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40 Days of Reconciliation

40 Days of Reconciliation

By: Emmanuel Manishimwe
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A 40-day journey designed to help an individual seeking a restorative relationship with God, through Christ Jesus, energized by the Holy Spirit. By the end of this journey, a person should be able to feel their burden lifted. The prayer connection can be felt and real, no more shame but confidence, love, care and greater responsibility for God's people.

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Episodes
  • Why I Need A Mentor: Navigating a Difficult Season
    Nov 12 2025

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    In our previous topic we said, "If you find obstacles or notice a lack of moral compass for your leader, know at once you need a mentor."


    Please also note that it's possible to brand a leader wrongly, simply because of impatience or conflict of interests. In any case, it's not advised to launch an opposition against your leader. Do not even attempt to do so secretly. Instead, please follow internal guidelines and procedures to address your concerns. If these don't help, you might have two options; resign or seek a mentor to help you navigate the difficult season.


    In this topic we will look at God walking with Joseph through his terrifying experiences. The rest of us, let's look for human mentors!


    The most inspirational story for young people is Joseph’s victorious response to serious problems as recorded in the book of Genesis chapter 39. Joseph was the 11th of the 12 sons of Jacob. He was voluntarily loved by his father, because he was the son of his old age (Gen. 37:3). But his brothers hated him for that. Joseph was an obedient boy as he grew up. His brothers weren’t as well behaved and Joseph kept reporting them to their father.


    Joseph had a dream twice, that clearly indicated God was preparing him for leadership and that his parents and brothers would bow before him one day. Jacob didn’t understand but he did not fight the boy. He only kept thinking about it. His other sons were terrible that time. These brothers, ten of them, plotted to kill their brother Joseph just for his dreams and being favored by his father. Reuben advised them to throw him in a dry well instead, and later Judah advised they sell him to Ishmaelite traders. That started his days of suffering as a captive, slave, then prisoner, before God finally fulfilled His plan for him.


    After Joseph was separated from His father Jacob, he was deprived of a credible mentor, at least an encourager. God had already started communicating to Joseph through dreams, which even Jacob was still yet to understand.


    Joseph’s life appeared unfortunate even when he was being prepared for a position of high-level leadership. In a dry well – he could have died of hunger or suffocation by water. The traders could have killed him on the way. In slavery he could have been lost forever without trace. After being charged falsely with rape he could have been sentenced to death. In a foreign prison he could have died there and forgotten. None of the challenges he went through stood in the way of his relationship with God. He kept a close relationship with God and by that God’s favor evidently remained on him.


    Did the rage kill the dream? No! Did the tricks of an adulterous woman overcome the dream? No! Did prison life and the test of time stop the dream? No! So, what helped Joseph? He kept his faith in God and feared Him above all.


    If Joseph was here, I would recommend Him as the priority mentor choice. Now you have to find one that at least beats all others in excellence of character, learning and allegiance to God. If Joseph had discarded God's sovereign power like we often do, where would his stubbornness have reached him? And if we don't learn from Golden history, what type of world will we reap tomorrow?


    Just remember to find a mentor who honors God and has triumphantly gone through the experiences you are facing.


    Your next step in life is to pledge your allegiance to God. As a leader, start mentoring someone. That's how excellent leaders are raised. If you are already mentoring one, make sure your "mentoring house" is built

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    9 mins
  • Transcending Peace Within
    Nov 14 2025

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    Allow me today to share an experience I had just recently when I went to fuel the car I was driving, and something really unexpected happened.


    Our topic today, let us follow the topic "Transcending Peace Within."


    I remember every Sunday in the church, a priest would say, "May the peace of God which passes all understanding..." He would proclaim peace over us. Things we take passively, but they are real. I don't take God passively, and I pray always that whenever I go to a church, I ask God to open my ears and my inner understanding because there is a lot that God speaks to us through the scriptures, through the priests that God has given us.


    So, people of God, servants of God, thank you. And whenever I'm in a church, I want to listen. This time round, this is something in the marketplace, an experience. When I think about it right now as I share in this podcast, I look back and I'm full of joy because of the outcome of the kind of response, unexpected response. When we choose to take this for real, the kind of experience and response we get afterwards will bring joy and inner transcending peace.


    So, at a fuel station, a gentleman does not read the sticker that says "Diesel". He doesn't want to look at it. He just puts in petrol. Thank God, he stops slightly before he puts in one liter, after I ask him, "What are you putting in?"


