Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Redemption Camp: A Nigerian megachurch builds its own city
Redemption Camp: A Nigerian megachurch builds its own city
Mar 17, 2026 12:16 PM

As urbanization accelerates around the world, local municipalities and city planners are struggling to keep up with the pace. Sometimes and in some areas, it’s easier to work outside the government altogether.

Such is the case for the Redeemed Christian Church of God in Lagos Nigeria, which has slowly developed a city of sorts over the past 30 plete with an independent power plant and privately managed security, infrastructure, and sanitation.

“In Nigeria, the line between church and city is rapidly vanishing,” writes Ruth Maclean in a profile for The Guardian. “…The Redeemed Christian Church of God’s international headquarters in Ogun state has been transformed from a mere megachurch to an entire neighbourhood, with departments anticipating its members’ every practical as well as spiritual need.”

Known as Redemption Camp, what began as a mere convention center now includes 5,000 private homes and a range of businesses and institutions, including daycares, schools, colleges, banks, healthcare facilities, restaurants, a supermarket, manufacturing shops, and a children’s plete with carnival rides.

Leaders of the project maintain good relations with the local government, which coordinates closely with the church to ensure that various laws are enforced and certain standards are met. But government is not the driving force of development:

“If you wait for the government, it won’t get done,” says Olubiyi. So the camp relies on the government for very little – it builds its own roads, collects its own rubbish, and organises its own sewerage systems. And being well out of Lagos, like the other megachurches’ camps, means that it has little to do with municipal authorities. Government officials can check that the church plying with regulations, but they are expected to report to the camp’s relevant office. Sometimes, according to the head of the power plant, the government sends the technicians running its own stations to learn from them.

There is a police station on site, which occasionally deals with a death or the disappearance of a child, but the camp’s security is mostly provided by its small army of private guards in blue uniforms. They direct traffic, deal with crowd control, and stop children who haven’t paid for the wristband from going into Emmanuel Park – home to the aforementioned ferris wheel.

The Redemption Camp experiment has a good deal of resemblance with other “private cities” that continue to emerge across the developing world, such as Gurgaon, India, a district to the southwest of Delhi that has transformed from remote village to large industrial city in a matter of decades.

Yet with its distinct integration of faith, Redemption Camp is about much more than government petence, growing organically and spontaneously over time the past 30 years. What began as dormitories and residences for temporary stays and occasional conferences soon evolved into a tightly munity of faith that wanted to stay and stick together. “Families like the Oliatans find themselves wanting to live full-time with people who share their values, in a place run by people they feel they can trust,” writes Maclean.

Or, as Olubiyi puts it: “We feel we’re living in God’s presence all the time.”

As for the underlying theology and ecclesiology, plenty of questions remain. Yet the prioritization faith and local institutions is a e development in the wider pool of private-city experiments.

Given the mixed results of non-religious private cities like Gurgaon, we can see that improved laws, property rights, and incentives are important, but they are not enough. Redemption Camp offers a unique angle and input to such experiments, weaving together private initiative and enterprise with a spiritual motivation centered munity, service, and shared belief.

At what point Redemption Camp can or should or alreadyhas transition(ed) from “mediating institution” to governing body is an open question. Regardless, it offers as pelling portrait of faith and work in action, unbound by scarcity or cultural constraints, and intentional and holistic in its public witness, both in word and deed.

