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Nigerian pastor | Zikoko!
  • Everything BBC’s Documentary Revealed about TB Joshua and SCOAN

    Everything BBC’s Documentary Revealed about TB Joshua and SCOAN

    The founder of The Synagogue Church of All Nations (SCOAN), Temitope Balogun Joshua AKA TB Joshua, has drawn public attention following a three-part BBC documentary investigating allegations of sexual crimes committed by the revered clergyman who passed away in 2021.

    Everything BBC’s Documentary Revealed about TB Joshua and SCOAN

    BBC released the documentary on Monday, January 8, 2024, featuring 25 eyewitnesses and alleged victims who claim to have lived with Joshua on his church premises at different times. We highlight the key revelations from the documentary:

    TB Joshua wanted everything filmed on camera 

    An ex-SCOAN member, Agomoh Paul, recounted how TB Joshua invested 90% of the ministry’s earnings on VHS videos, issuing a single command to the camera crew: “Record everything”. The videos covered healings performed in SCOAN, adding authenticity to his gospel of miracle work.  

    Rae, a former member based abroad, shared how she first encountered TB Joshua through these videos. 

    “The day it started was the day I was shown videos from SCOAN. Nothing was ever the same. We didn’t know what we were going to see. As soon as it started playing, it had a profound effect on me,” Rae told BBC. 

    Anneka, another ex-SCOAN member based abroad, encountered the preacher in a similar fashion. “It was an African church. I was like “What am I seeing? What am I watching?” They were quite graphic. There was no warning. It was private body parts that were swollen and oozing with puss. People with cancers and growth just being vulnerable and desperate. It was shocking to see”.

    In an old interview footage from the documentary, TB explained the rationale for capturing everything on camera. He said, “If Jesus wasn’t recorded in the Bible, you would not believe that he’s the same yesterday, today and forever.”

     [ad]

    He was a MOG with a raging temper

    Several ex-members of the church claimed TB had a horrible temper under the holy man facade he put on for the rest of the world.

    “One of my job was writing articles for the church. He called me in and said “Where’s the article? Have you not published it yet?” And I said “Sorry, sir. I’ve not published it yet,” and he slapped me.”

    Another member recounted how people would run off when the clergyman was “hot” and how those who stayed back were slapped. “You didn’t see it as physical abuse. We were told it’s an honour to get slapped by him because he’s next to Jesus.”

    An obsession with a white audience

    Paul, who said he was once the second-in-command to TB Joshua, claimed the clergyman had a strong bias for white people. “He had special interest in oyinbo.”

    The ex-SCOAN member recounted how Joshua had handed out VHS videos of miracles and confessions to a white pastor from South Africa, who had visited his church, and asked him to distribute them back at home. TB Joshua’s ploy to attract a white congregation worked. 

    “The greatest thing that pumped Synagogue church was when the foreigners started coming.”

    The disciples are staunch loyalists of TB Joshua, saddled with the responsibility of preaching the church’s gospel and recruiting more members. Abisola and Paul told the BBC how they specifically went after vulnerable white members because they were easy to manipulate, especially the unmarried ones.

    “Some intelligent disciples are sent to stalk on the whites. We don’t approach anyone, we look at you and how you fall into what is happening in SCOAN.”

    Sexual abuse allegations

    Several women, who were once under TB Joshua’s discipleship, alleged that they were sexually abused by the clergyman. Abisola, one of his earliest female disciples, claimed she was raped throughout the 14 years she was a member. She also revealed how the clergyman would ask her to find virgins.

    “TB Joshua asked me to find virgins for him, to bring young girls into the disciple fold. In the midnight, this person would be called into his bedroom so that he could disvirgin them.

    “We went into his room, and I stood there. He said, “Off your clothes,” so I removed my clothes. He just pointed, so I lay down, and then he raped me. He broke my virginity. I was screaming, and he was whispering in my ears that I should stop acting like a baby. I was 17 years old. I was underage,” another ex-member of SCOAN told the BBC.

    The guest house collapse of 2014

    On September 12, 2014, a guest house within the premises of SCOAN ministries in Ikotun-Egbe, Lagos, collapsed and killed 115 people. TB Joshua maintained that the building collapse resulted from an aircraft hovering over the said building.

