Muo Nso Gi Na Elu Ugwu Na Ndida - Sam Okoro Ft. Prince Ezeudo - Zite
The villagers still sing the song that Sam Okoro and Prince Ezeudo composed that night—a call and response that echoes through every high place and low place in their lives: (Show Your wonders on the mountain and in the valley.) “Onye kwere, ya ga-eri…” (Whoever believes will feast.) Meaning Behind the Song | Igbo Phrase | Literal Meaning | Deeper Insight | |-------------|----------------|----------------| | Zite muo nso gi | Send/show Your Holy Spirit/wonders | A call for divine intervention, not by human effort but by sacred power. | | Na elu ugwu | On the mountain | Represents times of victory, visibility, and spiritual high places—where faith is tested publicly. | | Na ndida | In the valley | Represents seasons of suffering, humility, and hidden struggle—where faith is refined. | | Gi | Your (possessive) | Emphasizes that the wonders come from God, not from ritual or ancestry. |
Together, they returned to the mountain at midnight and the valley at dawn. Sam Okoro declared the mountain’s power broken in the name of the Most High. Prince Ezeudo poured water from the valley’s new spring onto the dry fields. As the sun rose, a child who had been paralyzed for months took her first steps. The villagers still sing the song that Sam
This song—performed powerfully by Sam Okoro with Prince Ezeudo—is often sung in Nigerian gospel and highlife contexts as a prayer for God to show up everywhere : in prosperity and poverty, in health and sickness, in the shout of praise and the whisper of pain. | | Gi | Your (possessive) | Emphasizes