Alpha Hour Convocation: Why faith is attacked while entertainment is celebrated

What really is our problem as a people?
Entertainment shows, concerts, and all kinds of public events receive massive support, applause, and attention. Nobody complains. Nobody feels offended. But the moment it has anything to do with God or the gospel, it suddenly becomes an issue.
Why?
Christians are citizens too. We pay taxes, obey the laws, contribute to society, and have the same constitutional right to freedom of expression and worship as anyone else.
If musicians, comedians, and entertainers are allowed to project their messages freely, then believers must equally be allowed to express their faith openly without intimidation, mockery, or restrictions.
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The gospel is not noise. It is hope. It speaks peace, morality, love, discipline, and purpose values that actually help build society, not destroy it.
Silencing Christianity in the name of “tolerance” is itself intolerance.
And for those constantly shouting about Alpha Hour Convocation, let’s be very clear: the people who chose to be there have not complained of losing their jobs, missing opportunities, or suffering hardship.
They went there by choice. It is their faith, their conviction, and their personal decision that led them there, not force, not pressure.
So critics should honestly rest. If nobody at the convocation is crying, then there is no problem to fix.
Everyone has the right to choose what they believe in and where they invest their time.
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Chale, as I said sometime ago, nothing can stop the gospel.
No system, no trend, no individual. And no man born of a woman can shut the voice of truth.
History has proven it time and time again: the more people try to suppress the message of Christ, the louder it becomes.
If we can make space for entertainment, we must make room for God.
Faith should never be treated as a nuisance. It is a right and one that will continue to stand.
Source: Christopher Sededzi Kwame


