Tag: Chris Oyakhilome

  • Oyakhilome’s marriage dissolved

    Oyakhilome’s marriage dissolved

    A United Kingdom High Court has finally dissolved the marriage between the founder of Christ Embassy, Pastor Chris Oyakhilome and his former wife, Anita.
    Consequently, Anita has severed her link with the church also known as Believers LoveWorld INC.
    A statement issued on Anita’s behalf by her solicitors: Attwaters Jameson Hill, said the divorce was finalised on February 8 after which she dropped Oyahkilome from her name.
    The statement published on the United Kingdom-based law firm’s website reads, “We have been requested by Anita Oyakhilome to confirm that on 8th Februray 2016 a decree absolute was pronounced in the High Court of Justice Principal Registry of the Family Division dissolving her marriage to Christian Onehirokpeana Oyakhilome.
    “Anita Oyakhilome would like to confirm that she is no longer involved in or part of Christ Embassy AKA Believers LoveWorld INC.”
    Anita, a pioneer member of Christ Embassy got married to Oyakhilome in 1991 and have two daughters.

  • Chris Oyakhilome donates N1bn to Idahosa varsity

    Chris Oyakhilome donates N1bn to Idahosa varsity

    • Bags institution’s honorary degree

    The President of Loveworld Ministry, Pastor  Chris Oyakhilome, has donated a whopping sum of N1 billion to the Benson Idahosa University, as part of his support to the institution, which he described as one of the legacies of his mentor and role-model, the late Archbishop Benson Idahosa.

    Oyakhilome made the donation, even as the university yesterday conferred on him a honourary Doctor of Divinity, during which he made the donation to facilitate the Faculty of Engineering project in the campus in Benin city, Edo State.

    Oyakhilome said his contribution to the varsity is borne of out his passion to contribute meaningfully to the development of lives, noting that the founder of the institution, late Archbishop Idahosa, positively influenced his life and ministry as a youth.

    According to him, the television ministry of the late Archbishop Idahosa, popularly known as Idahosa World Outreach (IWO- Television), was the first of its kind in the country, noting that it helped to liberate lost souls and assisted Christians in the world to accept Christ.

    “The Archbishop Benson Idahosa was one of the most remarkable and inspiring personality of the 20th Century. It is a fact of life that those who did not have the privilege to get to meet him are blessed to meet him through many of us. The impact of the Archbishop on me as an individual is unquantifiable.

    “Many times, people would ask me why I talk about the late Archbishop Benson Idahosa more than anybody. It will surprise you to know that as a young man, I was working with the Archbishop in the mail room in the Church of God Mission in Benin City. I was blessed to have worked with the late Archbishop Benson Idahosa. While working with him, I had the blessing and benefit of seeing the Archbishop passed by my table everyday to his office,” he said.

    The Chancellor of the institution, Archbishop Margaret Idahosa, described Oyakhilome as a spiritual son of the late Archbishop Benson Idahosa, noting that the decision to honour Iyakhilome was in recognition of his contribution to building and saving lives through his ministry.

  • Between Anita Oyakhilome and Clara Chime

    Between Anita Oyakhilome and Clara Chime

    PAST and current reports indicate that both Anita and Clara, wives to charismatic preacher Chris Oyakhilome and Governor Sullivan Chime respectively, are undergoing some very turbulent moments in their marriages. Mrs Chime enacted a most dramatic and very public, if not quite odious, separation from her husband late last year. And Mrs Oyakhilome has alleged very unsavoury deeds against her husband, and has sued for divorce. Just when we thought the last had been heard of the Chime drama, Clara came out with what may still qualify as the worst self-abnegating letter ever written. Beginning with atrocious assault on grammar, and right through marked and infuriating incivility to the language, Clara begged the women of Enugu, whom she seems to think she had disappointed, for pardon, and urges her husband, whom for inexplicable reasons she appears to want to placate, not to mind detractors.

