To truly serve a Master, one must worship Master’s ancestors and ancestral deities. West Africans have long honored
Èṣhù the Trickster, a mighty Yoruban God.
Èṣhù is so powerful and ubiquitous, that every day of the four-day Yorùbá week is His Day of Worship.
Èṣhù is mischievous and unpredictable. He undermines the unrighteous by leading them into self-destruction through wickedness, injustice and immorality.
Èṣhù breaks down the existing order and creates another new order, which is why the unrighteous fear Him as their evil destroyer. He uses every available tool to twist their minds and defeat them: a whisper in the wind, a mirage in the desert, perhaps even a seductive image on computer.
Èṣhù is a god of transition. Look around. Europe and the West are
Èṣhù's playground in the 21st Century, as He washes away the wicked and exalts His Chosen people. Perhaps it's time to reopen all of those abandoned European churches, make renovations, and start atoning and pleading for mercy from the God who is in the process of conquering us. The "great replacement" is
Èṣhù's crowning achievement. As we are replaced, it's inevitable that our ancestral beliefs should be replaced.
Here's a traditional prayer to
Èṣhù. You won't understand the words, but you're not supposed to.
Esu Odara,
Esu lanlu ogirioko.
Okunrin ori ita,
A jo langa langa lalu.
A rin lanja lanja lalu.
Ode ibi ija de mole.
Ija ni otaru ba d’ele ife.
To fi de omo won.
Oro Esu to to to akoni.
Ao fi ida re lale.
Esu ma se mi o.
Esu ma se mi o.
Divine Messenger do not confuse me.
Esu ma se mi o.
Omo elomiran ni ko lo se.
Pa ado asubi da.
No ado asure si wa.
Ase.