"We seldom get into trouble when we speak softly. It is only when we raise our voices that the sparks fly and tiny molehills become great mountains of contention."
The Spirit of Prophecy and Revelation -- A Personal Testimony
by Imo Eshiet
Celestina Akonmma,
second daughter and last child in our increasingly empty nest tugs at
my heartstrings for several reasons. At conception doctors wanted her
aborted because of some factor in the mother’s blood. At each
birth, my wife needed to take a certain vaccine if she hoped for
another baby.
But as is scandalously
common in my country, the vital drug was not available at her last
delivery thus foreclosing the possibility of another pregnancy, or so
the doctors thought. One of the bizarre contradictions in the twisted
choices my nation makes is that while the cabal ruling it imports the
latest cars and jets rolling off assembly lines in the U.S., Europe
and Asia to drive on dirt roads and fly from derelict airports, the
majority yet lack the essentials it needs for basic survival. And so
when Livina conceived, it seemed the wise thing to do was to get rid
of the pregnancy.
However, a priesthood
leader thought otherwise. In his prayer, he was inspired to promise
both mother and child safety. He added that our testimony would be
strengthened at the birth of the coming child. Citing the scriptures,
he assured that if we kept the laws of the Church more glory would be
added to the kingdom which we had received.
His words injected hope
in our hearts and greater love for the unborn child. Early in my
conversion I learned to trust, against all odds, the unique power in
the priesthood. Though the “natural man” in me frustrated
my arriving at the state of “nothing doubting” required
so that whatever we asked of the Father in the Son’s name may
be granted, yet I had seen the astonishing change that faith in the
restored gospel brought to our family life.
Beyond my personal
experience, I had witnessed the stunning power in the priesthood
memorably demonstrated when our district embarked on a service
project. Concerned that recreational parks, turnarounds and city
gates were going to seed, public spirited members obtained permission
from city authorities to renovate them.
Though many saints
there are low income folks just struggling to survive, in spite of
their privation they hold on strongly to their faith and love for the
Lord. It was so heartwarming seeing these humble folks donating time,
skills, labor, money and items to give a facelift to a city that was
previously well groomed but now mussed. Through their selfless
sacrifice several rundown infrastructures received new life.
One of the target
projects was the city main gate. Because of its peculiar aquatic
environment, Calabar gives the impression of an island. Almost
surrounded by rivers and the Atlantic Ocean, it is connected to the
rest of the country only by a single-lane road which splits into a
dual carriage as it leads into the city. The gate located just at the
point where the road is dualized had been hit by hard times and
became shabby.
After several hours of
hard work, the saints gave it a resplendent look and the saints were
visibly happy. But they were to be reminded that earthly joy, as a
famous Nigerian dramatist remarks, “has a slender body and
breaks too soon”. No sooner had they finished the work than
the sky puckered and darkened its face.
From a distance,
torrential rains driven by gusty and fierce winds were hitting hard,
battering the city and triggering flash floods. We had no weatherman
to warn us beforehand. Even if we did, rains in our tropics sometimes
come so suddenly and unexpectedly that forecasts couldn’t help
much. Such rains often cause extensive disaster by literally washing
away to the sea, farms, homes, schools, roads, animals and school
children caught in the storm.
As the rains
approached, we were downcast because not only the wet paint but also
the love and labor of impoverished saints were about to be wasted. As
the district priesthood leader, I was lost in thought and
self-recrimination for not anticipating the situation. While I felt
momentarily deflated like a bird with broken wings, Francis Nmeribe,
my second counselor, (now a stake president) saw things differently
and suggested we gathered up the saints to pray.
Since the inspiration
was his, I asked if he would say the prayer. Calling on Heavenly
Father to accept the humble sacrifice of the saints, he asked that He
should hold off the threatening elements until the saints were done
with their work and the paint dried on the walls of the massive
concrete gate. Remarkably, the saints went home that day feeling
encircled in the arms of a God who is a respecter of faith.
It was instances like
this that bolstered my belief that my daughter “would be
delivered in a safe environment” and that “both mother
and child would be a blessing to the family” as the priesthood
leader had pronounced. It was uncanny that the leader who acted as
voice in blessing my pregnant wife spoke with such authority and
sweet inspiration over the fears gnawing at my heart.
Asking
politicians to be accountable in a culture of impunity and speaking
out in class and in public against thieves in government made me a
marked man. I loved teaching and put two decades into it. I tried to
open students’ minds to what Aristotle meant when he said,
“Dignity does not consist in possessing honors, but in
deserving them”.
The mass corruption
that kills our potential for greatness challenged me to transfer to
my students a passion for new possibilities and the right attitude to
deal with the retrograde mandate foisted on us. But being an
intellectual is a dangerous thing in a nation where ignorance is
officially encouraged to keep people benighted and thus freely rob
them of liberty without a whimper of protest. It means sleeping and
waking to the reality that one’s family could be bumped off at
any time to persuade one to submit to the culture of silence.