    In the documentary, Emmanuel, an ex-worker at SCOAN, claimed the church building had a structural defect. Rae corroborated Emmanuel’s claim to the BBC, adding that the late TB Joshua went against professional advice to increase the stories. 

    “The building collapse is a prime example of life under TB Joshua. It’s a series of cover-ups. This incident was so significant that it was nearly impossible for him to conceal,” Rae said.

  • Like Jimmy Odukoya, These 7 Stars Juggle Gospel with Mainstream Entertainment

    Like Jimmy Odukoya, These 7 Stars Juggle Gospel with Mainstream Entertainment

    Nollywood actor, Jimmy Odukoya, recently succeeded his late dad, Taiwo Odukoya, as senior pastor of the Fountain of Life Church. Prior to the new position, Odukoya led a vibrant career in ministry and served as a pastor in TFOLC and The Cave Church.

    “The Woman King” actor’s appointment has since stirred mixed reactions from Nigerian Christian faithfuls. Questions have been raised about his acting profession, but did you know he’s not the only Nigerian celebrity combining ministry with a thriving career in entertainment? 

    Here are seven others you should know about.

    Banky W

    Like Jimmy Odukoya, These 7 Stars Juggle Gospel with Mainstream Entertainment

    Source: Instagram/@bankyw

    In 2020, the musician-turned-actor was ordained a full-time pastor at Tony Rapu’s This Present House Church. A visit to the singer’s official Instagram page features several videos of him preaching to large congregations. Since he became a pastor, Banky has dropped an album, ran for office and released a song with gospel musician, Mercy Chinwo.

    Lynxx

    Source: Instagram/@its_lynxxx

    The former singer first shared the news that he’d become a born-again Christian in 2016. The years that follow would see Lynxx maintaining a balance that tilts closer toward his spiritual life.

    His last known work in entertainment was a feature in the 2022 Netflix film, Glamour Girls. These days, Lynxx proudly wears his tag as a life and spiritual growth coach.

    Mama Rainbow

    Like Jimmy Odukoya, These 7 Stars Juggle Gospel with Mainstream Entertainment

    Source: Instagram/@mamarainbowofficial

    The veteran entertainer is as vocal about her work as an actress as she is with her evangelism. She has gained a reputation for taking on spiritually inclined journeys for Nigeria in turbulent times. In February 2023, ahead of the general elections, her prayer request for a peaceful election season went viral on social media.

    Patience Ozokwor

    Like Jimmy Odukoya, These 7 Stars Juggle Gospel with Mainstream Entertainment

    Source: Instagram/@patienceozokwo

    Famous for her wicked step-mother-inclined roles in Nollywood, the veteran actress doubles as a woman of God. In a 2019 interview, Ozokwor stressed that there’s no divide between her career as an actress and her ministry.

    “You know, we do drama in the church. It is like I am preaching. I say that the movie industry preaches to the whole world. A pastor can be in his church and be preaching to the people there, but the movies go very far with their stories. It is part of what I am doing.”

    Eucharia Anunobi

    Like Jimmy Odukoya, These 7 Stars Juggle Gospel with Mainstream Entertainment

    Source: Instagram/@euchariaanunobi

    She was Mother in Nollywood; an iconic queen who delivered a masterclass on how to act anytime she showed up on the screen. However, in February 2012, Anunobi was ordained as a minister of God at the Fresh Oil Ministry International Church. These days, she juggles her ministerial duties with appearances on small-budget Nollywood productions on YouTube.

    Pepenazi

    Source: Instagram/@pepenazi

    Illegal hitmaker, Pepenazi, sent a shock wave through social media in September 2022 after he was seen preaching the gospel in a video shared on his Instagram page. He captioned the clip: “The world cannot give you the satisfaction you need! It is only Jesus! that can satisfy your soul. Start your week by establishing a relationship with him and make a decree on what you want him to purge out of your life. He is a beacon.” 

    The months that follow will see Pepenazi sharing more Instagram videos preaching the gospel and letting people know where he stands. Although he still proudly wears the tag of singer, rapper and songwriter.

