Pr Patience Museveni Rwabwogo cautions against confusing evil with good

"We cannot wink at sin on one level, and then fight it on another," Patience Museveni Rwabwogo says.

Patience Museveni Rwabwogo (R), 41, the lead Pastor of Covenant Nations Church located in Luzira, with her sister Natasha Museveni Karugire (L). CNC Photo.

By Male Marvin

Patience Museveni Rwabwogo, the lead Pastor of Covenant Nations Church located in Luzira, a suburb of Kampala has cautioned and urged Christians to pray against modern social righteousness which she says often differs from the righteousness of the Bible.

She made this call on Wednesday while launching an intercessors’ altar at the Church in Luzira. The service was graced by Pastor Michael Kimuli, the vision bearer and senior pastor of Christian Discipleship Ministries International.

“We cannot wink at sin on one level, and then fight it on another,” Patience Museveni Rwabwogo said.

“I want us to pray about this in our nation because I believe over the years, this is a spirit that I see. We celebrate what is evil,” she explained.

Adding: “When we have that kind of program that celebrate wrong things – when we give the wrong things prominence – we are indirectly allowing that spirit to operate in our lives.”

Mrs Rwabwogo, who is President Yoweri Museveni’s daughter, said Christians compromise their authority to pray against evil when they entertain it in life.

She then quoted Isaiah 5:20 -21 which says;

Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light, and light for darkness; that put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter! 21 Woe unto them that are wise in their own eyes, and prudent in their own sight!

The Pastor said many times believers pray about “the fruit or symptoms” and not the “root cause” of the challenging issues they face individually and as a country.

“God has stationed us at gates at different times,” she said.

“God is way ahead of us in what he wants to accomplish, however He chooses to only work through His people, through the Church. So, we are the ones who limit how much He is able to do and how fast He is able to work,” she added.

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