    But Clara’s infelicitous use of language was not half as provocative as Anita’s husband’s infelicitous deployment of Christian exegesis. Other than the suit instituted against her husband, we know precious little about Anita’s doctrinal standing. However, her husband’s doctrinal standing comes out vividly in newspaper reports of how he is handling the divorce matter. He disdains the controversy, and condescendingly calls on church members to pray for his wife. He sees himself as blameless, for in his sanctimonious opinion, he was the one called by God, not his wife. Pastor Chris, a profound teacher himself, obviously needs a lot of lesson on the doctrine of Christian love. And if he will not think us presumptuous, we should like to refer him to the equally profound teachings on humility. He knows where to find these passages.

    Whether he likes it or not, and as his fellow labourer Chris Okotie must have discovered, his testimony will never be the same if the divorce suit instituted by Anita goes through.

  • Chris and Anita

    Interestingly, a public notice published in newspapers obliquely concretised earlier reports of an impending legalised split between Rev. Chris Oyakhilome and his wife, Anita. The 50-year-old charismatic founder of Believers’ Love World Incorporated, a Lagos-based church popularly known as Christ Embassy, was reportedly served with divorce papers in a UK hotel room.

    In the accompanying confusion, a statement by his lawyers, Pinheiro & Company, said: “The attention of our client, (Rev. Chris Oyakhilome and the Church, the CHRIST EMBASSY (“the Church”) has been drawn to the wave of false, malicious and fabricated stories being published in the print and electronic media about his person, the Church and a matrimonial cause between him and his wife.” Also, the lawyers accused “the concerned publishers” of “malicious falsehood”, saying, “It is our client’s instructions to inform the members of the public and particularly warn the concerned media houses that the news or story presently circulating in the media is nothing but a complete distortion of the facts in the pending proceedings in the United Kingdom, to the knowledge of the publishers.”

    It is significantly revealing that the statement referred to “a matrimonial cause between him and his wife” and “pending proceedings in the United Kingdom”, which would appear to constitute a sufficient validation of the reports that things had indeed gone awry between Chris and Anita. It is possible that the development spawned salacious story angles that may have been inaccurately presented; nevertheless, the overriding consideration should be whether there are incontrovertible realities in this riveting drama of love gone cold or frozen romance.

    It is noteworthy that a report said: “According to an online newspaper, The Cable, the divorce case, with Suit No FD14DO1650, was filed on April 9, 2014 at Divorce Section A, Central Family Court, First Avenue House, High Holborn, London, the United Kingdom, on Anita’s behalf by Attwaters Jameson Hill Solicitors, a firm with expertise in commercial law, family, wills and estate, personal injury and medical negligence.”

    Also deserving of attention is the information that Chris was served with a decree nisi, which is “an order from a court that a marriage will end after a fixed amount of time unless there is a good reason why it should not.”  It is unclear how long the court may have allowed for the pursuit of possible reconciliation, but it is clear enough that in the event of irreconcilability the court will most likely issue a decree absolute, which is “an order from a court that finally ends a marriage, making the two people divorced.”

    Perhaps pathetically, there is a seemingly remote possibility that the couple will kiss and make up. The next episode may well be the working out of the terms of the divorce by the lawyers on both sides, which would be a sad ending to a love story that had the inspiring appearance of a fairy tale. Anita has reportedly ruled out an out-of-court settlement; and PREMIUM TIMES quoted her lawyers as saying that the estranged couple was on such bad terms that there was no chance that the personalities would ever return to the status of husband and wife. The online publication presented a response by Stephen Goddard, Business Development Manager of Attwaters Jameson Hill Solicitors: “It is with great sadness that our client, Pastor Anita Oyakhilome, has come to the conclusion that her marriage to Pastor Christian Oyakhilome has irretrievably broken down and regrettably there is no hope of any reconciliation.”

    The approaching inevitability is particularly disquieting not only because it involves Christian pastors who are also media magnets; before the storm, Chris and Anita enjoyed the titles of President and Vice-President of the Christian ministry respectively.