    Daddy Freeze

    Source: Instagram/@daddyfreeze

    The media personality started his spiritual career kicking back against Nigerian pastors like Enoch Adeboye and Paul Adefarasin, among others. He’d later start his own online church, Free The Sheeple Movement, dissecting the word of God for his followers and hosting questions and answers.

    Freeze combines his work as a minister with his full-time job as a media personality.

  • 6 Nigerians Talk About Life As A Pastor’s Child

    6 Nigerians Talk About Life As A Pastor’s Child

    What does the life of a Nigerian pastor’s child look like? Beneath the church programs and the excellence, what do they really struggle with? For this article, I spoke to 6 Nigerians who shared their stories with me.

    Bolatito.

    Being a pastor’s child hasn’t been a completely good experience. Yes, there are good parts, but the whole thing isn’t my choice so it’s hard to totally love something you didn’t choose.

    I had to be in every single department in church. I also had to lead in whatever thing I was involved in because as a pastor’s child, I had to show an example by being the best. It was really hard for someone like me who likes to do things differently. I was beaten a lot. My father is extra; he demands perfection in everything. And now, as a pastor, that demand doubled. We had to put on a perfect front because the gaze of the entire church was on us and we could not afford to slip up.

    At a point, my friends stopped talking to me because their parents used me as a metric of perfection that they had to follow. I was the good example, and each mistake they made was compared to my ‘goodness’ and magnified so much that they felt corrupt. Can’t you see her? Can’t you be like her? Eventually, they turned against me. And it was stressful, because I was suffering the perfection. If I did anything that was considered imperfect, I became a disgrace, and I was severely flogged. My father was generous with punishment. He flogged, scolded, and would even reduce my feeding allowance. Yet, I did everything he wanted.

    I could not wear trousers, make coloured braids or use attachments. When I eventually left home, I began to do the opposite. It was a gradual thing. A pair of trousers, a coloured braid mixed with black. Even though I was no longer under his roof, I still had to do them in hiding. Whenever he was coming to school, my mother would call me to hide these things so he would not get wind of it. He caught me once with my hair tinted blonde and he almost killed me.

    The only good part for me, I think, would be the ability to speak to large crowds. It was a result of always facing the church from a young age. My mum made it bearable. She was my support and told me that it was a matter of time before I left the house.

    At home, I never really had friends too. I was the Pastor’s child; only a few people wanted to relate with me. Making friends in university showed me that I had the potential to write, sing and do other things, and I explored that side of me, but I was extremely careful. I got into freelance modeling, and my dad found out when a cousin posted a picture of me dressed in an outfit with a high slit. My father saw it, and went to print out a disownment letter and told me to sign it.

    Being a pastor’s child gave me the confidence to address large crowds: Children’s anniversary and choir rehearsals didn’t go in vain. But despite this confidence, there are days I am depressed about being unable to express myself to my father. Sometimes, I don’t want to go to church but I have to because I am at home. In school, I don’t go regularly. I want to feel what it is like to be an ordinary church member, free from all the responsibilities and the scrutiny.

    I still have this desire of wanting to be first in everything because it is what was drummed into me. I want to be listened to, but I don’t listen to others. I want to be in front and lead, and if I don’t get the chance to be first in something, I feel the urge to destroy that thing entirely.

    David.

    The thing with being a Pastor’s child is that you get to see the human side of your parents, their blunders and mistakes and so this creates a disconnect in your head as you try to reconcile the holy, Christian part of them with the flawed, human side of them. The way I dealt with this was understanding that they were humans first of all and were trying to attain a high level of faith. Once I accepted this, the rest fell in place. Of course, this means you start to question a lot of things and this can lead to a crisis of faith. I think this is why a lot of pastors’ children go through a rebellious phase.

    The part I struggled with the most, was the expectations people have of you. I still struggle with it now. I try to do things a certain way just so that I don’t bring disrepute to my parents. It can be crushing, and at some point, you reach a boiling point where you just can’t pretend anymore, and this is where you feel the urge to go overboard and want to try all the vices at once. This happened to me while I was away from home on IT in another state. There was no monitoring, I had my life to myself for once, and I decided to explore. Thankfully, I didn’t grow a taste for all my explorations.

