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Home News Opinion

Religious Extremism In Nigeria: The Pulpit And The Gun

by Lanre Ogundipe
June 5, 2026
in Opinion
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Religious Extremism In Nigeria: The Pulpit And An open Bible resting on a wooden pulpit, symbolising the power of rhetoric in religious teaching.
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Nigeria remains one of the most religious nations on earth. Daily life is completely saturated by faith, as mosques regularly summon the faithful to prayer and churches consistently fill vast auditoriums. Religious language actively permeates our politics, education, and commerce. Yet, amidst this extraordinary religiosity lies a troubling paradox: one of Africa’s most devout societies continues to grapple with rising religious extremism in Nigeria, a crisis deeply tied to the historical legacy of the Boko Haram insurgency history. This stark contradiction demands honest reflection.

The issue is not faith itself. For millions of Nigerians, religion remains a vital source of moral guidance, charity, and personal transformation. The more difficult question is whether we have adequately distinguished between individual liberty and public responsibility. A democratic society must protect the right of every citizen to worship freely. Freedom of conscience is a fundamental constitutional guarantee. However, no liberty exists in complete isolation. Every freedom carries obligations designed to protect the rights, safety, and welfare of others.

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Historical Lessons of Sectarian Violence in Nigeria

History provides sobering lessons regarding unchecked radicalisation. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Mohammed Marwa, popularly known as Maitatsine, emerged as a charismatic preacher whose influence spread rapidly among disaffected populations in Northern Nigeria. What initially appeared to be an eccentric religious movement eventually exploded into one of the deadliest episodes of sectarian violence in Nigeria. Thousands lost their lives and entire communities were destabilised before the state responded decisively.

“Every insurgency begins as an idea before it becomes an army. Every extremist movement begins with words before it reaches for weapons.”

Years later, another preacher, Mohammed Yusuf, established what many initially perceived as a simple religious and educational movement in Borno State. The movement attracted followers frustrated by poverty, corruption, unemployment, and social exclusion. Before long, it evolved into Boko Haram, an insurgency that has consumed countless lives, displaced millions, and inflicted immeasurable suffering upon the nation.

From the Pulpit to the Boko Haram Insurgency History

Neither Maitatsine nor Boko Haram emerged overnight. Long before the gunshot comes the sermon; long before the bomb comes the doctrine. Nations that fail to understand this progression often discover the danger only after the pulpit has given way to the gun. This historical lesson is neither anti-Islamic nor anti-Christian. It is a warning that religious extremism in Nigeria rarely arrives fully formed. It grows quietly through unchecked narratives, charismatic authority, social grievances, and institutional neglect.

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The challenge extends beyond violent groups. Across the country today, religious activity occupies a vast public space with varying degrees of oversight. Thousands of worship centres emerge annually. New pastors, prophets, evangelists, and imams appear regularly. Many provide genuine spiritual guidance and social services. Others exploit ignorance, manipulate emotions, spread conspiracy theories, and enrich themselves through the vulnerabilities of their followers. This reality raises legitimate questions about religious accountability and national security.

Balancing Religious Accountability and National Security

Religious schools present another dimension of this debate. Faith-based education has historically contributed significantly to literacy and nation-building. Yet concerns remain regarding child welfare, curriculum quality, and the potential misuse of educational spaces for ideological indoctrination. The objective should not be to suppress religious education. Instead, we must ensure that institutions entrusted with children meet minimum standards consistent with constitutional values and public safety.

Another issue that deserves mature discussion is noise pollution. Across many Nigerian communities, tensions continue to rise over excessive amplification from places of worship. The right to worship is fundamental. So too is the right of citizens to rest, study, sleep, and enjoy their environment. A civilised society must be capable of balancing both rights without descending into hostility or intolerance.

“Government has no business determining doctrine, interpreting scripture or licensing salvation. A secular democracy cannot regulate belief.”

Equally troubling is the growing prevalence of inflammatory preaching. Throughout history, violence has often been preceded by rhetoric. Sermons that demonise other faiths, ridicule opposing beliefs, or encourage hostility weaken national cohesion and create fertile ground for conflict. Freedom of expression should never become a shield for incitement.

The Future of Democratic Responsibility

Then there is the question of politics. Religion and politics have become deeply intertwined in Nigeria. Politicians routinely seek religious endorsements, while some clerics increasingly function as political actors. In certain instances, legitimate scrutiny of public conduct is portrayed as an attack on faith itself. This convergence weakens both democratic accountability and religious integrity.
The challenge before Nigeria is therefore not how to regulate religion. What government can and must regulate are the public consequences of conduct where they intersect with security, education, child welfare, environmental standards, financial crimes, and incitement to violence. Religious freedom must remain inviolable, but it cannot become a sanctuary for impunity.
Nigeria’s future stability may depend upon recognizing this distinction. The shadows of Maitatsine and Boko Haram continue to remind us that difficult conversations postponed often return as national crises. Faith remains one of Nigeria’s greatest assets. Yet like every powerful social force, it must operate within a framework of responsibility, accountability, and respect for the common good. The debate is no longer whether religious freedom should be protected. It must be. The more urgent question is whether religious freedom can continue to flourish sustainably without corresponding accountability. That is a conversation Nigeria can no longer postpone.

Tags: Boko HaramBoko Haram InsurgencyNigeriaReligious Freedom
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