    More importantly, the picture of irresolvable conflict is a devastating blow to the noblest virtues of Christian faith and matrimony.

    To go by the reports, Anita’s anger has to do with issues defined as “unreasonable behaviour” and “adultery.”  Given that the details of her charges against Chris are not in the public square, it would be unreasonably and unhelpfully speculative to explore the accusations and even the counter-accusations.

    In the context of Pentecostalism, which Christ Embassy represents, it is useful to consider Biblical teachings related to divorce. First, reflect on the words of Apostle Paul: “And unto the married I command, yet not I, but the Lord, Let not the wife depart from her husband: But and if she depart let her remain unmarried, or be reconciled to her husband; and let not the husband put away his wife.”(1 Corinthians 7:10-11) Next, think about the idea of Jesus himself: “And if a woman shall put away her husband, and be married to another, she committeth adultery.” (Mark 10:12)

    The unmistakable import of this background is the unacceptability of divorce in the framework of the faith. If there is a regrettably casual attitude to divorce in the secular world, church leaders whose stance should be informed by spiritual integrity ought to project a better example, especially considering that all eyes are on them. There is no doubt that divorce is understandably an expanding problem in the modern world with its anti-family tensions and tendencies; and it should be recognised as potentially anti-social.

    Of course, a marriage may break down “irretrievably” just as suggested by the Chris and Anita developing story, and priesthood may not automatically confer immunity from marital troubles on individuals. However, the beauty of a matrimonial union must be its capacity for marathonic endurance, among other fundamentals.

    Chris and Anita have two grown-up daughters who must be watching intently as their parents romance the depressing option of divorce; that is exactly what it is, an option, meaning there is possibly another one in the direction of unity. Will they understand how love disappeared, replaced by an intensely frontal and unmediated hostility?  How will this experience shape their emotional relationships, even their spiritual directions? Beyond these, what will happen to the image of the ministry, and even to the personal and pastoral brands of Chris and Anita?

    Why is forgiveness apparently no longer possible in this case? This is the chief reason for its ugliness, the exclusion of the grace of forgiveness, which can always result from charity. Paul again: “Charity never faileth.” (1 Corinthians 13: 8) But pastors in particular should know this, which is why Chris and Anita need enlightenment.

  • Inside the world of troubled  marriages of preachers

    Inside the world of troubled marriages of preachers

    The news of the divorce case between Pastor Chris Oyakhilome and his wife of 23 years, Anita, is the latest of shocking marital breakdowns among Nigerian preachers. Sunday Oguntola writes on many pastors opting for the courts despite the many negative implications. 

    IT perhaps only came to public knowledge penultimate weekend. However, to many the seed had been planted as far back as 1999. The then 30-year old Anita Oyakhilome decided she had had enough. Her young marriage was turbulent. The husband was hardly in town. When around, he was always busy with ministry works with too many “ladies in skimpy skirts” lurking around, according to a former domestic staff.

    Anita, according to multiple sources, was drained and exhausted. She had two young girls to cater for all alone. The strain of raising them and working in the church weighed her down. She craved for her husband’s attention but couldn’t get it. He was just damn too busy with church works. The presence of too many ladies in his office also left her spent.

    Then one day, she decided to quit the marriage. “She wanted out since she was not getting emotional support. She felt she was not loved enough and was becoming a pain for her husband. She asked to call the marriage quit but her husband would not hear of it. He said it would destroy his ministry and church. He was willing to negotiate and Anita felt comfortable with the proposal he offered,” a family source confided in our correspondent last week.

    The proposal, according to Pastor Chris Oyakhilome, founder of Christ Embassy Church with headquarters in Lagos, was to dispatch his wife to Woolwich, South London with their two daughters, Sharon and Charlyn. The relocation will give the flamboyant pastor “a breathing space and sanity of mind to move the ministry forward,” a church source confirmed.

