Tag: pastor

  • A pastor and the law

    From time immemorial, the state and the church have always been in a contest for power. The church has the power of the word and the state has the force of coercion. The church appeals to the minds of the people, the state coerce them to do its will. In this contest for power and supremacy, the people have always been at the receiving end. Yet, they claim to be working for the people. The church has an edge because it is closer to the people. This closeness is as a result of the relationship between the pastor and his flock.

    A pastor, who is a good shepherd in the biblical sense of the word, looks out for his sheep. He does not make too much demands on them, rather he ministers to their needs, whether spiritually or materially. A shepherd who sees his sheep as cows to be milked misses his calling. The scripture puts it succinctly : ‘’Woe be to the shepherds…that do feed themselves! should not the shepherds feed the flock? Ye eat the fat, and ye clothe you with the wool, ye kill them that are fed : but ye feed not the flock…neither have ye brought again that which was driven away, neither have ye sought that which was lost, but with force and cruelty have ye ruled them’’.

    The job of a pastor is not only to feed his congregation with words, he is also to cater to their needs to enable them stand firm and not to backslide. Unfortunately, the reverse is the case today. Pastors ride exotic cars, live in mansions, while their flock live in abject penury. Their God, they are quick to say, is not a God of poverty. Is it the God of their sheep that is poor then? Beyond their flock, pastors owe society a duty to speak truth to power and also pray for those in authority. ‘’Exhort therefore, that, first of all, supplications, prayers, intercessions, and giving of thanks, be made for all men; for kings, and for all that are in authority; that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and honesty’’, says the scripture.

    This divine mandate is to ensure that the society progresses as it should for the betterment of all. A society where the fear of God reigns will surely be peaceful. This is why pastors are to act as checks on leaders so that they do not derail. In discharging this obligation, the men of God are not expected to overreach themselves. Though they are ministers in the temple of God, they are not above the law. A pastor who oversteps his bounds is courting trouble and when the consequences come, his flock may not be able to save him. In correcting the leadership of their countries, pastors are not expected to be quarrelsome. They must discharge this god-given responsibility with decency and not play to the gallery.

    A pastor must not criticise the government of the day in order to score cheap political point. By his calling, he must be apolitical in order not to incur the wrath of government. Reason : if he supports the Pharaoh that is in power today, what will happen if there comes a Pharaoh that does not know Joseph. He would have exposed himself for what he truly is. Pastors must tread gingerly because anything they do or say are usually monitored by the public that can easily discern where they stand from the positions they take. The church and the state appear to be on a collision since the failed attempt by the Federal Reporting Council of Nigeria (FRC) to regulate not-for-profit organisations, such as churches, mosques and civil society organisations. The FRC set a tenure limit for general overseers, which forced the respected G.O of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) to step down for Pastor Joseph Obayemi. Obayemi is now the national overseer for Nigeria.

    The churches did not find this funny and they rose stoutly to condemn the code of corporate governance fashioned by the former Executive Secretary of FRC, Jim Obazee, who was fired in the aftermath of Pastor Adeboye’s  decision to quit as RCCG’s leader in Nigeria. Living Faith Church Worldwide aka Winners Chapel founder Pastor David Oyedepo did not hide his anger over the issue. In a message that went viral, he said unequivocally that the country could not remain under the shackles of one region. Nigeria, he said, belongs to all Nigerians, noting that nobody should be treated as a second class citizen in his fatherland because of his faith.

    Apparently taking a cue from his fellow pastor, Apostle Johnson Suleiman of the Omega Fire Ministries (OFM), at a crusade in Ado Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital, last week, touched on the vexed issue of herdsmen’s killings in some parts of the country. He condemned the dastardly act, calling on Christians across the country to defend themselves, if the need arises. He was quoted as saying that if any herdsman comes near Christians, they should kill him. His statement ruffled the feathers of the Department of State Security (DSS), which went for him in his hotel room. The pastor quickly called Governor Ayo Fayose, who rushed to his aid before the security men could pick him up.

    The herdsmen matter has become something else because of the seeming silence of the government on how they have been wreaking havoc in some parts of the country. Are they Fulani herdsmen or where are they from? The DSS will do well to ascertain who these herdsmen are if it is really interested in getting to the root of how they have been killing, maiming and raping women in some states. Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai in whose domain the herdsmen struck last December, leaving death and destruction in their trail, said they were from outside the country. The governor must have had certain information at his disposal to have spoken like that. But has he availed the security agencies of that information?

