayer meeting of churches in Ghana as a starting point for transforming the heart of the Church and influencing the nation. 

He, however, cautioned that such prayer meetings should not be platforms for long talk, saying, “Let prayer meetings be prayer meetings, not talk. We don’t teach prayer by talking; we teach prayer by praying.”

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Apostle Eric Nyamekye’s AMC 2023 Opening Address [FULL TEXT]

Please find below the full text of the Opening Address delivered by the Chairman of THE CHURCH OF PENTECOST and Convener of the ongoing All-Ministers Conference (#AMC2023), Apostle Eric Nyamekye, during the opening session of the interdenominational conference.

The address contains all you need to know about the focus and objectives of this all-important conference.

⏳Reading Time: 5 minutes

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Praise the Lord!

I am delighted that we are gathered here once again as a unified force not bound by denominational barriers to pursue the purpose of the Church in our dear nation, Ghana.

On behalf of the Executive Council of The Church of Pentecost and the entire planning committee members of this conference, which cuts across several other denominations, I welcome you all to the second edition of the All Ministers #interdenominational conference. Last year was a blessing, and I am hopeful this year’s edition will equally be a blessing.

Dearly beloved, as I indicated last year, I hold the view that no one denomination is the exclusive or particular channel of God’s grace. The saints, I believe, are equally distributed among all denominations and that the degree to which God uses a fellow is determined not by the denomination in which he is located but by the depth of his surrender to God, regardless of where he is.

To achieve the #transformation of our dear nation and fulfil the Great Commission within our context, we must work together across denominational lines. By joining forces, we can become a powerful voice that shapes the growth and development of our nation through the gospel of Christ. This is the essence of the “All Ministers Conference”.

Brothers and sisters, this year’s conference, in particular, is a direct follow-up of the National Development Conference, which was hosted by The Church of Pentecost here at PCC a couple of weeks ago under the theme, “Moral Vision and National Development”.

The conference brought together Ghana’s two former presidents, the sitting Vice President, the Speaker of Parliament, the Chief Justice, parliamentarians, leaders of political parties and various heads of institutions.

The Conference called for an urgent need for a clear moral vision that will serve as the bedrock for our development as a nation.

The question we are confronted with as a Church is this: as the salt of the earth and light of the world, what role can the Church play in all this? Dearly beloved, this is what this year’s All Ministers Conference seeks to address under the theme: “Moral Vision and National Development – the Role of the Church”.

The relevance of the church to the common man is the transformation it brings to society.

For a nation that claims to have 71.3 % of its population as Christians, we need to rethink our influence on the nation’s development in our generation, especially the moral development.

Among this, 71.3% of Ghanaians claiming to be Christians are cultural Christians, nominal Christians and actual practising Christians.

By cultural Christians, I am referring to those who claim to be Christians solely due to their forebears being Christians but have never been active members of any church.

Between 2010 and 2015, the Ghana Evangelism Committee conducted a “National Church Survey” in five regions.

However, due to funding constraints, the survey did not cover all the five regions. According to the survey, only 19.76% of the population in the Ashanti region attended church.

In the Upper West region, the survey recorded only 12.05% of the region’s population attending church. The Upper East, Northern and Bono Ahafo regions recorded 12.0%, 8.21% and 21.23% respectively.

Admittedly, it is possible that these statistics might have improved over the period, but one thing is clear: as ministers of the Gospel, we need to work really hard to bring all these cultural and nominal Christians into the fold of the Church and effectively disciple them so that our huge numbers can have a meaningful impact on the nation.

Brothers and sisters, as we work hard in discipling our members, we must, however, keep in mind that persons are not isolated individuals, but are persons embedded in community with its complex and sometimes corrupt socioeconomic and political structures.

We cannot save the soul of an individual and be unconcerned about the society they live in – the very structures and systems that inform their everyday life. Both the soul and society must be evangelised to make righteous living easy in the society.

The theme for this conference, “Moral Vision and National Development – the Role of the Church”, is a call to consciously raise all who claim to be members of our churches to be channels through whom the grace of God will flow in blessing to society.

It is a call to help our members appreciate their role as the salt of the earth and the light of the world.

It is a call to re-orient ourselves that the Church holds the key to the transformation of this nation.

It is a call to refocus the church on its core mandate of raising Christlike Christians who will transform society with righteousness. For righteousness, the Bible says, exalts a nation, but sin is a reproach to any people (Prov. 14:34).