    On her part, it would allow Anita to express her prodigious gifts and fulfill her calling. She was to pioneer the UK branch of the church. She had always complained of being underrated and overlooked in the schemes of things. She felt she had a calling and deserved more in the then budding church. For the couple, it was a win–win situation. The husband would have his space while the wife would be able to prove her calling.

    That development more or less led to the physical separation of the popular couple. The flamboyant husband had all the time and space to expand the church. He travelled without any restraint. The number of ladies around his Lagos office codenamed ‘White House’ increased significantly. The church grew in leaps and bounds, opening branches within and outside the country.

     

    Free at last

    Anita also settled down in her new abode free from the emotional strains in Lagos. She devoted her time to building the church to a force to be reckoned with. The branch she built from the scratch became the Europe’s headquarters of the church, raking in remarkable revenues and breaking new records. “It was like she came in prepared. She gave her all. South London became her territory. Her amiable personality and beautiful mien attracted people. She was the new kid on the block,” a founding member of the church, who identified herself as Isabella, informed.

    Pastor Chris, as members fondly called him, noticed the strides his wife was making. He felt justified with his proposal. The wife was breaking barriers in Europe while he was making headways in South Africa. He made occasional visits to the UK branch to the delight of his wife and new members.

    But while their church was making remarkable progress, the union was cracking and failing. Separated by thousands of miles on two continents, the popular couple drifted from each other. It became a marriage of convenience with intimacy taking a serious dip. “Both of them were happy that at least the church was growing and raking in revenues. They just forgot their marriage and became more or less business associates,” another source explained.

    The couple’s smiling faces dotted Rhapsodies of Reality, the church’s popular devotional. But deep within, all was far from well. There was tension and suspicion between them. They masked all of these with excited public appearances. A former pastor in the church said: “They felt they just had to keep a bold face for the sake of the church and themselves. They were making money and thought that was enough to get going.”

    Though Anita was taken care of, her emotional stability remained a challenge. She wanted her husband around for the growing daughters. “There were days she cried and cried with no shoulder to lean on. Fine, there was money but where was the man? She wanted him around desperately but he was busy crisscrossing the globe,” a friend to the wife hinted.

    Last April, she finally filed for divorce. The case was filed at Divorce Section A, Central Family Court, First Avenue House, High Holborn, London, UK, on Anita’s behalf by Attwaters Jameson Hill Solicitors. The development became a public knowledge penultimate weekend when The Cable, an online publication broke the news.

    Investigations revealed that the months leading to the filing of the case were really stormy for the couple. Anita, it was learnt, became aggrieved in November 2013 when she was shut out of the church. Her husband, sources said, became enraged when she allegedly started making demands and claiming equality. He accused her of planning to usurp authority and being rude to senior pastors of the church.

     

    His reaction was to seize the church from her. Anita, on her parts, felt she had contributed enough to be so recognised. She wanted more visible presence in the schemes of things and thought she was being shut out. Sources close to her stated that having pioneered the UK branch to stardom, she should have been further elevated despite being the Vice President of Believers’ Love World Incorporated. The power tussle between husband and wife spiraled to several confrontations and accusations.

     

    The storm came

    Last May, Pastor Chris decided to frontally address the issue in a meeting with pastors and elders of the UK church. “Bitterness is prolonged and accumulated anger. My wife is always angry and bitter,” he told the stunned pastors.

    “Some pastors’ wives think when they marry a pastor; they are equals to the pastors. My wife thinks so. As a matter of fact, Rev. Tom was her pastor before I married her and Rev. Ray and Evang. Owase were her leaders long before I married her. How come she thinks she’s senior to them now?” he stated. (The two reverends are pastors in the church).

    To put her where she rightly belongs, Oyakhilome declared: “I already started Christ Embassy before I married her. I didn’t marry her and said we should start Christ Embassy. I was already pastoring. I already set my sail and knew my direction before I married her. I only said come and help me.”

