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PHOTO: Financial Technology Africa
In the colonial era and the period succeeding it, Africa was treated as a charity by the western powers. Africa was a dependency in deals, and not as a partner. This unbalanced relationship also means that the terms of exchange became unbalanced and unfair. Whilst money, finished products and advanced services flowed into Africa in ample quantities, natural resources serving as raw materials flowed out of the continent in much larger quantities and African leaders were powerless to negotiate, leading to a culture of dependency.
The twenty-first century world looks a little different. Whilst Africa still remains poor in comparison to the rich western countries, there is a significant shift in the dynamics. With increased development, self-awareness and access to technology and information, African leaders now have more to bargain with. Also, there is an increase in human capacity development within many African countries as more people become educa
South-sudanKenyaUnited-statesNigeriaSingaporeGhanaLiberty-universityVirginiaLiberiaNigerianSingaporeanAmericanOn Biblical Literacy in America
Wednesday, June 9, 2021 @ 7:37 AM
My people are destroyed for a lack of knowledge… (Hosea 4:6 ESV).
“Biblical illiteracy is one of the big problems the church is facing today,” according to Matthew White, a bi-vocational pastor who also writes for
AFA Journal. Biblical literacy is the foundation for a biblical worldview that affects families, churches, our nation, and the world.
Unfortunately, that foundation has cracks.
Even if you take a free biblical literacy quiz and do well, facts alone without faith in Christ mean nothing eternally. Second Timothy 3:7 describes this perfectly as “…always learning and never able to arrive at a knowledge of the truth.”
United-statesUnited-kingdomSwitzerlandScotlandAmericanBert-harperJesus-christJohn-bunyanAtlantic-oceanAmerica-judeo-christianPaul-caminitiMatthew-white April 22, 2021 : By Logan Smith - Office of Communications & Public Engagement
From left: Jerry Prevo, Steve Green, Forson Swanzy, Jack Brewer, and Everett Hamilton
Liberty University’s School of Business, in partnership with the Standing for Freedom Center, organized and implemented one of the most groundbreaking summits in school history April 13-15, bringing in top government and business trailblazers from across Africa to discuss ways to orchestrate and deliver Judeo-Christian foundational change for all economies involved. Plans for a second Equity for Africa summit are already in the works for late September.
These African leaders, either attending in person or through videoconferencing, included the vice president of Nigeria, president of Ghana, former president of Malawi, vice president of Liberia, and other political and economic heads of state. Members of the Congo parliament, the governor of South Sudan, and an ambassador to Rwanda also participated. Many other coun
South-sudanMalawiUnited-statesNigeriaGhanaCongoRwandaSouth-africaLiberiaNigerianThe-congoAmerica