    Another stressful thing about being a pastor’s child is the constant morning devotions and vigils too. Good God! The problem with this is that because you aren’t the ones making the decisions, it starts to feel like a tiring chore and you just want to be done so you can get on with your day or sleep. It doesn’t help matters that you can’t even eat or watch TV until the family has had morning devotion. And then on Sunday, just know that you are spending your entire day in church as your parents move from service to meetings and meetings. Thank God for one woman like that that used to bring food for us to eat in church.

    Also, there was usually a lot of uncertainty in terms of finances. Even though my parents tried their best to keep this from us, I knew the church usually owed salaries and my parents would have to take on some jobs here and there to make sure everything evened out. And of course there’s bad reps for pastors, but a lot of them are really passionate about the church and their members. My parents sold their car and house to support the church that he was planting in a community.

    But being a pastor’s child is not all bad A good part that usually made me happy was Christmas period when we would receive lots of gifts and hampers. There was a year we received so many animals that the house started looking like a zoo. But not for long though. My parents gave out the gifts we received to needy people. It’s their habit.

    Gloria.

    I hate being a pastor’s child and I wish I was never one. Being a pastor was a good idea for my dad because it helped him get out of the ancestral stuff done in his village. If he hadn’t been a pastor, perhaps my sister and I would have been involved in the ancestral things too, but by being a pastor, he escaped that and got us an escape route too.

    I never really got the chance to be close to my father. By the time I was born, he had become so invested in the ministry that he had little or no time for me. My father is the type of person who would favour his church members over his own family, and I did not like that. It was as though all the love he had left in him was reserved for them. They took higher precedence in his list of priorities, and I hated that.

    I went from one member’s house to another, and eventually, I was molested, but I couldn’t tell anyone because I was too young to understand what happened. When I grew older and understood it, I blamed my parents for not being there for me. If they had, I probably would not have been in that situation. But they had the ministry in their heads and forgot their little daughter at home.

    Oh, my father loved the church members. He would be lacking school fees for me, but would have money for the members. Sometimes, I didn’t even see him as my dad, just the pastor.

    As a pastor’s child, too much was expected from me and I hated it. I was to be involved in every children’s program, do Bible recitation, sword drill and so many things I was not interested in but still had to perform the best. Whenever I fumbled, I was scolded by my father for disappointing him and embarrassing him before the whole congregation. My siblings were in school or married, and I was the only one at home, so I had nobody to cry to, except my mother.

    I was also punished for things that had nothing to do with me. For example, when deacons had issues with my dad, they’d come to flog me. I was the scapegoat for all the punishments they couldn’t dole out to my dad, all the things they couldn’t say to him. I didn’t get it at first. But I spoke out to my mum and she put two and two together.

    What I enjoyed the most about being a pastor’s child was the food that came in from members. I also got connections that went a long way in life. But to be honest, I feel that I could easily get some of these things as an ordinary member.

    There are misconceptions about pastors children being the most spoiled. I’ll tell you the truth: I think I fit that bill. There are so many things I have done and still do that, as a pastor’s child, will make you shocked. Back then, I couldn’t do any of these things because the pastor’s child identity hung over me. I couldn’t talk to boys because people would report me, and I couldn’t talk to the girls, because they didn’t want to make friends with the pastor’s child.

    There was also the constant transfer from church to church. I changed schools so many times and couldn’t even keep permanent friends. I didn’t know where I belonged. I could have a friend, and in 3 months, we’d have to move and I would have to start the whole process all over again.

    If my dad wasn’t a pastor, I think he still would have been a terrible father and husband. Perhaps being a pastor just helped him manage it. He has terrible eye service, doing things for people to see and praise him, but doing the opposite at home. I think my life would have been a lot better if he wasn’t my dad at all. It’s just him as a person, I guess. And I’m not the only one who feels this way. I guess my mother did too, and that was why she left him eventually.

    Lolade.

    I grew up in a very conservative home. The kind of conservative that focuses on spiritual wickedness, etc. And while it might seem tough, the advantage is that I grew up with people who knew the Lord, had a solid foundation of the Bible, and who gave me a moral compass for my life as defined by the tenets of our religious doctrine.

    As a pastor’s child, I saw how my family had to bear the brunt of sacrificing. If your parents have the heart for gospel or church, you’d sacrifice personally. Money that could have been used to do stuff at home was used to meet the need of a member, and we had to bear the consequence of this sacrificial giving. The complaint was always that there was no money, no money. Now, as an adult, I see that it had to be done and that there’s no sacrifice that goes unrewarded. God always rewarded our labour of love.

