Election 2012 Is Battle Of All Battles � Bishop Duncan-Williams

The Archbishop and Presiding Overseer of the Christian Action Faith Ministries (CAFM), Archbishop Nicholas Duncan-Williams, has dubbed election 2012 as �battle of all battles� because that will �make or unmake� Ghana. Speaking exclusively to the host of the Citi Breakfast Show, Bernard Avle, he said the time has come for God to stretch His hands on the country to lead it to good fortunes, but evil forces will want to use the upcoming polls to foment anarchy. �This election will be more dangerous than 2008 and it�s because anytime God is about to do a new thing there will always be a reaction in hell,� the Archbishop said. �If we�re able to make it in 2012 without violence and shedding of blood and we cross 2013 Ghana will take off. � �This is a battle of all battles; this is going to be the one that will make or unmake us. I am declaring by divine authority that there will be no violence within our borders. � Archbishop Duncan-Williams predicted that although the task ahead is going to be tough, the outcome of the general elections of Ghana has already been known in the spiritual realm. He added: �God will decide the outcome of this election and it will not be by just the ballot box. By define providence God Himself will decide the winner and at the end of it everybody will know that this is the hand of God. The winner himself will bow and everybody will know it was the hand of God. � �Ghana can�t be divided into two. Everybody is looking at us,� he stated. �There are people who believe something is about to happen in Ghana and the country will fall apart. Let that be prohibited. � �If having power and wanting power will be at the expense of violence then what is the use of having power then. If at the time of having power the people you are supposed to protect have been killed and destroyed in the process then what are you going to be president over? � the Presiding Overseer queried politicians. The �Apostle of Strategic Prayer� cautioned Ghanaians to be mindful of their utterances on radio since unpalatable words and airwaves banter are recipes for disaster. �We have to watch our radio discussions� if you look at the genocide in Rwanda it was as a result of radio discussions. Some of these things are dangerous. They say if you don�t know death then watch a person sleeping. Something is going on with our radio discussions as much as freedom of speech and expression is good it must be guided with some sense of responsibility. �The insults are too much and this trigger strain fires. There is no respect for our elders anymore. Everybody can insult anybody and get away with it. This is not Ghanaian. We are decent people so let us not out of character like we are doing go into that. Let us begin to examine our hearts and motives and not to use radio as a weapon of vindictiveness and retaliation. If we set fire in this nation then where can we go? � Archbishop Duncan-Williams pointed out.