 Before I begin, I'd just like to comment very quickly on the Ecumenical Center or the National Christen Center, as it's now called. I think I agree entirely with all that has been said, especially the very graphic presentation made by His Excellency Senator Ruchaz Okuruta on how the center was built. We have done quite a bit of work. I'm not too sure whether I'll put that on the screen, but I wanted to show some of the work that we've done, especially the new designs and some of the additional work that we think ought to be done in the National Christen Center to improve the use of it, especially to provide additional facilities. This is site analysis, comprehensive analysis of the site, of the present site, looking at where the defects are, where the problems are, and that's the whole center. Now, we're looking at the underdeveloped areas and what needs to be done there. The Belfry Tower has office space, but at the moment it's not new. It has no lift. The Belfry Tower is this structure there. It has office space in it, so what we're looking at is providing a lift there and also properly renovating the office spaces so that they can be used. I think there are about three or four floors. Is it 21 floor building, any one story? That Belfry Tower. So we need to put in a few offices there, about four floors of offices or five floors of offices. And then it works. And then there is another piece of the main auditorium. Now, if you look, currently the main auditorium is in extremely poor shape and we had at some point thought of just replacing the roof, of just mending the roof. But what we are looking at now is replacing the roof entirely. So if you look at the new designs, there is time to remove this old roof. And the new designs after how the new roof look. And these are just designs. There are roof floors and etc. This is the Belfry Tower. This is the current state of Belfry Tower. Just one. So these are some of the grounds for the new buildings. We are looking at putting it in chapel. Of course there is a discussion going on now about putting a marquee there for events and all that, which, and I think the marquee should take anywhere between 1000 and maybe 2000. But we are also looking at putting a chapel. And this is the design of that chapel. It's meant to be a very weather-pointed chapel that has the kinds of detail that you'd expect to see in chapels in other places of the world. They have done very, very good. Now there's supposed to be a Mozilla Park. But we're going to have to look at that again, especially in the light of the fact that the Central Park is also building a Mozilla Park. Our target was the Central Park. But if we go and put up a Mozilla Park, when they are already building their own, we may end up spending a lot of money and not getting anything. Because we're hoping the Central Park will pay for that. So we have to take a second look at that. But this is the design. So those are mainly what we intend to do. The addition of, these are the parties, there's just no one, no one, because we're not here. It's the carpark's things and all that. But now these are new toilet facilities that we intend to install. These are state-of-the-art toilet facilities. So there is a lot of work to be done. And the designs are ready. Everything is said. We have a few people that have already indicated that they will be happy to support the resources. But we're going to be doing a lot of work recently. And I already have a team of people who I'm looking at. I will not bother to announce their names at this point. But we certainly will be working. Definitely we need the experience of Senator Rocha. So he's going to be very handsome. So that's where we're living. But as I've said, we'll certainly be looking at organizing this properly so that we can put together a National Christian Center that will be fitting and that will meet the aspirations and all of the expectations of Christians all over Nigeria. And it will be a tourist attraction. It will be a place that people can go and come to to come and spend time in prayer, spend time in contemplation. It will be certainly a befitting place, not what we have there at the moment. So thank you very much. That's for the National Christian Center. To the awards, Reverend Shukwai of today, please accept on my behalf and on behalf of all of you is a very deep gratitude for the great honor done to us by the conferment of these awards. I accept the award and on behalf of the others who have been giving the awards, who are members of the government, we accept the great humility. We're mindful that we are not necessarily the most deserving of Christians to be given any recognition, but that because of the special grace of God, by which we have been chosen to serve in the high capacities of ourselves, we are in the advantageous position that our contributions will be more easily noticed. So this award is dedicated to the many who daily in different locations, distant and near, propagate this message, the love and the consolation of the gospel of Jesus Christ in sometimes difficult even life threatening situations. And to the many who have suffered their provision and the families of those who have lost their lives by reason of their beliefs. And we are deeply grateful to the Almighty God for the opportunity and the enablement to serve in the positions to which we have been preferred. Mr. President of the Christian Association of Nigeria, I bring you also the very warm felicitations of the President of the Federal Report of Nigeria, President Muhammad Mubarak, and the Federal Government of Nigeria on the 45th anniversary of the birth of this foremost association of Nigerian Christians. CAM was formed to among other objectives to nurture the unity of the Church in Nigeria and to work with the leaders of other faiths and persuasions to build bridges and to forge understanding, peace and unity among the various people and faiths in our nation. CAM has not only been continually faithful to its founding vision, it has become a veritable force for peace, for unity and for social justice. And personally to the gospel, CAM has consistently spoken on behalf of the least of these in our society. Importantly, the current and past leadership of CAM have acted in full realization and recognition of their roles as pivotal stakeholders alongside the government and the private sector in nation-building. We are proud of the role of moral compass of society and indicator for peace amongst the different faiths that CAM has played and continues to play in our nation. We are also proud of the enormous work that the current executive of CAM, ably led by his evidence, the reverend Shabaya Pune, has done. I am aware of your collaboration with the leadership of the Islamic and other faiths to reconcile where there are conflicts, to pacify where there has been offence and to abrid and reprimand where there have been these deeds well done and congratulations to you. As we have seen in the past few years, not just in Nigeria but all over the world, there is a growing religious and ethnic chauvinism and almost in temporary vehement, often violent dismissal of the views of other people, people of other persuasions and people of other faiths without adequate consideration. At the same time, there is also the rise of identity and cultural politics. Rather than the answer to hate and intolerance and conflict is the gospel of Jesus Christ. We must believe enough in the gospel of Jesus Christ to make it our article of faith in our interactions with people of other faiths. We must believe enough in it. We cannot believe in it halfway and resort to other tactics sometimes. We must believe enough in the gospel. The message of the great law of Jesus Christ by which he sold of the world that all men, whatever their faiths who believe in him, will not perish in consequence of sin but inherit eternal life. That is the message of the gospel. We must continue to let the important truth be known that Christ did not come to establish a religion, not a condemn a man, but to show all men that his own righteousness, not our own, not our own righteousness of performance, is the qualification for eternal life. That the gospel commands consideration for the views of others, treating them as we would wish to be treated, non-violent communication, that our words were the words of grace seasoned themselves. But perhaps more importantly, as Christ instructed, that we love our enemies, that we bless those who curse us, do good to those who hate us, and pray for those who spitefully use us and persecute us, that we may be sons of our Father in heaven. We must apply these principles, contrarian and difficult, as they may be. These instructions are clearly contrary to our natural human explanations or the ways that seem right to us. But we know that the wisdom of God is the only solution to the most difficult of human problems. If we act as the world acts, if we react as the world reacts, we cannot expect divine results. We must act true to our faith that God himself will move on our behalf. Yet we must be an organization and, as individuals, we must remain constant and relentless advocates of freedom of worship, of respect for human rights, of fairness, of justice and the rule of law. Fairness, equity and respect for the right of others are fundamental to peace and security. We cannot talk about peace, we cannot talk about security without fairness and justice and compliance with the rule of law. Thank you once again for this award and happy for the future and the rest. We pray that the Lord will bless the Christian Association of Nigeria, its leadership and all of us, our members, and may the Lord prosper his work in our hands and in our generation to the glory of his name in Jesus' mighty name.