    And yes, I am aware of the misconceptions. Some people have unrealistic expectations of how upright you should as a pastor’s child. Some others believe that we are the worst pretenders because we are spoiled. I have had to deal with both sides of this narrative. I think that at the end of the day, we have to find our path regardless of the misconception and what people project on you.

    For starters, I had to find God for myself. I had been a pastor’s child for so long and yet didn’t know God until I was twenty-one. I’m currently twenty-four. I left religion and found a relationship with God, and by doing this, I got answers to questions that religion could not and did not answer for me.

    At the end of the day, the pastor is a man, and the pastor’s children are just like every other person who has to deal with every other challenge life throws their way. But the advantage for us is this: we have a solid backing from the Bible, a solid scriptural foundation, and we have a worldvew that is framed by the gospel which can be a good thing or a bad one, based on how your home was, growing up. But yes, I am thankful for the family I was born into.

    Chidi.

    I thought I had it worse as a pastor’s child. I should know better than to say mine was more than someone’s or less because trauma is trauma. My dad is a pastor and my mum a deaconess, so people have always expected perfection from my siblings and me. I soon learned that being called “pastor’s child” is more of an insult than a  good thing and I hated being called that.

    My dad was never the type to force us to do anything in church when I was younger, I did all that on my own. I taught toddlers’ class, was in the choir, drama team and I think to a degree I even loved doing those things. Until I started to fully come into myself. That is, I’ve always been a sort of tomboy and queer, but in 2016/2017 I realized that I was gender non-binary. I wanted to be addressed with a different name because it didn’t feel like me anymore, different pronouns, I refused to wear dresses to church and I wanted my chest flat so I got a binder and my father started to lose his shit. To crown it all, I became agnostic. When you’ve seen how the church is run, the dirty politics that goes on, the irrelevant things people are punished for, the stealing, lies and manipulation, your sense will tell you to flee.

    Last year during the lockdown, my father told me that God said I should cut my locs. It’s silly but that was when I knew that there would be no going back to any god. When I’m at home and in a good mood I follow my dad to church and create stories in my head the entire time. Since last year, I only went to church once.

    I feel sorry for my dad because I know people talk and it maybe reflects badly on him but honestly, I don’t care anymore. He has the title, I am just the unfortunate sperm that has survived for way too long.

    Godwin.

    I was not born a pastor’s child. My dad worked as an accountant and earned a lot until 2008/9 when he said he got the call of God to be a pastor. He quit his job, went to pray on the mountain with 14 days of dry fasting. He came back very haggard. After he recovered, he went to Abuja to see a pastor who has the biggest influence on him. He spent two/three days there, and returned, ready to take on the duty ahead. And as his child, this meant that my life and my siblings’ lives would have to change.

    We were held to a higher standard than the other children. “Pastor’s children” was a title that was held over us. I felt like I was not in control of anything. I was a child and could not be in total control, but even then, I was not allowed any control at all. My entire life was like being tethered to a rope. At first I felt loved by the community of members and the way they asked questions and cared for us, but when I became a teenager, the whole thing felt stifling and the community itself seemed intrusive, especially with regards to certain questions they asked and their attempts to crack my privacy.

    Whenever we were reported to him, my dad would discipline us. He feared what people would say and he tried to keep us in a straight line with the cane. Once, he sat us down and tell us a Bible story about Dinah, Jacob’s daughter who kept the wrong company and was lured and raped. When he was done, he prayed with us. After the prayer, he brought out the cane and flogged the living daylights out of us.

    An illustration of Dinah from My Book of Bible Stories.

    Day after day, I felt more resentful of him, and of the community. I had fallen out of love with doing things in church, but I kept doing it to keep up appearance. Finally, he moved to Abuja and it felt like a huge load was lifted off me.

    But this relief was not enough to stop my religious apathy. When I got to university, the ship of my interest towards religion had already sailed. I cared very little. My dad still believes God has destined me to be a pastor and I anticipate future disagreements with him, because, after university, I don’t know when I’ll step into a church, especially now that I am even questioning God.