It was painful seeing
people being physically beaten and arm twisted to accept whatever the
state threw at them. Such outrage made me wonder why we were so
wanton, why people including my children, couldn’t be treated
with decency. Surely, even dogs had some dignity in societies that
were not so wayward to eat them up as we do. There was dereliction
all around as peopled reneged on duties. For instance, when the
brother who preceded my last daughter by twelve years was born, I had
to bribe specialists ahead of time so they would be by my wife’s
bedside in the labor-room.
I had to because
statistics show that a woman in labor dies every thirty minutes in my
country as most cannot access medical care. So taking a wife for
child delivery in moribund hospitals that look more like Stone Age
morgues was like escorting her to the gallows. Insane as it was, it
was reality one had to live with.
So the blessing my wife
got resounded in my mind when a sister living in the U.S. invited her
to spend time vacation there. She had just defended her doctoral
dissertation and the trip was to help her cool off after the grueling
research. There was also the unstated possibility she might have her
baby there. I very much welcomed the prospects given the redoubtable
insecurity to life and property so common in our crisis-ridden
nation.
There was a chance that
as the baby would indeed be safely delivered as had been prophesized.
In addition, if she chose at a later date to return there, she could
have an education that would prepare her for life in an economy
driven by ideas and innovation rather than stagnation. If she opted
to live there she’d be free from the open and cankering worries
that haunted us when we turned down the opportunities to migrate as
many of our mates had done. The issue now was how to get the American
visa, because in Nigeria is easier for the biblical camel to pass
through the eye of a needle than to get that document.
But when Livina got her
visa, her condition regardless, Nephi’s prophecy that “there
shall none come into this land save they shall be brought by the hand
of the Lord” suddenly transcended time for us. When she left I
suggested a name for the baby. It was to be my sister’s
namesake in the hope that sister’s tireless energy would rub
off on the child. The sister had stuck firmly to the family’s
vision on education.
After seeing her four
daughters through college as various professionals, she had gone on
from practicing and teaching nursing to pursue a degree in medicine
even though she was advancing to sixty. She had a vigor I respected.
Living in hard and harsh circumstances as a child pushed us to want a
better life.
Soon after the baby
came Livina called and shared an experience with me. After delivering
the child, she said she was lying on the bed with her baby beside
her. In what seemed like a trance, though she claimed she was very
much conscious, my mother who had passed in 1995 appeared in the
room. With a happy countenance as any grandmother would have in the
circumstance, she picked up the baby, cuddled her and sat down on the
couch for a while before returning the baby and leaving the room.
Since Livina is not
given to superstition, when she suggested based on her experience to
add my mother’s name to the one I had given for the child, I
agreed. There was a strong bond between the two women, even though
they clawed at each other, they just as well easily made up soon
after. Though I rarely saw her in my dreams, Livina often did.
A year following her
passing, I and Livina had traveled to Johannesburg, South Africa, for
temple ordinances. At the time this was the only temple in Africa. We
had a long list of ancestors to work for.
Returning to the hotel
room after the endowment and baptismal sessions, we slept soundly. It
was chilly but the exhaustion of the eight hour trip the day before
and the humming heater in the room made me sleep like a log. When I
awoke the next morning, I saw Livina sitting in a contemplative mood.
Having been married to
her for ten years by then, I could easily read her like a book.
Sitting close with my arms on her shoulders, she told me of a dream
where my late mother was extremely happy with her vicarious baptism
for her. When I examined her critically for signs of any pranks, she
started crying and I stopped the foolishness.
The priesthood leader
had it correct when in that prayer he pronounced her and her baby a
blessing to the family. It was through her and our children that I
got into the church. It was through her I got my early testimony,
too.
She had been called as
our branch organist. The only musical instrument, if it could be
called that, Livina knew how to play was using her hands as clappers!
The couple missionary set apart to teach her was just as blissfully
ignorant.
The best she did was
read the notes and ask Livina to sort it out herself. From the human
point of view, it was like asking the blind to lead the blind. But
when the spirit of prophecy and revelation through which the call was
extended took over neither the teacher nor the student turned out as
forsaken as I had feared.
When she told me about
strangers teaching her in her dream how to get her notes right, I was
amused. However, all that changed when she started playing at
sacrament meetings to the amazement of all. This is my testimony and
my family members and saints in Calabar who witnessed the events
narrated here know it is true.
Imo Ben Eshiet was born in Port Harcourt, Nigeria. Raised in his village, Uruk Enung, and at
several cities in his country including Nsukka, Enugu, Umuahia, Eket and Calabar, Eshiet is a
detribalized Nigerian. Although he was extensively exposed to Western education right from
childhood in his country where he obtained a PhD in English and Literary Studies from the
University of Calabar, he is well nurtured in African history, politics, culture and traditions.
Imo is currently a teacher in the high priests group in the Summit Ward of the Greensboro North
Carolina Stake.