    Apostle Suleiman’s message got the DSS worried. And since the agency could not get him in Ado Ekiti, it invited him to Abuja last Monday. We do not know yet what actually transpired at that meeting, but it is certain the apostle would have been grilled on the message he preached in Ado Ekiti. Was it a call to arms by Christians, he would have been asked. The apostle has since clarified what he said in Ado Ekiti. Shortly before going to keep his appointment with DSS, he told reporters that his statement was based on information from a reliable source that herdsmen were coming to attack him. ‘’I was talking in my personal capacity on information from a reliable source that certain people in the capacity of herdsmen were coming to attack me and I told the people around me that if it happens they should defend themselves’’.

    Everybody, not only pastors, should be concerned about the atrocities of these herdsmen. If it takes the message of a pastor to wake us up to their menace, so be it. The pastor may have made what the DSS perceives as inciting statement, but did the agency leave him with any option? Indeed, has it left Nigerians, especially those attacked, any option over this issue? The herdsmen have been allowed to be on the loose for too long. It is high time the DSS and other security agencies upped their game and fished out the culprits. The pastor may have spoken as one pained by what is happening to those he considers his shepherd, but that does not mean that he should take liberty for licence.

    Our governors too should be mindful of how they interfere in security matters. They do not have the power to stop the security agencies from doing their jobs.  No matter how strong  they feel about an issue, obstructing security agencies in the line of duty is not the way to go. If care is not taken, this may create more trouble than it is meant to solve.

  • The age of AK47 Pastor

    The age of AK47 Pastor

    Like the proverbial stubborn grass that defies the gardener’s sickle – quick to sprout after every cut, the lexicon of public conversation has undoubtedly grown with a raft of terms and phrases since the last compilation on the page. Consistent with our tradition, we shall be undertaking an update – an induction, if you like – of the new entrants today, the first in the New Year.

    “To be forewarned is to be forearmed”: At normal times, the spectacle of a cleric bearing arms would appear abominable, even heretical. Lesser mortals could be forgiven if they lacked faith and surrendered to fear. Certainly not a Pastor or Reverend Father.

    For the clergy to bear a rifle would, therefore, likely be interpreted as doubting God’s sovereign words to guard and protect His children, always. If the shepherd would succumb to fear, what becomes of the flock? But these are surely abnormal times.

    Nothing tells the story of an emerging ecclesiastical oxymoron today perhaps better than the image of a Reverend Father with a loaded rifle, much more ruthless AK47, slung on his shoulder ostensibly while conducting a church service (pictured here), flanked by a company of soldiers in battle fatigue.

    The powerful picture has been circulating in the social media in the past few weeks. With digital clarity, it surely speaks to the palpable tension in parts of the north where Christian worshippers are increasingly coming under relentless attacks by those identified as Fulani herders but strongly suspected of harboring darker sectarian agenda.

    Maybe, a counterpoise to Boko Haram’s sepulchral imagery of deranged Shekau with AK47 against the grotesque backdrop of a black flag. While responding to the recent killing of Christian worshippers in Southern Kaduna, the Archbishop of the Abuja Diocese, Cardinal John Onaiyekan, in what ominously signaled the hardening of position, stated that it was no longer conceivable to expect faithful not to defend themselves henceforth.

    Since the picture came un-captioned, it is difficult to tell where this happened. Regardless, its message is unmistakable: a steely determination to continue preaching the gospel in the face of mortal danger, exhorting people never to doubt God’s omni-potence in the hour of peril, never mind if the preacher’s other finger is firmly on the AK47’s trigger.

    It obviously mirrors the season of danger. …Omega Fire!: Chants of “Holy Ghost fire!” are common refrain when Christians are gathered in supplication to God Almighty in Nigeria. It is a powerful invocation of celestial forces against perceived enemies.

    “Omega Fire!” surreptitiously joined the diary two days ago following the reported attempted arrest of the General Overseer of the Omega Fire Ministry Worldwide by DSS operatives in Ado- Ekiti. His sin? Commanding his faithful to kill any of the murderous herdsmen that dares come close to him or the church.