    To be honest, it was nice to have the huge church family at first. But at some point, I had had my fill. I now felt restricted and oversaturated. Also, there’s something about how people respect pastors and place them highly, but you as their child who lives at home with them sees how very flawed they are. My dad makes judgements about people, he gets angry, and this is the same man people hail, the same man who preaches against those things. The images do not align.

    Another thing I find impossible to overlook was how, when my father quit his job to become a pastor, our income went down and living conditions changed. We used to live very comfortably, all of a sudden we began to manage because of one decision by one person. The entire thing has made me tired of religion and my dad. Maybe as I grow, I will understand the motivation that led him to those things.


  • We Need To Talk About The Crime of Defilement

    We Need To Talk About The Crime of Defilement

    At some point, Nigeria will have to declare a national emergency on the crime of defilement.

    For starters, I actually thought “defilement” was just another sensational term used on newspaper headlines, but it actually is a criminal offence. Section 137 of the Lagos Criminal Law (2015), for instance, prescribes an imprisonment for life for anyone convicted on the offence of “Defilement of a child”.

    And yes, a lot of defilement has been going on in Nigeria.

    Meet Prophet Idowu And Other Annointed Men of God

    On Wednesday, the Lagos State Police Command arraigned a Nduka Anyanwu before the State Magistrate Court in Yaba for allegedly impregnating two sisters of, guess their age – 13 and 17 years. Anyanwu who is a Pastor was said to have slept with the girls on multiple times, impregnating them in the process. Worst thing is that the mother of the girl refused the arrest because he’s a Pastor and he promised to marry one of them.

    Meanwhile, there is a Prophet Idowu of the “Victorious Sacred Solemn Healing and Deliverance Ministry” who was arrested in February 2016 for “putting two sisters in the family way” (kinda thing you say to clear your conscience when you want to put rat poison in someone’s tea). This man also wanted to sell the victim’s father’s property – but one crime per pastor a day. Ahan.

    There is also Prophet Ebenezer Ajigbotoluwa, founder and General Overseer of the Church of Lord who was arrested for defiling and impregnating two sisters, this same August. This one allegedly told a family of six to move into the church premises to avoid being ‘afflicted’ by the same sickness, after which he started afflicting the family’s girls of ages 13 and 16.

    And there’s Pastor Jeremiah Godman Iziduh of the House of David Full Gospel Church who held a widow and her five daughters captive in Edo State, impregnated two of the girls while claiming that they were sown as seeds to his church by their late father (and so he sowed his seeds to them?). He also collected the documents of every property left by the late father and husband, and claimed that they were all sown as seeds to his church.

    Things Are Happening

    Look, there’s many more of these things happening in Nigeria. And its really not just Pastors. Terrible men are really destroying the lives of Nigerian girls by sleeping with them, getting them pregnant, and destroying their chances of proper education and a good future. And if that’s not a menace then I don’t know what is.

    Meanwhile, let me go and look for the sex story of another Prophet Bartholomew Endurance Izanga. I’m sure there’s one out there. There always is.

  • What Do All Daddy G.Os Have In Common?

    If there’s something Daddy G.Os don’t joke with, it’s in how they like to stand out. Whether it’s by their hairdo or their catchphrases, you’ll recognise them when they come through.

    Can somebody shout Hallelujah? If you check very well we can bet that you have at least one relative who is a pastor.  As different as all our Daddy G.Os are, we couldn’t help but notice a couple of things most of them seem to have in common.

    Many of their churches run either universities or secondary schools or both.

    It’s not as if it’s just for-profit o, it’s because education is also their calling.

    They are all published authors, some of them even run their own media houses so they can efficiently distribute the word of the Lord.

    So multi-talented. Can only be God.

    Some of them have private jets.

    You might think this is a luxury, but it’s not. The word of God is timely and can’t be stuck at Muritala Muhammed, like the rest of us.

    Has your Daddy arrived if he doesn’t have a campground along an expressway

    Who cares if you get stuck in the unbearable traffic, receive your blessings from there. Amen?

    Some of them are worth millions of dollars.

    They don’t have to explain the source of their income to you, because how do you explain a net worth of over $150 million?
    Divine abundance, brothers and sisters. Next year is your year.