Brothers and sisters, I am very confident that as the Church of God, when we collectively keep our minds to our mandate, we can bring about the needed transformation to the nation. I am happy to note that we can draw some encouragement from history.

Max Weber was a German sociologist, economist, and politician. In 1904, Max Weber wrote a series of essays about the evolution of capitalism in Northern and Central Europe. These essays later became the widely read book “The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism.”

According to Weber, the industrial revolution that gave birth to the new economy in Europe and eventually to our modern civilisation was a result of the teachings of the European Protestants.

Weber believed that the influence of the Protestant ethic on large numbers of people to work in the secular world, enterprises, trade, savings, and investments gave birth to the new world economy, largely known as capitalism. It is upon that economy that our modern world stands.

Prior to the Protestants’ teaching, the dilemma of the European economy was the fact that when landowners employed labourers, they could not make these labourers give their best. The only incentive widely known and used at that time was an increase in wages, thinking that when there was an increase in wages for labourers, they would view their work as more valuable and, thus, work longer and harder.

However, in the real sense, the labourers often spent less time working and not hard enough. They would rather drink and leisure. But the teaching of the Protestants changed all that.

The basic teachings of the Protestants were all surrounding values, ethics, and morals. They focused on building a better world out of what they had. Their teachings, among others, stressed on the following:

✅ That righteousness must be at the basis of the nation, government, and society in general.

✅ That ministry was not only meant for the clergy; every believer is a minister. Howbeit, they minister everywhere they find themselves on a daily basis: at work, at home and everywhere.

✅ That secular work is as sacred as the clergy’s. Hence, you do everything as unto the Lord, and whatsoever your hands find to do, you do to the very best.

✅ They also taught their people to choose to live for the long term, even eternity. This perspective on time motivated them to be far-sighted, sacrificing the short-term for the long term. They live with the next generation in mind. They were never interested in amassing wealth at the expense of the nation.

These values were later transferred to the United States of America, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and other countries and continents where the descendants of these European Protestants were scattered in the 16th/17th centuries.

Everywhere the Protestants and their descendants went, they took with them these same teachings, and they got the same results – a developed economy and an advanced and civilised society – a generally more prosperous nation.

If we do what the #Protestants did, we will have the results they had – the transformation of our society.

We cannot afford to only put up huge church buildings, raise gigantic billboards, litter churches across the nations, etc., without our salt and light being felt in our generation. This ought to change, brothers and sisters; this ought to change.

How can we complain about corruption when we are the salt of the earth?

It is for such reasons that we are gathered here once again to rethink our influence on our nation. It may not all happen in one day, but we need to begin from somewhere.

We need to ask ourselves, what are we not doing right? As we hear from the various speakers, let each and every one of us reflect – what am I not doing right as a church worker?

Let us make an intentional effort to translate our religiosity to spirituality and from spirituality to morality, and let us release our members into society to transform it with the values and principles of the Kingdom of God.

If the Protestants in the 16/17 century could do it, we can also do it in our time.

It is my prayer that in this conference, we shall have a deeper and better understanding of our role in the nation’s development.

I pray that after this conference, righteousness will flow from our churches to the streets and the marketplace.

On this note, I once again welcome you to the second edition of the All Ministers Conference. May the Lord of the Church, even our Lord Jesus Christ, be with us and give us success.

Seek Character In Addition To Charisma – Apostle Agyemang Bekoe To Ministers WEB

Seek Character In Addition To Charisma – Apostle Agyemang Bekoe To Ministers

The International Missions Director of The Church of Pentecost, Apostle Emmanuel Agyemang Bekoe, has challenged Ministers of the Gospel to balance charisma and character in their ministries.

He explained that charisma and its power have become the most desirous among some Christians at the expense of character, even though charisma could be faked.

“Character as a fruit of the spirit in the life of the believer is always genuine and could not be faked and thus has to be desired,” he posited, adding, “A false scale is an abomination unto the Lord. The genuine must spread in order not for the fake to trend.”

Apostle Agyemang Bekoe further explained that character formation hinged on the fruits of the spirit will guide and guard the believer. So, it was important for believers to develop character and not be afraid to operate in charisma. 

Speaking on the topic, “The Personhood of the Priesthood for Moral Vision and Development” at the 2023 All Ministers Conference on Wednesday at the Pentecost Convention Centre (PCC), Gomoa Fetteh near Kasoa, Apostle Agyemang Bekoe observed that some ministers by their actions and concentration focused on the workings of charisma at the expense of character. 

