
Faith Ended Slavery, Can it End Corruption
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Yemi Adesina

Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
Faith Ended Slavery, Can It End Corruption in Africa?
By Yemi Adesina
Two hundred years ago, Christians in Britain and beyond faced down one of the most brutal systems in human history: the transatlantic slave trade. It was not politics or profit that broke its chains—it was faith. William Wilberforce fought in Parliament, Thomas Clarkson gathered evidence, Hannah More wielded her pen, and Olaudah Equiano shook consciences with his testimony. They believed the Gospel demanded more than private piety. It demanded public justice. They prayed, they protested, they sacrificed—and slavery fell.
Today, Africa faces another kind of slavery. The chains are not iron, but corruption. They choke classrooms where children sit without books. They cripple hospitals where mothers die without medicine. They steal jobs from graduates, pensions from elders, and futures from the young. And yet, churches rise taller while justice lies broken.
In this bold and prophetic work, African historian, farmer, social worker, and Christian leader Yemi Adesina asks: If faith ended slavery, can it also end corruption in Africa?
With piercing clarity, Adesina traces how colonialism planted corruption, how post-independence leaders inherited broken systems, and how the Church has often traded its prophetic voice for comfort, spectacle, or silence. He exposes the dangers of prosperity preaching, the complicity of elites, and the ways corruption has been normalised from classrooms to boardrooms.
But this is not just a critique. It is a vision. Drawing on Scripture, African wisdom, and the example of abolitionists, Adesina calls for a new kind of discipleship—one that refuses to separate prayer from policy, worship from justice, or revival from reform. He insists that faith must not only save souls but also heal societies.
This book is for pastors who are weary of blessing stolen wealth. For professionals who want their careers to count for integrity. For young Africans who are disillusioned but not defeated. For all who believe that the Gospel is not just about heaven someday, but about transforming earth today.
Faith once turned slave ships into relics. It can turn corruption into history—if the Church dares to live it.