    In order to become a successful G.O. humility is a vital ingredient.

    Just think about it, which G.O. do you know who isn’t humble?

    Their churches have several branches including some in the overseas. They also broadcast nationally and internationally some even have TV stations.

    Is your work truly complete if you haven’t given it international exposure?

    If you say ‘tithe’ in front of a mirror three times, a Daddy G.O. will appear.

    They are only trying to help your life, your prosperity is tied to your tithes. If you don’t tithe you can’t blow.

    Their wives are usually also pastors.

    You can’t find a Daddy G.O. without a Mummy G.O.

    What’s your favourite thing about G.Os and did we leave anything out?

  • Nothing Serious, Just A Pastor Babysitting A Little Girl While Healing The Sick

    Nothing Serious, Just A Pastor Babysitting A Little Girl While Healing The Sick
    Ghanaian Pastor Addison Adamu, the founder of Freedom House Church International, Atlanta, Georgia wanted us to know how much he loved children when he shared pictures of him “backing” a child on his Facebook page.

    That’s not the best part, he managed to preach the word of God, and heal the sick…

    With this adorable little girl on his back.

    He captioned the pictures “Having awesome time during Ephphatha conference: babysitting, preaching and healing the sick at the same time. what an awesome time to love on little kids Jesus so love dearly.”

    He loves children just like Jesus did but couldn’t he give the little girl a chair to sit on while he preached and watched over her?​

    Is backing a child the only way to babysit?

    Is this little girl not too old to be backed with a wrapper?

    Are women (including female pastors) this celebrated for backing a child while preaching?

    Is it necessary for any pastor or public speaker whether male or female to literally back a child while talking to an audience?

    [zkk_poll post=33122 poll=content_block_standard_format_9]
  • A Pastor Went To Heaven And Wants To Share His Souvenir Pictures For 68k

    A Pastor Went To Heaven And Wants To Share His Souvenir Pictures For 68k
    After going through fuel scarcity, heat, permanent leader syndrome and many other African problems, we all eventually want to make heaven.

    A South African pastor has been making trips between heaven and earth.

    And he was kind enough to take heavenly pictures to show mere mortals like us.

    But all you sinners can’t just view such holy pictures free of charge…

    Propher Mboro is charging 5,000 Rand, approximately 68,000 Naira for those who want to know what heaven looks like.

    Although haters are trolling him on Twitter.

    https://twitter.com/Just_Lungelo/status/715273636584800261

    Because even Jesus has not accomplished this feat.

    Maybe only Samsung Galaxy S5 phones work in heaven.

    He sha took a selfie with the serpent of Eden.

    And probably followed the ladder to heaven.

    He doesn’t care, he just wants people to stop sending him nudes.

    But really, who heaven selfies epp?

    Will they buy someone a seat in the kingdom of heaven?

    If not, let us all meet at the feet of Jesus abeg!

  • This Nigerian Pastor’s Lifestyle Is Admirable And People Are Talking About Him

    This Nigerian Pastor’s Lifestyle Is Admirable And People Are Talking About Him

    Men of God in Nigeria are known for different things. Some are controversial and mostly specify in prophesying things that have already happened.

    Samuel Adeyemi, the senior pastor of Daystar Christian Center not only preaches on the altar but also changes lives through his motivational speeches and life coaching talkshows he hosts on radio stations within and outside the country.

    He has also authored several books some of which include: Nigeria Of My Dreams, Generation Z+ and We Are The Government.

    Impressed by his lifestyle and values, a Nigerian man, Davis King, took to his Facebook to express the admiration and respect he felt. He says:

    This is not hero worship and today is not his birthday or anything like that. I am only celebrating excellence because I know it inspires others…
    <!– // (function(d, s, id) { var js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0]; if (d.getElementById(id)) return; js = d.createElement(s); js.id = id; js.src = “//connect.facebook.net/en_US/sdk.js#xfbml=1&version=v2.3”; fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs);}(document, ‘script’, ‘facebook-jssdk’)); // ]]>
    This is Sam Adeyemi. He pastors a congregation of about 20,000 people. He runs his own businesses unrelated to the…
    Posted by Davis King on Sunday, January 31, 2016

    Let us know your opinion on the Facebook post in the comments section.