My Son Was Kidnapped for Rituals...But What He Did Shocked the Kidnappers.
Lesson: Teach your children wisdom and prayer early.
I remember the day vividly. September 5th, 2022. The rain had just started falling softly over our small town in Ogun State, Nigeria. It was one of those gentle showers that smell like earth and peace. But what happened that day turned my heart to ashes.
My 10-year-old son, Daniel, had gone to school as usual that morning. His uniform was clean, his lunchbox packed, and his smile — radiant. He kissed me on the cheek and said, “Mummy, don’t forget to pray for me today.” I remember those words clearly now, like they were etched in stone.
That was the last time I saw him before everything changed.
By 2:00 p.m., I was already waiting at the junction near his school. Normally, the school bus would drop him off by 2:15 p.m. sharp. But 2:30 came. Then 2:45. Then 3:00.
No sign of Daniel.
I called the school driver...no answer.
I called the school...they said Daniel left with the bus like every other day.
Panic began to crawl into my chest like a snake. Cold sweat soaked my clothes. I ran straight to the school, screaming, begging, and losing my mind.
Everyone was in chaos when they realized Daniel was truly missing. The teachers, the driver, even other parents joined the search.
But deep in my heart, something told me — this was more than just a child wandering off.
Daniel had been kidnapped.
The hours passed like years. My husband and I went to the police station, filed a report, and returned home that night with broken hearts.
I couldn’t sleep. I kept walking up and down the sitting room, holding Daniel’s picture, whispering prayers through cracked lips. “God, please… please… I’m not ready to bury my son.”
I remembered all the times I made Daniel join me in night prayers. All the times we read Psalm 91 together. All the mornings we anointed his head before school. I suddenly wished I had done more. Prayed more. Covered him more.
That night felt endless.
Every small sound outside made me jump. Every passing keke or bike made me rush to the window like a madwoman, hoping, praying, begging that it was Daniel.
But it wasn’t.
Around 3:22 a.m., the police called us. They said they had found a suspicious abandoned building at the edge of town and wanted us to come immediately. My legs almost failed me. My husband was shaking beside me. We drove like demons through the empty roads of Ogun State, whispering “God please… God please…” over and over again.
When we got there, police officers were already surrounding the building. It looked like an old shrine...blackened pots, broken bottles, burnt candles, red cloth tied on the door. My heart collapsed.
“Madam, we found the boy inside,” one officer said gently.
I screamed. I didn’t wait for permission. I ran inside barefoot, crying, my heart punching my ribs.
And there he was.
My Daniel.
Sitting calmly on a dusty floor… humming a worship song under his breath.
I fell to my knees and grabbed him, crying so hard I couldn’t breathe. He held me tightly and whispered, “Mummy, stop crying. I told you God will bring me back.”
He was unhurt. Untouched. Not a single scratch.
The officers later told us what happened — but hearing it from Daniel’s small, shaky voice broke me all over again.
“Mummy… when those men grabbed me, I remembered what you always say. ‘Pray first, panic later.’ So I started praying in the bus. I didn’t stop. Even when they tied my hands, I was praying in my mind.”
He continued…
“When they took me inside the place, the leader wanted to start doing something… but each time he came close, he would shout and run back like something was pushing him. Mummy, he couldn’t touch me.”
My husband and I stared at him, unable to speak.
“One of them said I was ‘burning like fire.’ He started screaming that they should take me away because my eyes were shining too much. Mummy, I didn’t know my eyes were shining o… I was just praying Psalm 91 like you taught me.”
He said the kidnappers became restless. Confused. Scared. Everything they tried failed.
Then something unbelievable happened.
Daniel said one of the men suddenly fell on his knees, crying, sweating, shaking like he had seen a ghost.
“He told the others that if they don’t let me go, all of them would die before morning. He said a big light was behind me. I didn’t see anything o… but he was shouting. He told them, ‘Release this boy. His God is too strong.’”
So in the middle of the night, they drove Daniel back and dropped him in front of the building where the police eventually found him.
That same man — the one who trembled — later confessed everything when the police tracked him down. He said he had never seen anything like it before. He said a child prayed with “the kind of confidence adults don’t even have.”
He said a force was “standing with Daniel.”
Listening to the confession, I couldn’t stop crying.
When we got home that morning, around 6:17 a.m., dawn was breaking. The same kind of gentle light from the morning Daniel left for school.
Except this time, I held him in my arms.
Alive.
Safe.
Untouched.
He looked at me with those innocent eyes and said, “Mummy, you see? Prayer works.”
And right there in the sitting room, I broke down all over again ...but this time, they were tears of gratitude.
Teach your children how to pray. Teach them wisdom. Teach them early.
Because the world we live in is no longer normal.
And sometimes… the only thing standing between your child and danger is the God you taught them to call.
That God answered my son.
And brought him back to me.
