Prophetess Adimabua Urges God-Fearing Women to Rise and Rescue the Nation
The Assistant Director of the Organization of African Instituted Churches (OAIC), Prophetess Bosede Adimabua, has called on God-fearing women across Nigeria to rise, intercede, and take decisive action to rescue the nation from moral and social decline.
Speaking at the 17th Annual OAIC Women and Children Convention, held at the Resolution Church of Christ, beside 7Up Bottling Company, Babaode Area, Ilorin, the prophetess charged women to emulate the biblical Queen Esther, whose courage and obedience delivered her people from destruction.
“Unprecedented challenges surround us daily as a nation — moral decadence, drug addiction, rape, violence against women, poverty, hunger, indecent dressing, injustice, insecurity, and loss of family values,” she lamented.
Prophetess Adimabua, who was also installed as the ‘Mother General’ of the OAIC during the event, urged women to be prayerful, wise, and submissive, stressing that only godly virtues can restore the nation’s moral fabric.
“Technology has advanced beyond imagination, yet ungodliness abounds in society, the Church, and even the home,” she noted, admonishing women to “let the God in them stand” and to act with wisdom in all situations.
She further emphasized the power of prayer, describing it as a vital weapon for building strength and resisting spiritual and societal attacks.
“Women must learn to take a decisive stand in times of crisis, just as Esther risked her life for the deliverance of her people,” she added.
As part of her philanthropic gesture, Prophetess Adimabua — who is also the Chief Executive Officer of the Bosede Adimubua Foundation and a former Chairperson of the Women Wing of the Christian Association of Nigeria (WOWICAN), Kwara State — announced a scholarship scheme covering 60 students for Junior WAEC, 15 for Senior WAEC, and 15 for UTME. She also distributed clothing materials to women’s groups, and presented textbooks and gifts to children, parents, and the church choir.
The three-day convention, which ran from Thursday to Saturday, brought together women and children from various OAIC congregations, focusing on the theme “Let the woman of God in stand” and with seminars, intercession, and teaching on nation-building through godly living.