    Apparently, like many Christian leaders unhappy at perceived official indifference to the continued mass killings of Christians across the country, balding Apostle Johnson Suleiman had reached his own tether’s end. No longer prepared to turn the biblical other cheek, the Auchi-based cleric is now ready for “action” or “Omega Fire!” According to media reports, but for the agility of the Ekiti Governor Ayo Fayose who had graciously extended his now celebrated executive vigilante services to Pastor Suleiman following a mere distress call to him in the small hours of Wednesday, the man of God would have been herded to DSS detention camp. (The cleric was in town on a two-day crusade.)

    Like Rambo, Fayose, who once rescued the wife of a PDP chieftain in similar circumstance, stormed the hotel and personally led the Omega Fire Pastor to the safety of the Government House.

    Coincidentally, in Ekiti, a stern law was already in place seeking to regulate herders’ conduct. Just as there remains a standing rule from Fayose himself expressly empowering Ekiti hunters to “kill any armed herdsmen before they kill you or rape your wives.” To an extent, Suleiman’s threat, even if restated in Ekiti, could, therefore, be situated in the context of an exercise in self-defense against possible physical attack by the murder gang masquerading as herders.

    In the circumstance, we can only appeal to those with powerful voices like Suleiman to refrain from incitement to violence, out of a shared sense of civic responsibility. But that hardly absolves DSS’ glaring partisanship. Or this tendency to flex big muscles only against those who already could be described as the victims.

    At this writing, DSS was yet to explain if the cleric had spurned any invitation for a “chat”. But everyone knows Suleiman’s address in Auchi, Edo State where the “inflammatory” statement was reportedly made. Why this new obsession with waylaying targets at night? Couldn’t the arrest wait till the morning? Couldn’t it, in fact, be deferred till Suleiman returned to his Auchi base? Again, how come we hardly see this sort of “rapid response”, this razor-sharp efficiency, this fanaticism for law and order on the part of DSS elsewhere when armed herders are on their own rampage?

    Instead, the killer herdsmen thereafter get appeased with cash payments to “forgive” their victims. Big puzzle indeed. Grass-cutter: From the dawn of time, this species of rabbit has undoubtedly been the mouthwatering delight of bush-meat connoisseurs and patrons of pepper-soup joints by the street-corner. It is the wild rat, a mammoth rabbit, the jumbo-size of the regular domestic mouse house-keepers are familiar with.

    Perhaps more in recognition of its pre-eminence in the rabbit family than the ferocity of its canine on the grass, everyone got used to addressing this creature exclusively as “grass-cutter”. But not after a little scandal exploded around the clearing of grass around some IDP camps in Borno and elsewhere in the North-east in which no less a political heavyweight than the Secretary to the Federal Government, the avuncular Lawal Babachir, is gravely implicated. According to the findings of the Shehu Sani-led Committee on Mounting Humanitarian Crisis in the North-East region, Babachir allegedly helped himself to a chunk of the money paid to the firm in which he had a substantial stake before his current appointment and, worse still, is accused of being the sole signatory to its bank account until recently.

    Suddenly, political adversaries and other mischief- makers have begun to see grass-cutter in a different light. So, the mere mention of grass-cutter anywhere in Aso Rock or Abuja today is now interpreted as a coded reference to the award of any murky contract. Well, the good news is that Babachir, I am reliably informed, is hardly fazed by such side-talk, much less the outrageously malicious whisper of the uncharitable who go a step further by insisting they see some semblance between his sparse mustache and the whisker of that hunter’s favorite in the bush.

    Accidental bombing: Over the years, hapless Nigerians have learnt to reconcile themselves to the reality of “accidental discharge” whenever a policeman extrajudicially shoots anyone dead. The standard official response is that “It’s a case of accidental discharge”, a euphemism that the weapon mistakenly fired. But when a whole fighter jet of the Nigerian Air Force chose to rain, not Manna, but bombs on a camp sheltering citizens displaced by the Boko Haram insurgency – like we witnessed at Rann in Borno State a fortnight ago, the language understandably changes to reflect the magnitude, the gravity of the catastrophe.