As you go to sleep... please pray 🙏
Goodnight and follow Benjamin Peace
Lesson: Teach your children wisdom and prayer early.
I remember the day vividly. September 5th, 2022. The rain had just started falling softly over our small town in Ogun State, Nigeria. It was one of those gentle showers that smell like earth and peace. But what happened that day turned my heart to ashes.
My 10-year-old son, Daniel, had gone to school as usual that morning. His uniform was clean, his lunchbox packed, and his smile — radiant. He kissed me on the cheek and said, “Mummy, don’t forget to pray for me today.” I remember those words clearly now, like they were etched in stone.
That was the last time I saw him before everything changed.
By 2:00 p.m., I was already waiting at the junction near his school. Normally, the school bus would drop him off by 2:15 p.m. sharp. But 2:30 came. Then 2:45. Then 3:00.
No sign of Daniel.
I called the school driver...no answer.
I called the school...they said Daniel left with the bus like every other day.
Panic began to crawl into my chest like a snake. Cold sweat soaked my clothes. I ran straight to the school, screaming, begging, and losing my mind.
Everyone was in chaos when they realized Daniel was truly missing. The teachers, the driver, even other parents joined the search.
But deep in my heart, something told me — this was more than just a child wandering off.
Daniel had been kidnapped.
The hours passed like years. My husband and I went to the police station, filed a report, and returned home that night with broken hearts.
I couldn’t sleep. I kept walking up and down the sitting room, holding Daniel’s picture, whispering prayers through cracked lips. “God, please… please… I’m not ready to bury my son.”
I remembered all the times I made Daniel join me in night prayers. All the times we read Psalm 91 together. All the mornings we anointed his head before school. I suddenly wished I had done more. Prayed more. Covered him more.
That night felt endless.
Every small sound outside made me jump. Every passing keke or bike made me rush to the window like a madwoman, hoping, praying, begging that it was Daniel.
But it wasn’t.
Around 3:22 a.m., the police called us. They said they had found a suspicious abandoned building at the edge of town and wanted us to come immediately. My legs almost failed me. My husband was shaking beside me. We drove like demons through the empty roads of Ogun State, whispering “God please… God please…” over and over again.
When we got there, police officers were already surrounding the building. It looked like an old shrine...blackened pots, broken bottles, burnt candles, red cloth tied on the door. My heart collapsed.
“Madam, we found the boy inside,” one officer said gently.
I screamed. I didn’t wait for permission. I ran inside barefoot, crying, my heart punching my ribs.
And there he was.
My Daniel.
Sitting calmly on a dusty floor… humming a worship song under his breath.
I fell to my knees and grabbed him, crying so hard I couldn’t breathe. He held me tightly and whispered, “Mummy, stop crying. I told you God will bring me back.”
He was unhurt. Untouched. Not a single scratch.
The officers later told us what happened — but hearing it from Daniel’s small, shaky voice broke me all over again.
“Mummy… when those men grabbed me, I remembered what you always say. ‘Pray first, panic later.’ So I started praying in the bus. I didn’t stop. Even when they tied my hands, I was praying in my mind.”
He continued…
“When they took me inside the place, the leader wanted to start doing something… but each time he came close, he would shout and run back like something was pushing him. Mummy, he couldn’t touch me.”
My husband and I stared at him, unable to speak.
“One of them said I was ‘burning like fire.’ He started screaming that they should take me away because my eyes were shining too much. Mummy, I didn’t know my eyes were shining o… I was just praying Psalm 91 like you taught me.”
He said the kidnappers became restless. Confused. Scared. Everything they tried failed.
Then something unbelievable happened.
Daniel said one of the men suddenly fell on his knees, crying, sweating, shaking like he had seen a ghost.
“He told the others that if they don’t let me go, all of them would die before morning. He said a big light was behind me. I didn’t see anything o… but he was shouting. He told them, ‘Release this boy. His God is too strong.’”
So in the middle of the night, they drove Daniel back and dropped him in front of the building where the police eventually found him.
That same man — the one who trembled — later confessed everything when the police tracked him down. He said he had never seen anything like it before. He said a child prayed with “the kind of confidence adults don’t even have.”
He said a force was “standing with Daniel.”
Listening to the confession, I couldn’t stop crying.
When we got home that morning, around 6:17 a.m., dawn was breaking. The same kind of gentle light from the morning Daniel left for school.
Except this time, I held him in my arms.
Alive.
Safe.
Untouched.
He looked at me with those innocent eyes and said, “Mummy, you see? Prayer works.”
And right there in the sitting room, I broke down all over again ...but this time, they were tears of gratitude.
Teach your children how to pray. Teach them wisdom. Teach them early.
Because the world we live in is no longer normal.
And sometimes… the only thing standing between your child and danger is the God you taught them to call.
That God answered my son.
And brought him back to me.
As you go to sleep... please pray 🙏
Goodnight and follow Benjamin Peace