    Yeah, here where I come from, in my country, sometimes we don't read. Sometimes we can call when we are at a signpost; for example, if I'm going to Banana Hotel (doesn't exist), I'll be at the signpost and make a call, "Hello, where is the way to Banana Hotel?" even when there are arrows that show where I should go.


    The gentleman, upon realizing he had put in the wrong fuel, he was timid. I was calm inside because I feel I've been transformed, and I'm undergoing transformation still in many other areas. But in this one, I thank God. I felt transcending peace, even when there was a crisis before me.


    The gentleman does not read. He gives me wrong fuel. What is my response? Now, before I continue, what would be your response? I wish this was a discussion and I hear your experiences, wherever, whichever culture, what would be your immediate response?


    The gentleman came over to apologize. But here's something strange on me again. Let me ask you, especially the practicing Christian believers who are reading. (Remember, my podcasts are not only for Christians. Please, these podcasts are for everyone). But let me ask a question for my fellow believers. In that case, what do you do?


    And then there was another technician, by God's grace, he hadn't gone home. It was at night. Two technicians were able to give me advice from their experience. The matter was resolved. The gentleman who had put in wrong fuel had become calm seeing I was focused on solutions and not against him. That also gave me peace. His colleague was working with me to find the solution. The management also quickly understood.


    There was nothing like, "No. You need to pay for this crime." I wanted peace for everyone.


    I hope this gentleman will know that God changes people, and he can change him as well. As I share this podcast with you, everyone, wherever we are, we don't really have to talk too much, but how we react, how we respond to a situation has very many effects.


    There is peace within, as a result of how we respond to situations. It determines how we affect the other people. And in our Christian world, for us who believe in Christ, this is how we change

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    10 mins
  • Walk The Talk: Shifting Trends
    Nov 15 2025

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    I met a friend online during a Bible study fellowship, and he asked me a wonderful question: "What is the percentage of Christians in your country?" I told him 80%. He said, "How many of those are practicing Christians?" I didn't have the data, but all I know is that it's very hard to tell, but it's not a big number. This made me think, how about the 20%? The experiences we face, the bad things, unreliability, things that are not good… Are they done by the other 20%?


    The term 'born again' first appears in the New Testament during Jesus' teaching. Nicodemus comes along and he's teaching him about being born again. Nicodemus doesn't understand, wonders whether one has to go back into the mother's womb and come out again. Jesus helps him understand. Today we don't ask Nicodemus' questions because he helped us to understand.


    The word 'Christian' came later to refer to the people who follow Jesus Christ and obey him. This implies that at the beginning, the term 'born again' and the word 'Christian', those two terms are the same. They mean the same person. But time changed, and then things were different.


    Back to us today, saying 'I'm a Christian' doesn't really mean much, because being a Christian doesn't mean you really obey God. It simply means you belong to the Christian community.

    And we've come to a time when describing oneself as 'born again' doesn't make much sense. People have been using the term 'born again' to tell you, "I am a Christian, but one who is practicing what the Bible says." This trend is shifting now. People say, "I'm born again," and then they ask them, "Which church do you go to? Who is your pastor?"


    So the church and the pastor are becoming defining factors as to whether the person who is saying he's born again is truly on the right track, because everyone is probably on a scale set by men.


    The good news here is that God is still the same, as the scriptures tell us, and he never changes. He's still the righteous God. Only we, the people, keep changing. We even find words to describe ourselves. But God really wants us to obey him. Despite all the changing terminologies, perceptions, descriptions, the word of God remains the same. Of course, as the scriptures say, that the word of God shall not pass away. Heaven and earth shall pass away, but the word of God shall not pass away.


    That is our hope. We need to live genuine, true to the word of God. Say things that are true to yourself. Walk the talk. Even if everybody else around you may change, do not change.

    That's why it's important as you pray, to read the word of God as well, in order to grow in knowledge and understanding. It's important to read with the mind, with intellect. It is very essential. Ask questions. Be part of a Bible study group. Do not think you know it all alone; that could lead you into some kind of heretical path, and you don't want to be there. You need to be part of a group, share your reasoning, let them share theirs.


    Accept the Holy Spirit. Many people have decided to set themselves against the Holy Spirit. They really have nothing to do with him, but they are Christians, and they will fail. Get to understand, please, that the Holy Spirit has been given to God's children who obey, to help them in understanding the word of God. Please, do not set yourself against him. It will not help you. We need God's Holy Spirit.


    As we close this discussion, there are four essential things to remember. Pray without ceasing. Study God's word continually. Join a Bible study group. Tell people what God has done for you. Be

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    9 mins
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