ODON JO BA WA Psalm 150 is the aggregate of our bottomless - TopicsExpress



          

ODON JO BA WA Psalm 150 is the aggregate of our bottomless gratitude to the Almighty God. The Psalmists dexterity and hallowdness in his eulogy and uncompromising glorification of God is generously demonstrated in this Psalm. The Psalm is comparable to a spiritual odyssey that crystalised and culminated to its apogee in the sixth verse. The sixth verse is a clarion call on all and sundry to render undisguised obeisance and reverence to the infallible, invisible, ever-loving God. In Uhe, the worship and praise of Oishagbodo Agogoo - (Our native name for God the Creator) (or Oronmojo - which is a clip from Oron un o mojo ola - meaning only heaven(God) knows tomorrow)(written Orunmojo in the Yoruba variation) is done with the totality of strength, excitement and unmitigated faith. To the Uhe man, there is no alternative to God! God is supreme and second-to-none! He sees all and knows all. His mercies and compassion are innumerable. He is the giver of Life and the procurer of enduring, unfading, unstoppable blessings. He is the protector with unblinking eyes hovering His beloved children night and day. The Uhe man is a God addict! He sees the supernatural, invinsible arms of the Lord in his daily manifestations and undertakings. To us God is just a little over us ensuring the perfection and fulfilment of His Fatherly desires for us. We have the awesome consciousness that Oishagbodo Agogoo is able to do and undo all things. He has the ability and capability to kill or raise to life. He Himself cannot be killed. He is unconquerable, unharrassable and undefeatable! God is to us in a class, the class of God! The Uhe man is a powerless man outside the perimeter and the gratuituos canopy of God. We hold tenatiously to the tenderly cord of the Creator and Maker in order to ensure infinite supply of our Physical, physiological, emotional and spiritual needs which only He can guarantee. In all we do or say in Uhe, God is the ultimate. We praise Him(gbushu gba), we worship Him, we pray to Him because He is our corner-stone and our Rock and Defender in the day of tribulations and challenges. Children are taught early in life to render the early-morning doxologies to the Father. On the farm or on the road, moral lessons about God and Gods omnipotence, omniscience and omniscience are variably expounded. The child grows up in Uhe to know, love and worship God as the One with the utmost authority and sovereign power. The sixth verse of Psalm 150 thus captures the cognitive reality of the Uhe man, which is to worship and praise God vicisitudes notwithstanding. Despite our ocean-full love of God in my ancient city, we are nevetheless bereft of the means and the full capacity to truly convey our ineffable, heartfelt delight to Oishagbodo Agogoo. The Bible in Psalm 22:3 says God LIVES in the praise of His People. Which nonetheless implies that the more we praise Him, the more of Him we see, become and possess, amen! This audio is intended to bring more of God to us as we expand our mental reservoirs of Godly praise songs in our Uhe dialect. The audio songs in our Uhe language that I deliberately upload now may not make any meaning(or little if any) to this present generation but our unborn children may be the best beneficiaries because they will always access the catalogues of Uhe songs which I am privileged to receive from above and put down for posterity like the writer of the holy book of Revelation. Odon Jo Ba Wa - is a compilation of Uhe praise songs as you praise Him, may you find Him in all aspects of your life and family in Jesus name. Odon Jo Ba Wa, Wo se Olugbala! youtu.be/2k7sLAG5vyc
Posted on: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 12:01:42 +0000

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