
This is the turning point. To miss it would be to mortgage another generation to frustration and despair. To seize it would be to unlock the greatness that has always lived in our soil, our streets, and our souls… We have lost a lot. But we must not lose the future. The next decade is our proving ground. If we choose courage, discipline, and vision, then history will remember this generation as the one that turned Nigeria from a story of loss into a testimony of rebirth.
Nigeria stands today at a difficult but decisive crossroad. Ours is a nation that has endured much, yet still possesses within its soul the possibility of greatness. But before we can rise, we must acknowledge the sobering truth — we have lost a lot.
We lost decades to military rule while the rest of the world was racing into modernity. We lost the oil boom to waste, corruption, and short-sighted policies, instead of building enduring wealth. We lost countless lives to insecurity, poor healthcare, and preventable tragedies. We lost trust in institutions that should have protected us, and we lost many of our brightest minds to other nations because they could no longer find space to dream here.
And yet, while we have lost much, we have not lost everything. We still have a vast and youthful population — creative, determined, and unbroken. We still have abundant natural resources and fertile land. We still have the faith and moral courage of a people who, despite repeated disappointments, still find hope in the possibility of change. Above all, we still have time — though the window is narrowing — to make a decisive turn.
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History shows us that loss is not always the end. Germany lost a war and rebuilt. Rwanda lost nearly a million lives to a genocide, yet rose from the ashes. Israel was scattered across the earth and still returned to its homeland with renewed strength. Nations can be reborn, but only when their people and leaders refuse to repeat old mistakes. Loss can be seed — if we do not allow it to become a grave.
Nigeria is now at that turning point. We must move from rhetoric to resolve, from promises to policy, from delays to decisive action. The work before us is clear. Government must accelerate efforts to industrialise our economy, modernise agriculture, and build mega-infrastructure that can anchor productivity for generations. Piecemeal projects that scratch the surface will not do. We need roads, railways, ports, and power systems robust enough to unleash trade and innovation across the nation.
But every true turning point comes with resistance. History teaches that the moment a nation decides to rise, the forces that profit from its fall begin to fight back. Those who benefit from chaos rarely volunteer for order. Those who prosper from darkness do not welcome light. Every reform awakens an entrenched interest. Every progress threatens a privilege.
We must therefore understand that the struggle for Nigeria’s transformation is not just administrative, it is spiritual. It is a battle between the old and the new, between the corrupt convenience of stagnation and the disciplined courage of progress. The turning point is never smooth. Those who gain from the old Nigeria will resist the birth of the new. But the tide of change, once awakened, cannot be stopped.
We see this clearly today. The resistance against the Dangote Refinery is not just economic; it is symbolic. It represents a clash between the old order that thrived on import dependency and the new vision of industrial self-sufficiency. For decades, some have built empires on Nigeria’s weakness — profiting from fuel importation, subsidy manipulation, and policy paralysis. The emergence of local refining threatens that lucrative cycle. The opposition, therefore, is not accidental — it is systemic.
The same applies to our power sector. There are those whose fortunes depend on Nigeria remaining in perpetual blackout. The importation of generators, the sale of diesel, and the politics of scarcity have formed an economy within the economy — an economy of darkness. If light comes, their profit fades. So, they resist. But no matter how fierce the resistance, light will eventually prevail. For every Pharaoh that hardens his heart, there is still a Red Sea waiting to part.
We must therefore understand that the struggle for Nigeria’s transformation is not just administrative, it is spiritual. It is a battle between the old and the new, between the corrupt convenience of stagnation and the disciplined courage of progress. The turning point is never smooth. Those who gain from the old Nigeria will resist the birth of the new. But the tide of change, once awakened, cannot be stopped.
Our generation must not be intimidated by resistance. The presence of opposition does not mean we are failing, it means we are moving. It means something is shifting. Like birth pains, every nation that rises must first push through contractions. The old Nigeria is convulsing because a new Nigeria is trying to be born.
Still, government cannot do it alone. The citizens must be ready to pay the price of transformation. True reform is never comfortable. There will be sacrifice, adjustment, and short-term pain. But the alternative — continuing as we are — is national suicide in slow motion. Corruption cannot remain our default mode of transaction. Mediocrity cannot continue to govern our work ethic. Cynicism cannot define our public life. The Nigerian spirit is too strong to settle for smallness.
Change will come not because it is easy, but because it is necessary. The darkness may resist, but dawn is inevitable. The old order may rage, but its time is up. Nigeria will rise, and when it does, it will be clear that every delay was only preparing it for destiny.
This is where our two streams must meet. Like the Niger and Benue rivers that converge at the heart of our land and flow into the wealth basin of the Niger Delta, Nigeria’s prophetic conscience and its pragmatic policy must now flow together. A moral rebirth without structural reform will not endure. But structural reform without moral rebirth will collapse under its own weight. Our national future requires both the power of vision and the discipline of execution.
We must fix systems, but we must also fix the soul of the nation. We must strengthen institutions, but we must also strengthen integrity. We must attract investment, but we must also restore trust. Without righteousness, reform will not last. Without accountability, progress will not be sustained.
This is the turning point. To miss it would be to mortgage another generation to frustration and despair. To seize it would be to unlock the greatness that has always lived in our soil, our streets, and our souls.
We have lost a lot. But we must not lose the future. The next decade is our proving ground. If we choose courage, discipline, and vision, then history will remember this generation as the one that turned Nigeria from a story of loss into a testimony of rebirth.
Change will come not because it is easy, but because it is necessary. The darkness may resist, but dawn is inevitable. The old order may rage, but its time is up. Nigeria will rise, and when it does, it will be clear that every delay was only preparing it for destiny.
The time is now.
Sunday Ogidigbo is the Lead Pastor of Holyhill Church, Abuja. He writes on faith, leadership, and the intersection of spirituality and culture. X/Instagram/Facebook: @SOgidigbo. Email: [email protected]



