    The public accusations meant nothing again to Anita, who had already filed for divorce. She knew her husband was going for her jugular and cared less. Long before the suit was filed, Anita had been prevailed upon to reconsider. “Pastor was willing to make peace because of the backlashes on the ministry and their daughters. He begged her but she had made up her mind,” a source in Pastor Chris’ camp hinted.

    The charismatic preacher reportedly offered to give her more attention and visibility but Anita, it was learnt, could not trust him again. “She realised he wouldn’t change. He was just pleading to save his face and image,” one of her friends stated. To her, the divorce was a fait accompli. “Even when some concerned ministers outside the church intervened, things were already out of hands. She just wanted out and wanted to really hit back at him for years of suffering,” she added.

    It was learnt that Anita perfectly timed her fight back. The first daughter, Sharon was going to be 21. She clocked 21 on August 11 and threw a bikini party in London for her friends. Sharon is a UK-based gospel singer with the stage name CSO formed from Carissa Sharon Oyakhilome. Her younger sister, Charlyn, is already 18, old enough to understand the messy affairs. Their understanding, it was learnt, convinced Anita to finally go ahead with the suit.

    The daughter of a former MD/CEO of Nigerian Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC), Mr. John Ebhodaghe, Anita met Pastor Chris in the former Edo State University now Ambrose Alli University where she studied English. Her mother is Swiss and she is the first in a family of five children.

    Since the news broke, officials of the church have maintained complete silence. All efforts to extract official comments proved abortive. But Oyakhilome is not one to take such affront without a fight back. Checks revealed he has removed the profile and picture of his wife from the church’s official website, www.christembassy.org. His personal website also no longer has her picture and profile. They have been replaced with those of popular gospel singer, Sinach, who worships in the church.

     

    Like Oyakhilome, like others

    Their messy divorce case has brought to the fore again the unexpected marital turmoil of preachers and church founders. Some of the affected preachers include Pastor Chris Okotie, Bishop Bola Odeleke, Pastor Olumide Emmanuel, Evangelist Wunmi Owolabi and Pastor Eze Ofoegbu, among others. (See catalogue of Nigeria’s pastor-divorcees for details).

    These celebrated marital spats ruffled not a few feathers. As it is in the wider world, indications have, however, emerged that Oyakhilome’s case might not be the last among preachers in the country. Several others, according to findings, are working towards breaking their marital vows. Many who married before they became preachers now consider their wives unsuitable for their new status.

    “To some, these women are no longer suitable because many of them were married before ministerial calling came. They feel they have made mistakes and desire someone with ministerial outlook,” Pastor Bisi Adewale, a marriage counselor stated. He, however, said such consideration is terrible. “Even if you married an unbeliever and became a pastor, you must stay married. You have a responsibility to pray and work for her conversion instead of leaving her,” the televangelist stated.

    For those who think their wives no longer match their status in life and ministry, Pastor Taiwo Odubiyi said such preachers must ensure they brush them up. “Even if she is way below your standard, you up her level. Carry her along as you grow in life and ministry. Bring her to your level. You have married and there is nothing you can do about it,” she advised.

    Church growth consultant, Dr. Francis Bola Akin-John, is of the opinion that there is no going back once Christians get married.

    While stating that divorce is never an option for gospel ministers, Akin-John said: “There is no room for divorce at all. Pastors divorce a lot today because they have committed a lot of errors. These days, most of our pastors are not real men who can fight for their homes. When there is what they term ‘irreconcilable differences’, they look for every reason to get out of the marriage.”

    He added: “Once you are married, you must remain married. You must fight for that marriage. You must adjust to each other. You must be willing to offer sacrifices for your marriage. You must not do what only pleases you but learn to adjust to your partner’s personality.”

    The question most outside the pastorate ask is: “If iron gold rusts what will iron do?” In other words, if those who preach patience and endurance in marriage can’t live by what they preach, what will the flocks do?