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A National Day of Disgrace - Not Prayer

Opinion

3 days ago
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There are moments in a nation’s life when moral clarity demands brutal honesty. July 1, 2025 — once hallowed as Republic Day, the symbolic rebirth of Ghana’s sovereignty — has been defiled, rebranded by President John Mahama as a National Day of Prayer. But this is not a nation in genuine repentance. It is a ruling elite cloaking tyranny in piety — a calculated performance to baptize oppression with sacred words. It is not holiness. It is heresy.

Since taking office, Mahama’s administration has orchestrated a ruthless partisan purge of the public service. Thousands of competent professionals have been discarded — not for corruption or dereliction of duty, but for lacking NDC loyalty. In their place, party loyalists have been installed, turning public institutions into political outposts. Governance has degenerated into patronage. And while citizens groan, the clergy — once lion-hearted in moral witness — now sits in embarrassed silence, their tongues tied by favour, fear, or complicity.

Even more troubling is the desecration of justice. A sitting Chief Justice, whose only fault is her refusal to bend the law to political will, has been suspended and dragged before a kangaroo disciplinary tribunal. The constitutional order is being gutted in broad daylight — and yet, the clergy, who should thunder against this violation, whisper instead, if they speak at all. Their silence is not neutrality; it is betrayal.

To give this religious charade an air of credibility, Cardinal Peter Turkson was flown in from the Vatican. Archbishops, including Nicholas Duncan-Williams, were assembled like ceremonial props in a script already written. The spectacle was grand — yet hollow. The presence of such religious luminaries did not sanctify the event; it exposed it. Their participation rendered the entire occasion an extravagant farce, a pageant of pious deception. It was not a national day of prayer. It was a national day of disgrace — clad in cassocks, soaked in contradiction.

If the so-called National Day of Prayer were ever meant to achieve true spiritual renewal, the very clerics assembled should have spoken with prophetic courage. They should have told Mahama to his face: stop destroying the judiciary. They should have demanded the immediate revocation of Chief Justice Torkornoo’s suspension, an end to the frivolous disciplinary proceedings, and her full reinstatement. They should have called — without fear or favour — for the reappointment of all unjustly dismissed public servants. Anything less is not prayer. It is performance.

This moral collapse did not begin today. Under Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, Ghana took a bold, unifying step — the construction of a national cathedral envisioned as a transcendent symbol of faith, memory, and identity. It was a vision rooted in statesmanship, not partisanship. But it became the object of vilification. The charge was led by Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, who rallied a campaign of distortion, aided by clergy who conveniently energized the pulpit against the state. There was no proven wrongdoing in that project — only a determined effort to frustrate a legacy. What emerged from that episode was glaring: Ghana’s deeper political illness may not be its politicians, but its pliable clergy — men who claim to speak for God but bend to party scripts.

Against this backdrop, July 1 as a National Day of Prayer becomes not a call to divine encounter, but a mockery of it. You do not persecute the righteous, dismantle institutions, suppress dissent — and then summon the nation to pray, as though heaven can be deceived. That is not repentance. That is religious drama. It is not a return to God. It is a strategic hiding behind His name.

Let it be said with moral precision: Ghana does not need more ceremonial prayers from hypocritical lips. We need truth spoken in power, justice upheld without fear, and faith lived with integrity. The nation is bleeding not only because of corrupt politics — but because its spiritual sentinels have gone blind.

To the clergy: your silence is not peacekeeping; it is complicity. And to the people of Ghana: do not be pacified by rituals dressed in scripture. July 1 must not become a shrine to hypocrisy. Let it instead be a trumpet blast — a national reckoning, where truth tears the veil of pretense and the republic reclaims its soul.

J. A. Sarbah
Political Observer | Voice of National Conscience

source: J. A. Sarbah