News
The desire to know the future

One of the most common complaints of mankind is that we know so little about the future. To most of us the future is closed, except as it may be predicted in general terms by the experience of the past, and except as it has been broadly outlined in scripture. But so anxious are some to pry into the secrets of specific things to come in their own lives, that they will go to great lengths to consult almost anyone within reach who professes powers beyond the perception of ordinary men. Before Saul ever consulted the Witch of Endor, and perhaps until the last scene of time shall have been enacted, men have tried and will continue to try to wrest from the great unknown, some inkling of what is yet to transpire.

Accordingly, the soothsayer, the fortune teller, the clairvoyant, the crystal-gazer, the reader of the tea-cup, the diviner of cards, have all sold information they do not know; or, if they have such information the source of it will not bear scrutiny. It is true that the scriptures testify: “Surely the Lord God will do nothing but he revealeth his secret unto his servants the prophets.” (Amos 3:7) and it is also true that down through the centuries divinely appointed prophets of the living God have been privileged by the Almighty to foresee events that were yet to transpire, but these prophetic utterances have been proclaimed and recorded by men of God for the knowledge and comfort and warning of all the children of our Father, and have not been sold for silver, nor bartered for gold.
It is natural that men should desire to know something of what lies before them, but if it were good that each of us should have specific fore-knowledge of events to come in our lives, the wisdom of an all knowing Creator would have made such prescience possible, without our resorting to dark places among those who, for a price, conjure up specters and mumble incantations.
In some respects, and to some extent the future may and should be known, For example, science helps us to forecast something as to the future of weather conditions, which is of much value to all of us. To know something concerning the future of private wants and needs, helps the manufacturer and the merchant to avoid some of the hazards of chance, and to this end we have our business forecasts.
The broad lines of the future, so far as the plan and purpose of life are concerned, as well as specific forthcoming events, have often been foretold by the prophets, when the purposes of God were served thereby. But the desire to know the future may become an inordinate desire—so much so that there are some who feel they cannot rest unless they can know the unknowable and see the unseeable, and who, to this end, place their confidence in those who profess, for a price, to tell what irrevocable events the fates have decreed, as revealed in the stars, the tea leaves, in the cutting of the cards, in the crystal, or by some other occult means.
In this twenty-first century we have sometimes given ourselves to believe that we have left witchcraft and mummery and superstition behind, and then we cling to much of it. In the wisdom of God it has not been given to us to pry the lid off the future at our indiscriminate discretion. It has been so ordered that in many things we shall live by faith, and meet the events of life as they come. If the stars were fixed and the pattern of our lives were fixed with them; if the future were already set in its mold, then the next logical conclusion would be that it doesn’t matter how we live or what we do with our livesthe result would be the same anyway. But such philosophy is false and untenable.
If a man cannot be happy and live well with such knowledge as God has chosen to reveal concerning things to come, it would be left to conclude that, among other things, such a man lacks understanding, and also faith, which is a fundamental element in an acceptable life.
By Samuel Enos Eghan
News
President Mahama appoints Second Deputy Governor of the Bank of Ghana

President John Dramani Mahama has in accordance with Section 17 of the Bank of Ghana Act, 2002 (Act 612) as amended, appointed Mrs. Matilda Asante-Asiedu as the Second Deputy Governor of the Bank of Ghana.
This was revealed in a statement signed by Minister for Government Communications, Felix Kwakye-Ofosu.
Mrs. Asante-Asiedu is a Chartered Banker and seasoned corporate leader who has served as Group Head, Retail Banking at Access Bank Ghana PLC.
Mrs Asante-Asiedu holds an MBA in Marketing from GIMPA Business School (2021), an MA inJournalism Studies from Cardiff University (2005), and diplomas in Journalism (Ghana Institute of Journalism, 1997) and Politics and Public Affairs Reporting (International Institute of Journalism,Berlin, 2000).
A Chartered Executive Banker (CIB-Ghana, 2024).
She has undertaken Executive Programmes at Said Business School at Oxford University (2023), Wharton School (2015) and Marquette University’s Les Aspin Centre (2003), among others.
News
Prez Mahama is committed to open-up Afram Plains once and for all – Kwame Agbodza

The government is set to construct a 3.6km bridge over the River Afram in the Eastern Region, along with approximately 100km of road network.
This initiative, part of President Mahama’s “Big Push” infrastructure plan, aims to boost agricultural productivity, stimulate economic growth, and reduce poverty.
Some of the roads being considered included Mpraeso – Obomeng – Nkawkaw, Abooso – Mpaem, Mpaem – Kwahu – Adawso and Feyiase – Kwahu Tafo. The rest are, Ekye Amanfrom – Takoratwene, Takoratwene – Dome, Takoratwene – Donkorkrom and Donkorkrom – New Kyeiase.
Earlier today, the Minister for Roads and Highways, Mr.Kwame Agbodza, led a team of engineers to assess the proposed location of the bridge and some critical roads.




Speaking to the media at Donkorkrom after the assessment tour, Mr. Agbodza assured the people that President Mahama is “committed to opening up the Afram Plains once and for all.”
“The bridge when completed will connect Eastern, Ashanti and OTI regions in a very strategic way. It will open up the place for big time agriculture and investment in agro-processing,” he emphasized.
The project is expected enhance economic development, foster regional integration, generate income through agriculture and other sectors.