Your privacy is our policy. See our new Privacy Policy.


Liberians asked to pray for peaceful election

United Methodist Bishop Samuel J. Quire Jr., is calling on fellow Liberians to shun violence as they prepare to vote in the country’s presidential run-off election.

“We cannot as a nation afford to experience any form of violence that would threaten our co-existence as a people,” Quire said.

The run-off election between Vice President Joseph Boakai of the governing Unity Party and George Weah of the Coalition for Democratic Change had been scheduled for Nov. 7.

But on Nov. 6, the Supreme Court of Liberia halted all National Elections Commission activities leading to the run-off election pending the adjudication of the complaints of irregularities of the Oct. 10 presidential and legislative elections.

Days after the Oct. 10 elections, the Liberty Party of Charles Brumskine filed a complaint of irregularities with the commission. When the commission failed to hear the case, the Liberty Party went to Supreme Court seeking for a writ of prohibition, which was granted on Nov. 6. Both Brumskine and Weah are United Methodists.

Quire, who is attending the United Methodist Council of Bishops meeting in the U.S., said the Supreme Court has decided that the complaints of the Liberty Party be investigated by the National Elections Commission.

"While we're waiting for the National Elections Commission to call the aggrieved parties, we want to call on all Liberians wherever they are to remain calm so that the commission can conduct the hearing,” said Quire.

He called on the commission to take the issue very seriously and hear the aggrieved parties as soon as possible.  “There is no need for over-anxiety. We need to still be civil. We are people of law,” the bishop said.

Earlier, the bishop expressed gratitude for the way Liberians conducted themselves during the first round of the presidential and legislative elections and escribed all who participated earlier as “winners for helping to preserve the peace and unity of Liberia.”

Quire challenged both parties in the second round of the presidential election to speak to their partisans and sympathizers to avoid threats and every form of violence during the voting and afterward.

“Liberia is the only country we have and know, so let’s protect and cherish our beloved country,” he said.

The bishop also called on United Methodists throughout Liberia and elsewhere to pray for the country as the run-off election looms. He reiterated that Liberia cannot afford to lapse into civil war.

“We have made considerable progress in our lives since the (second civil) war ended in 2003 and we cannot allow this election to destroy the gains that we have made,” the bishop warned.

He promised to do all within his power as leader of The United Methodist Church in Liberia to work for the peaceful co-existence of all Liberians.

He urged all to accept the result of the election, saying “whoever is elected as president among the two contending candidates will be the leader that God wants for Liberia.”

Before leaving for the Council of Bishops meeting, Quire urged all United Methodists in Liberia to go to the polls and vote for the leader of their choice.

“Your vote and prayer is all you can contribute to uphold the peace of Liberia,” he concluded.

Swen is a communicator in Liberia. Heather Hahn of United Methodist News Service contributed to this report. News media contact: Vicki Brown, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or [email protected]. To read more United Methodist news, subscribe to the free Daily or Weekly Digests.


Like what you're reading? Support the ministry of UM News! Your support ensures the latest denominational news, dynamic stories and informative articles will continue to connect our global community. Make a tax-deductible donation at ResourceUMC.org/GiveUMCom.

Sign up for our newsletter!

Subscribe Now
Evangelism
Danny Dube (left), a regular member of Morning Service in Nyanyadzi, Zimbabwe, talks with the Rev. Godfrey Gaga, Nyanyadzi Circuit pastor-in-charge, after a funeral. The 7 a.m. church service has transformed Dube, who had been known in the community for drinking and causing disturbances. “The circuit is meeting people where they are, offering a safe space for transformation and showing that the church is a place of healing rather than judgment,” says Bishop Gift K. Machinga. Photo by Kudzai Chingwe, UM News.

'Morning Service' revives farming community

From humble beginnings three years ago, a church service in Nyanyadzi, Zimbabwe, is sparking a quiet revolution by meeting struggling people where they are.
Disaster Relief
Beneficiaries of a United Methodist-sponsored nutrition program gather at Dzaleka Refugee Camp in Dowa District, Malawi. The camp is home to an estimated 57,000 refugees. The church initiative provides a monthly clinic that offers supplementary feeding programs for those at the camp most at risk of malnutrition. Photo by Francis Nkhoma, UM News.

Church provides food, hope at Malawi refugee camp

Through the Dzaleka Refugee Camp Nutrition Program, United Methodists offer vital health and nutrition services to vulnerable women and children.
Mission and Ministry
Elie Etako Wembo, coordinator of the Yambasu Agriculture Initiative in the East Congo Episcopal Area, and Omanga Sebastien, a zoo technician, inspect a pig with an injured ear at a United Methodist farm funded by the initiative near Kindu, Congo. The United Methodist Board of Global Ministries program has financed the construction of two buildings for pig farming, which can accommodate up to 300 animals. Photo by Chadrack Tambwe Londe, UM News.

Yambasu farm fosters hope in Congo

A mixed-use farm funded through the Yambasu Agriculture Initiative strengthens local food security, creates jobs and generates sustainable income for the community and The United Methodist Church in eastern Congo.

United Methodist Communications is an agency of The United Methodist Church

©2025 United Methodist Communications. All Rights Reserved