| Celestial City, Imeko | |||
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Celestial City, Imeko
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| Coordinates: 7.452348°N 2.839408°E | |||
| Location | Imeko, Ogun State | ||
| Country | Nigeria | ||
| Denomination | Celestial Church of Christ | ||
| History | |||
| Founded | 1985 | ||
| Founder(s) | Samuel Oshoffa | ||
Celestial City, Imeko is the Holy City of the Celestial Church of Christ (CCC). It is located in the Imeko Afon Local Government Area of Ogun State, Nigeria, very close to the border with Benin. Celestial City is known as "Jerusalem" by the celestials. The city has potential as a tourist location.
Contents
- 1 Origins
- 2 Ceremonies
- 3 Buildings
- 4 References
- 5 External links
Origins
Imeko is a small, spread out village in a hilly region of Ogun State a few kilometers from the Benin border.
The vegetation is a mixture of savannah belt and sparse forest suitable
for cattle raising. Most people are engaged in farming, with tomatoes
and cassava being the most important crops. Imeko is the home town of the mother of the Prophet "Papa" Samuel Oshoffa, who founded the Celestial Church of Christ in 1947 in Dahomey (now Benin), moving to Nigeria in 1979.
In 1973 a visionary told Oshoffa of a visitation by a troop of angels
who had said the Celestial City must be built at Imeko in a place
called Igbo-Ifa, home of the traditional Yoruba
deity Orunmila. Mecca would be closed and Jerusalem would move to
Imeko. This confirmed messages the Prophet believed he had received from
Christ. Oshoffa initiated construction of the Celestial City in 1983.
Oshoffa had directed that if he died in Nigeria he should be buried
near his mother on family land at Imeko, and his burial ground be
treated as holy ground and a place of pilgrimage. If he were to die in Dahomey he was to be buried at Seme in his home town of Porto-Novo. Oshoffa died in Lagos,
Nigeria on 10 September 1985 a few days after surviving a car crash. He
was buried according to his wishes at Celestial City on 19 October 1985
with great ceremony. He left behind 34 wives and 150 children.
The Porto-Novo congregation was angry at the choice of burial place,
and there were rumors of plans to remove the body to Porto-Novo. The
Nigerian police took special precautions to prevent this happening.
Ceremonies
Alexander Abiodun Adebayo Bada
was proclaimed the second Pastor of the church on 17 December 1985, and
his appointment was ratified by the general congregation at their
annual Christmas festival and convocation at Imeko on 25 December 1985.
After a two-year waiting period, Bada was enthroned as Pastor at
Celestial City on 24 December 1987.
Imeko became a place of pilgrimage at Christmas for thousands of
Celestial Christians from Nigeria, from other parts of West Africa and
from more distant parts including London and the United States, although
most of the Benin congregation gather in Seme, Porto-Novo. The journey
to Imeko is expensive and may be difficult to accomplish. Travelers from
Abidjan in Côte d'Ivoire,
for example, face a long coach ride costing the equivalent of a month's
minimum wages. The traveler must pay visa fees, informal fees at border
crossings, and anointment fees on arrival. But an important part of the
pilgrimage is the opportunity to be anointed, which can only be done by
the Pastor of the church, and usually only at Imeko.
When Pastor Bada died, he was buried at Celestial City on 1 October 2000. Ogun State Governor Olusegun Osoba represented President Olusegun Obasanjo at the funeral ceremony.
There had been a legal challenge to the burial of Bada close to the
Oshoffa's tomb, with Rev. Edward Olayinola Oladokun saying that the
burial would erode Oshoffa's intentions for Celestial City to become a
pilgrimage centre. The 3rd pastor, Philip Hunsu Ajose, was appointed the new leader at a meeting on 24 December 2000 at Celestial City.[10]
However, Ajose soon became terminally ill, and died on 2 March 2001. He
was buried on 30 March 2001 at the conference center at Celestial City.
Ajose's succession was disputed, and by October 2003 the church had split into four factions. One was led by the founder's son Emmanuel Oschoffa, chosen by the board of trustees, one by Paul Suru Maforikan,
chosen by the council of superiors of CCC Worldwide, one by Superior
Evangelist Agbaosi of Benin and one by Superior Evangelist Josiah Kayode
Owudunni.
The schism had still not been resolved as of April 2010, with six
claimants to be pastor, although the Supreme Court had declared that
nobody could call himself Pastor of the CCC until the church had a new
constitution.
Buildings
Plans to build a cathedral at the National Headquarters, Makoko had
been initiated and approved by the founder in 1973, but were put on hold
when planning began for Celestial City.
The original plan, revealed in a celestial vision, was for Celestial
City to include a huge cathedral, a prayer garden, conference hall,
residence for the pastor, inns for each diocese and so on. Later, plans
were made to build an impressive mausoleum for the prophet. Work began,
foundations were laid and some pillars erected, but a 2002 report said
that the Celestial City was still essentially a building site. A market
has sprung up to sell religious goods such as candles and vestments, as
well as food and drink. With no formal facilities, the pilgrims must
camp where they can find a place. When the pilgrims leave, the site
becomes virtually deserted.
Senior Prophetess Rosaline Bola Sodeinde, known as the "spiritual
daughter" of the church founder, was reported to be raising funds for
building a basilica at Celestial City in 1995. During his short tenure, in 2001 Pastor Ajose ordered that the seminary at Makoko,
in the outskirts of Lagos, be transferred to Imeko. This was ratified
by the board of trustees. He also ordained that any Pastor who succeeded
him should live at Imeko. At Ajose's burial, youths carried placards
reading "The emerging pastor must stay in Imeko", "Complete the
Celestial city project" and "Don't change Papa Oschoffa's plan for
Imeko". One of the youth leaders said the people of the town wanted
church elders to develop Celestial city faster, making it more than just
a burial ground.
However, despite plans for more construction at the site, little was
done. In a statement dated 27 January 2009, Evangelist (Prophet) Samuel
Olumuyiwa Oshodi said "All projects in the Celestial City, Imeko ...
have become major embarrassment to right thinking Celestians – just
because we lack Godly leadership".
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