Image: Wikimedia Commons, Kaizen Photography, CC BY-SA 4.0

Image: Wikimedia Commons, Kaizenify, Public Domain

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The Future is Paranoia
We know the government is listening, watching, gathering information. We know that we’re being told it’s all for our own good; after all, who wants to miss a possible terrorist attack? Sleeper cells, the Boston bombers, the haunting memory of 9/11 say all of this is necessary for our safety, right? Not so fast, says Peggy Noonan. First, she reminds us that the NSA has – at least technically – only limited authority when es to spying on American citizens....
Is Augustine Obnoxious, Too?
Earlier this week, Elise noted an essay by Rev. Schall, which asked, “Do Christians Love Poverty?” Michael Sean Winters at the National Catholic Reporter also responded to the piece, with ment, “Almost everything about this essay is obnoxious.” But I think Winters really misses the central insight of Schall’s piece, which really is an Augustinian point: A person who sorrows for someone who is miserable earns approval for the charity he shows, but if he is genuinely merciful he would...
Beyond Gardening and Governance: Cities Need Business
[This post was co-authored with Chris Horst, director of development at HOPE International. He is a This is Our City fanboy and is grateful that Christianity Today has given him freedom to write about manufacturers, mattress sellers, and solar product designers, all working for mon good in Denver, where he lives with his family. Chris blogs atSmorgasblurb, and you can connect with him on Twitter at @chrishorst. His first book, Mission Drift, will hit shelves this spring. The views expressed...
Pro-Market is Anti-Zombie
Economist Luigi Zingales provides a helpful explanation on the difference between being pro-market and pro-business: A pro-market strategy rejects subsidies not only because they’re a waste of taxpayers’ money but also because they prop up inefficient firms, delaying the entry of new and more petitors. For every “zombie” firm that survives because of government assistance, several innovative start-ups don’t get the chance to be born. Subsidies, then, hurt taxpayers twice. . . . And a pro-market approach panies financially accountable...
India Is To Surrogacy As Detroit Was To Cars
That’s the conclusion Wesley J. Smith, J.D., Senior Fellow at the Discovery Institute, e to. The surrogacy business in India is booming. While statistics are hard e by, according to one estimate, . That does not translate to much money for the surrogate mothers, however. Women are paid about $8,000 for their medical expenses and having a baby. However, since it is typically poor women, many of whom are illiterate, that are targeted for surrogacy, many sign contracts they do...
Obamacare’s Bait and Switch
When a business advertises a particular product in a particular way but secretly delivers something different, it’s considered fraud. When a government agency advertises a particular product in a particular way but secretly delivers something different, it’s considered . . . what, a necessary evil? Huffington Post’s Jason Cherkis spent two days at the Kentucky State Fair with workers from Kynect, the state’s health marketplace. A middle-aged man in a red golf shirt shuffles up to a small folding table...
Get a Free Copy of Kuyper’s ‘Wisdom and Wonder’
If you haven’t yet bought a copy of Abraham Kuyper’s Wisdom and Wonder, you now have no excuse: You can get the Kindle edition from Amazon for free. As Jordan Ballor explained at the time of publication, this book consists of 10 chapters that the Dutch theologian and statesman Abraham Kuyper had written to be the conclusion of his three-volume study mon grace. But due to a publisher’s oversight, these sections were omitted from the first printing. So they appeared...
American Evangelical Protestantism For The 21-Century
[Thanks to RealClearReligion for linking. — Editor] Anthony Chute, Christopher Morgan, and Robert Peterson have delivered a real gift toward building a unified future in their newly released Why We Belong: Evangelical Unity and Denominational Diversity. This edited volume brings together Anglican (Gerald Bray), Baptist (Timothy George), Lutheran (Douglas Sweeney), Methodist (Timothy Tennent), Pentecostal (Byron Klaus), and Presbyterian (Bryan Chapell) representatives to do two things: (1) the contributors give personal narratives of how they became a part of their respective...
The Economics of Profiling
I ran across this video yesterday (courtesy of ESA), which I thought presented some interesting challenges and issues: The video was presented on Upworthy as an example of something “all white people could do to make the world a better place,” that is, use their white privilege to address injustices. A number of economists, including Milton Friedman and Thomas Sowell, have written about the power of the market economy to e racism and discrimination, to put people into relationships on...
Obamacare: Driving Up Costs And Driving Down Those Insured
Delta Airlines has announced that it foresees a spike in health care costs for pany to the tune of $100 million a year. A Delta executive, Robert Kight, has said that fees associated with Obamacare will be costly, but won’t likely be more beneficial than what pany’s employees now have. One of the costly items pertains to an annual fee of $63 per “covered participant” next year. pany estimates this means a more than $10 million expense in 2014. The...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved