From being a priest in the kingdom of darkness to an evangelist in thekingdom of light—this true story will shock and amaze you!
Jesus Christ appeared to Joshua Blahyi as a blinding light and told him that he would die unless he repented of his sins.
Joshua Blahyi grew up in Africa, became a powerful pagan priest in a local tribe, and then became one of the most feared warlords in Liberia. Under demonic influence, General Butt Naked fought and killed while he was naked; he personally sacrificed men, women, and babies, and forced children to abandon their families and fight with him.
Then, in a radical transformation like that of Paul on the road to Damascus, Joshua met Jesus face to face. His mission now is to reach out to others who are under evil’s delusions and reform the lives of his former soldiers, enemies of Jesus Christ, and anyone in need of hope and love.
Joshua Blahyi’s incredible story has been told in documentaries on PBS, CNN, BBC, and other media including the New York Times. His story appeals to everyone interested in foreign affairs, Africa’s mysterious spiritual culture, civil wars, Christianity, and child soldiers.
At age 11, Joshua Blahyi became the high priest of the entire Krahn tribe, a tribe given to violence and human sacrifice. In his late teens and early twenties, he was one of the most infamous and feared warlords in all of Africa leading an army of child soldiers in the Liberian Civil War. Today, after a road to Damascus type conversion experience, he is Evangelist and Pastor Joshua Blahyi, ministering to ex-combatants, former child soldiers, and other victims of this brutal civil war. He also ministers to thousands in crusades throughout West Africa and serves as a pastor in a local church in Monrovia, Liberia.
This book is insanely hard to fit into a classical 5-star-rating-system. It was a highly interesting read, but not for the reasons and purposes it was written for, which is why I've given it a single star. It gives insights in West African spirituality/occultism, the unique blend of the former and Catholicism that's taken root in those areas, and most of all a first-person account of someone (unawarely) suffering from heavy delusions and hallucinations.
The author of this autobiography, re-christened as Joshua Blahyi, was also known as General Butt Naked. A Liberian warlord, mass murderer & rapist, and a cannibal who especially enjoyed eating little girls alive. This is attributed to the commands of a "spirit" appearing in visions before him. Sceptical readers might attribute these visions to a genetic predisposition to psychosis and ritual incest, both outlined in the autobiography.
So we follow Blahyi murdering and raping, abducting children to eat them alive, taking babies from mothers and smashing their heads open in front of them. Up until he gets a different vision telling him to become a Christian.
And that makes everything okay. Blahyi has never been prosecuted, never been brought to justice, because him becoming a Christian nullified all his previous sins. That is, until the still-occuring voices and visions in his head tell him to kill again. We'll see in due time.
It is an interesting read, but there is literally nothing more to it than that. Rapist-murderer-psychopath-cannibal turns Christian due to one of his strokes "visions" changing his behaviour. There is no transformation happening.
I want you to let this sink in, if only to give a context to the people on goodreads praising him. Blahyi was responsible for at least 20,000 deaths as a warlord. Blahyi personally burned people alive, cut open children to eat their flesh, raped, looted, slaughtered wherever he went, took infants from their mothers, held them by their legs and smashed theirs heads open on concrete so he could eat their brains, organised regular human sacrifices - and all it takes for those things to be forgiven is to say a nice little prayer and Amen.
Blahyi has not spent a single day in prison, protected and enabled by "Good Christians", allowed to roam free and confront his former victims, even going as far as condemning their unchristian-like outrage on having to meet the rapist and slaughterer of their families. And as is described in his autobiography, up to this very day he still experiences heavy strokes and vivid psychotic delusions. He is a ticking bomb.
The only thing more scary than Blahyi himself is the amount of drones heaping praise on this book for seemingly reinforcing their religious convictions.
Will open the eyes of the sleepy westerner the the spiritual realities around us. Demonic and Heavenly. Amazing testimony of the power and passion of Jesus to save and redeem. You will need to have Google close by to reference dates/names and phrases that are hard to make sense of. But I have been floored by this book and highly recommend it to any who would seek to know God in His power deeper.
Interesting read although not what I intially expected. I thought it would cover his time as thee "General Butt Naked" but it was just kinda brushed over in a short chapter. All in all an interesting book although it still makes no sense to me how he is able to be free today.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
The story of a man who became a follower of Jesus after spending his life gaining spiritual power as an animistic priest for his tribe. The first part of the book goes through the history of the tribe and the institution of its god, then moves into his conversion and evangelism. Lots of people and places made it somewhat difficult to follow the storyline. Yet eye opening to the activity of the spiritual world during the times of the Liberian civil wars.
i first heard of the joshua blahyi story after watching a VICE interview. this is an unbelievable transformation. the writing of this book may not flow smoothly, but the message is loud and clear. certainly leaves me conflicted reflecting on the heinous crimes he committed versus the holy work he does now. it’s an inspiration to read, but truly unsure how i would feel if i encountered him in real life. it’s very bold to tell every aspect of this story in great detail.
This is an incredible book. Read it. It is scattered and disorganized, strange and affecting, alienating and crude, and all without realizing it. Joshua Blahyi, for all you can potentially say about him, is in my opinion a good person. I've spoken with him. I've seen what he has to say. I've reviewed his situation (although it would be impossible to really understand it) and I have come away dumbfounded and amazed at the absolute terror, and also warmth, that this single individual can give off.
A Western audience is not going to read this book and think "Ah yes, I believe all of this happened and it's all true." That's fine. You shouldn't be reading this looking for a fully accurate picture of what has happened to Joshua Blahyi, but of how he feels about it, and how he perceives his world. This is a man responsible for the deaths of thousands, and here we find him rambling on about his encounters with demons, his superpowers, and his newly found (but not entirely orthodox) faith.
Maybe the greatest book I have read about a man by that same man.
The overarching story is amazing and transforming. However, the prose is disorganized and hard to follow.
It is obvious that Joshua Blahyi was an evil man and did unspeakable things during the Liberian civil war. It was hard to figure out how the events in the book line up with the timeline of the civil wars.
It is a short book. The first part outlines the history that led to the author gaining power in Liberia. The end of the book tells about his conversion, acceptance of Jesus, and confessions. The middle of the book is the hardest part to follow. One problem is that I read the book with my Western perspective of the world, but that is the only perspective that I have. It was hard to understand the witchcraft and supernatural components of the story and accept them as factual parts of Blahyi's history.
I generally find it very hard to rate somebody's life story. For this reason I did not rate it with stars. I personally like the message of the book, I like the transformation Joshua went through. But I have to say, the book was poorly structured (in my opinion) and therefore hard to follow. But nonetheless the message was powerful and worth reading!
quite disturbing in parts. triumphant Saul to Paul type testimony. Would help to have some background understanding of the ethnic religion first. don't read this if you are offended by the spiral dimension. this book assumes you firmly believe in spiritual warfare and devil worship.