
Nigerian Writer Shares 30 Years of Answered Prayers
A Nigerian columnist says he's never had an unanswered prayer in three decades, sharing stories of faith-driven generosity and divine timing. His account of lending $150,000 to a stranger shows how belief transforms ordinary moments into miracles.
When Femi Aribisala arrived home in 1994, a stranger in a Mercedes was waiting with an impossible request.
Kunle Bolodeoku had just turned down a contract that required bribes. He believed something better would come, and it did. A publisher wanted him to supply newsprint for two magazines, but he needed exactly 150,000 Nigerian naira to fulfill the order.
Aribisala had just collected cash from his video shops. The amount in his briefcase was exactly 150,000 naira, down to the last bill.
"The Lord spoke to me: give him the money," Aribisala writes in Premium Times Nigeria. He handed over the entire sum to someone he barely knew. Kunle paid him back, but the real reward was understanding how faith works in everyday life.
The columnist, who has written about spirituality for decades, makes a bold claim. Since becoming a Christian, every prayer he's offered has been answered. He knows people don't believe him, but he's stopped worrying about skeptics.

His philosophy is simple: don't ask frivolously, ask for what you need. He prays for himself and others, trusting that genuine requests receive genuine responses.
Why This Inspires
Aribisala's story challenges our typical view of faith as something separate from daily decisions. His willingness to give away his entire day's earnings wasn't reckless. It was the result of years building trust in something bigger than bank balances.
The mathematical precision of that moment still amazes him. Two people, two identical needs, one exact amount. He sees divine orchestration where others might see coincidence.
Now, decades later, he doesn't need to hear instructions anymore. Generosity has become automatic, woven into who he is. Faith transformed him from someone who needed prompting into someone who acts instinctively.
His message isn't about prosperity gospel or guaranteed outcomes. It's about alignment. When your actions match your beliefs, he suggests, the world rearranges itself in unexpected ways.
For readers exhausted by transactional religion, Aribisala offers something refreshing: faith as a force that makes you better, not just blessed.
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Based on reporting by Premium Times Nigeria
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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