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Olaopa Highlights Significance of 70 as Ezie Celebrates Birthday
The Chairman of the Federal Civil Service Commission, Prof. Tunji Olaopa, on Sunday reflected on the significance of the number 70 as Engr. Joseph Anayo Ezie, Akudo II of Umuna, celebrated his septuagenarian birthday in Abuja.
Olaopa who was the chairman of the occasion set the ball rolling by thanking God for making Ezie to gracefully enter the septuagenarian club.
Olaopa specifically
congratulated Ezie, his wife, Lolo Ify Ezie, the children, friends, colleagues, well-wishers, family members and the entire Ezie clan of Umuna town in Orlu LGA of Imo State .
According to Olaopa, God has seen Ezie through the wilderness of life, with all its traps, valleys, seen and unseen arrows of wickedness in the last 70 years.
He said that since Ezie survived those past years, he should rest assured that by God’s grace, he would be alive to celebrate 80, 90, and 100 years.
“You will live, you will not die, you will live, you will neither bury your wife or children. You will live to continue to proclaim the goodness of the Lord, in the land of the living, even as our Lord preserves you in good health, soundness of mind, and all-round prosperity”, Olaopa said.
The essence of attaining age 70, according to Olaopa, in a challenging society like Nigeria, is that Ezie has “weathered all manner of storms. It indeed takes the grace of God to survive the many existential traps in Nigeria’s combustible space to be able to get beyond the life expectancy age of 59 years for males.”
Beyond the dangers of living in Nigeria and reaching 70, Olaopa underscored the significance of that age in a broader context.
As Olaopa put it, “Seventy indeed, is a weighty number in spiritual and cultural terms. Seven (7) indicates perfection and ten (10) signals completeness.
“This must be the reason why Psalms 90 says ‘The years of our life are seventy.’ This makes seventy years a most notable year that represents fullness—the time of reckoning and deep reflection and appreciation.”
Underscoring the significance of 70 years in a spiritual and biblical context, Olaopa said: “In a little deeper spiritual sense, and for those that are Bible students, for instance, for the Israelites and in the Holy Book, the number 70 indicates so many remarkable significations.
” From a combination of seven for perfection and ten for completeness as I earlier noted, the number 70 packs sufficient sacredness that represents a perfect spiritual signification in Israel’s and biblical theological and political acts.
” In Exodus chapter one and verse five, the scripture declares that the Jewish nation began with seventy souls, with God as the seventieth member.
“Moses appointed seventy elders. The Sanhedrin, Israel’s formidable tribunal, is made up of seventy elders.
” Israel spent seventy years in captivity, and Jerusalem also kept seventy sabbaths while Judah was in captivity.
“Jesus sent seventy disciples to preach the gospel.”
Olaopa said further : “The translation of the Torah into Greek is marked by the symbol LXX, seventy—the Septuagint.
“In fact, seventy years are the span of political activities from the first Zionist Congress in 1897 to the unification of Jerusalem and the expansion of the Jewish state in 1967.
“And then, to cap it, the Book of Psalms pegs the nominal span of human life at precisely 70; the age of wholeness when, as the psalmist suggests, we are to number our days, give thoughts to our life and be guided by wisdom from there on.”
Olaopa also explained the significance of the
title of Akudo that Ezie bears. According to Olaopa, Akudo is a compound word deeply rooted in Igbo culture and philosophy, specifically translating to “Peaceful Wealth” or “Wealth that comes with peace”.
“Akudo therefore describes a person who brings peace and prosperity to their family or community.
“The Akudo title is therefore not a mere appellation. It represents a distinguished value orientation for the Igbos. It celebrates someone in good standing with the family and within the society, an honorable fellow who has fellow-feeling.
“What an apt metaphor characterization of our celebrant. Indeed, everyone who knows Engr. Ezie would attest to the fact that Akudo depicts the personality of Engr. Ezie in an irreducible manner”, Olaopa said.
He disclosed that before he stumbled on the Akudo title as an Igbo title, he had always seen Engr. Ezie as one man who embodies, in more than equal measure, the perfect quality of an English gentleman.
While praying for Ezie to end well and live more gloriously in the coming years, Olaopa added that “70 years and beyond is the time of reckoning, a time for stock-taking, a time for deep reflection and appreciation. A time when it is appropriate for the very reflective and perhaps spiritual person to begin to undertake reflection around the critical questions around our being: why am I here, where am I, and where am I going?”