About the use of anointing oil and the working of the Holy Spirit in the believer’s life, he advised Christians to yearn for the infilling of the Holy Spirit, which places character as its core and indwells in the believer.

“If you have the anointing oil (aleiphos) in your bag, it is time to seek the fruits of the spirit (Kleos) because the ‘aleiphos’ can be counterfeited whereas the ‘kloes’ cannot,” he admonished. 

The conference, which started on Tuesday, 19th, and will end on Friday, 22nd September, is on the theme: “Moral Vision and National Development: The Role of the Church.”

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Churches Urged To Help Solve Ghana’s Problems web

Churches Urged To Help Solve Ghana’s Problems 

The Chairperson of the National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE), Ms Kathleen Addy, has called on churches in Ghana to be conscious of the country’s challenges and be proactive in assisting the state to help address them.

Addressing participants of the 2nd All Ministers Conference (the biggest non-denominational conference for Ghanaian clergy) at the Pentecost Convention Centre, Gomoa Fetteh near Kasoa, on Wednesday, Ms Addy explained that although God has blessed Ghana with enormous resources, the country is bedevilled with enormous challenges with the citizenry looking up to others to come to its rescue, thus hindering the nation’s growth and prosperity.

“The church is integral to the very essence of the country. It must lead the nation to model the country to the place where our forefathers projected,” she said while alluding to the national anthem’s words.

She added: “Ours is a country with a great opportunity to be the best, but our challenge today is with how to get out from where we are today to where we ought to be. 

“You (the Church) are the ones we are waiting for. Jesus has done his part. No Messiah is coming to solve our problems for us. It is now time for us to take action and solve our problems. We are to be the change we want. Each of us must take up the responsibility.”

The NCCE Chairperson also used the opportunity to appreciate the Church in Ghana, especially The Church of Pentecost, for being a reliable and dependent partner of the NCCE over the years.

“The political class made it a point to defund the NCCE from the onset of the 4th Republic, and so we value the Church and her relationship with the NCCE. 

She cited the invaluable support The Church of Pentecost offered the NCCE during the COVID-19 pandemic, where it released a fleet of vehicles (cinema vans) to the Commission, fueled them and provided drivers to help the Commission carry out its mandate of educating the Ghanaian populace. 

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The Relevance Of The Church Is The Transformation It Brings To Society – Apostle Nyamekye

The Chairman of The Church of Pentecost and President of the Ghana Pentecostal and Charismatic Council (GPCC), Apostle Eric Nyamekye, has asserted that society will feel the impact of the Church when it works towards transforming society.

“The relevance of the Church to the ordinary person is the transformation it brings to society,” he said, adding, “For a nation that claims to have 71.3 % of its population as Christians, we need to rethink our influence on the nation’s development in our generation, especially the moral development.

Apostle Nyamekye said this at the opening session of the 2nd All Ministers Conference (the biggest non-denominational conference for Ghanaian pastors) being attended by about 2,500 ministers at the Pentecost Convention Centre (PCC), Gomoa Fetteh near Kasoa.

Being held from Tuesday, 19th to Friday, 22nd September 2023, the conference is under the theme: “Moral Vision and National Development – the Role of the Church.”

The Chairman pointed out that 71.3% of Ghanaians purporting to be Christians are cultural Christians, nominal Christians and actual practising Christians.

He observed that cultural Christians are those whose ancestors were Christians while they have not accepted Christ or been active church members.

He charged the clergy to work to bring all cultural and nominal Christians into the Church and effectively disciple them so that the Christian community’s huge numbers could have a meaningful impact on the nations.

Apostle Nyamekye charged ministers to work together across denominational lines’ since this is the essence of the conference.

While calling on the clergy to work hard at winning souls, he advised them not to lose sight that the souls (persons) they win are not isolated individuals but live in communities with complex and corrupt socio-economic and political structures.

“We cannot save the soul of an individual and not be concerned about the society they live in, the very structures and systems that inform their daily lives. Both the soul and society must be evangelised to make righteous living easy in the nation,” he stated.

The GPCC President expressed his delight that Ghanaian clergy was gathering once again as a unified force not bound by denominational barriers to pursuing the purpose of the Church in Ghana.

He reiterated that a single church denomination cannot achieve the work of transforming people to be Christlike, saying, “I hold the view that no one denomination is the exclusive or particular channel of God’s grace. The saints, I believe, are equally distributed across denominations. That, the degree to which God uses a fellow is determined not by the denomination in which they are located but by the depth of their surrender to God regardless of where they are.”

Apostle Nyamekye disclosed that the essence of this year’s conference is to work together as a joint force to effect a moral change and foster national development as the Church, stressing that “we can become a powerful voice that shapes the development of our nation through the gospel of Christ.”

He indicated that the conference is a direct follow-up of the conference on national development that brought together two former presidents of Ghana, the sitting vice-president, the speaker of parliament, the chief justice, parliamentarians, leaders of political parties and various heads of institutions.

He revealed that the conference called for an urgent need for a clear moral vision to serve as a bedrock for Ghana’s development.

He said the theme of the conference serves as a conscious call to Christians to be channels through whom the grace of God will flow in blessing the Ghanaian society, a call to help all appreciate their role as salt and light of the earth, a call to orient church members that the Church holds the key to the transformation of nations.

Apostle Eric Nyamekye called on the Church to refocus her core mandate of raising Christlike Christians who will transform society with righteousness.

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Counselling Ministry Trains Prayer Camp Counselors web

Counselling Ministry Trains Prayer Camp Counselors

The Church of Pentecost Counselling Ministry (COPCOM) has organised a three-day training programme for Prayer Centre Counselors.

The event was held at the Pentecost Convention Centre (PCC), Brofoyedru in Kumasi from Wednesday, 13th, to Friday, 15th September 2023.

The three-member COPCOM team led by Apostle Dr. Philip Osei-Korsah (COPCOM Director) also included Pastor Dr. Ebenezer Tetteh Kpalam (National Executive Committee Member of COPCOM) and Pastor John Nyarko Akyirem (Nkwanta Area COPCOM Leader).

Apostle Dr. Philip Osei-Korsah, in his opening address, congratulated the participants for allowing themselves to be used by God in preparing the “bride” (believers) for her “groom” (Jesus).

He explained that the purpose of the training was to help them acquaint themselves with the needed basic knowledge to enable them to function well as counselors at their various prayer centers.

Speaking on the Basic Principles of Counselling, the COPCOM Director admonished participants not to assume the role of “the Messiah” but make time for their personal growth.

He touched on Christian Counselling, noting that they should do well to emulate Jesus’ style of counselling, thus being thorough, having compassion, accepting people as they are, changing the thinking of those who visit their facilities, and the like.

He encouraged them to disciple those who visit their centres for God and His Church as they seek to address their needs.

Apostle Dr. Osei-Korsah also urged participants to keep all information they have on their clients confidential unless the client is at risk of causing harm to him or herself or to someone else or they are working under supervision when they have to report to the Camp Leader.

“Even with that, names should not be mentioned,” he added.

Presenting on the topic “Introduction to Mental Health and the Role of Religion and Christian Spirituality in Mental Health,” Pastor Dr. Ebenezer Tetteh Kpalam said reports indicate that almost 50% of those seeking help with mental health issues turn first to ministers, especially Prayer Camp Leaders and Counselors, and because of this, Leaders of these centers need to be braced up with how to handle these issues.

He advised participants to desist from making statements such as “This sickness is not hospital sickness,” “This sickness is not physical or spiritual.” Rather, they should employ a collaborative method of handling all mental illness issues that people visit them with.

This, he said, they should liaise with mental health professionals in their communities to assist them.

On the Relevant Legal Framework of Mental Health and Counselling in Ghana, Pastor Dr. Kpalam stressed that Ghana’s 2012 Mental Health Act provides that people with psychosocial disabilities “shall not be subjected to torture, cruelty, forced labor, and any other inhuman treatment.”

He added that prayer camps found exposing such persons to abuses such as shackling, caging, flogging, force fasting, and the like could, therefore, be persecuted.

On record keeping, participants were admonished to take this seriously as it serves the following purposes: Standard of Care, Basis for Communicating with one’s client, Desirable Defense Against Litigation, and Ethical and Legal Ramifications.

A template for basic record-keeping was made available for participants.

Other topics treated at the event were: The Role of Religion and Christian Spirituality in Mental Health, Group Therapy and Counselling, as well as Networking and Referral System.

In all, 43 participants drawn from the various Areas took part in the training programme, with two of them being ministers who have prayer centers within their district.

Report by COPCOM Media Team.