    Acting on what turned out a false tip-off from an unnamed western power that absconding Boko Haram fighters had found a new sanctuary, the pilot supposedly on routine aerial patrol sadly ended up hitting the IDP camps not once, not twice, but – Lord – thrice! Worse still, whereas officialdom tried to downplay the casualty figures by admitting between 50 and 57, independent sources including international relief bodies quoted figures in excess of 200. Now, it does seem whereas police’s “accidental discharge” refers to killing of the innocent on retail basis, “accidental bombing” describes killing of the defenseless and the traumatized on industrial scale.

    God save us! Jammeh: If mortal fear had gripped many quarters – both high and low – at the height of the recent political face-off in The Gambia, the reason was undoubtedly partly a reading of the name of her now disgraced dictator. The word “jam” surely conjures less-than-pleasant imageries. In street parlance, “to jam” means “to hit” something. To “jam wahala” connotes serious kerfuffle. Any motorist in urban centre will, for instance, attest “traffic jam” is no pleasant experience. So, when a power-drunk dictator began to beat war-drums frantically and his name is derived from stressing “jam” to become “Jammeh”, the trepidation in the hearts of ordinary mortals could then only be imagined.

    But history teaches us that most bullies and braggarts are in reality cowards seeking to hide their dark inadequacies in some coarse facade. Yahya Jammeh turned out not to be exception. As they say, those who made a career from beheading others will hardly continue to sit easy at the sight of a sword-wielding stranger. Surrounded by ECOWAS’ far superior weapon of mass destruction, the brutal Jammeh, who had ruled the tiny West African country with an iron fist for 22 years, finally surrendered last Saturday.

    But not until huge cost had been incurred by Nigeria and others in mobilizing thousands of battle-ready troops and dozens of fighter jets to Gambia’s shores. Dramatically, not a single bullet was fired before the emperor finally fell. So, the word “Jammeh” is now generally accepted as synonym for empty boast or needless clowning.

    To play a Jammeh is to squander the altar of glory and instead offer oneself for international ignominy. (Meanwhile, whereas there are conflicting accounts on the actual number of luxury super cars taken and the quantity of cash looted in his last two weeks in power, a lie has been put to the claim that a cargo of $11m was physically hurled into the private jet that ferried Jammeh from Banjul that Saturday night to an uncertain fate. Out of rare magnanimity, Nigeria’s Asiwaju Bola Tinubu had allowed his jet to be used to finally break the 48- hour stand-off.) FRC code: Movie aficionados will certainly recall the American epic entitled “Da Vinci Code”.

    The 2006 thriller explores ancient Christian mythology which the Roman Catholic establishment found too outlandish, if not blasphemous outright. In the circumstance, the more controversial a work of art is, the higher its chances of commercial success. Little wonder then that it netted a whopping $224 million worldwide in its first weekend of premier and proceeded to gross a hefty $758 by the turn of 2006.

    Eleven years later, a milder variant of Da Vinci Code would seem to assail the Christian community in Nigeria and bears a more cryptic acronym, the FRC Code. In principle, the Federal Reporting Council code expressly seeks to compel heads of not-for-profit bodies, including religious organizations, to be more transparent in the rendition of their financial records.

    But portions considered “intrusive” and “offensive” by the leaders of the Pentecostal sector of the Christian community include those that prescribe term and age limits for their General Overseers. With the charismatic G.O of the most populous RCCG, Pastor Enoch Adeboye, dramatically tendering his resignation, thereby volunteering himself as the “martyr” of the protest against the FRC code, sectarian tempers naturally flared up across the country.

    Jim Obaze, the rambunctious executive secretary of FRC, was the next casualty as he was booted out unceremoniously by President Buhari, with the enforcement of the code suspended entirely. Soon, a new twist entered the narrative when the vocal Pastor Tunde Bakare, head of the Latter Rain Assembly and by no means an influential voice in the Pentecostal community, weighed in forcefully in defense of the FRC code, sensationally squealing that those preaching against it were actually money-launderers scared of the law and afraid of losing access to easy money.

    Ever since, funereal silence has descended on the entire FRC business. The last time the issue popped up among some top players in the Pentecostal district in Lagos, one account quoted a prominent Pastor as reducing every thing to a joke by likening the FRC Code to an attempt to tamper with his own “stomach infrastructure”. It was needless seeking any confirmation, to avoid further trouble.

    Alternative facts: Anyone still doubting the power in a name should consider the example of Sean Spicer, the chief spokesman of the newly inaugurated President Donald Trump of the United States. Still wallowing in the triumphalism that has defined the Trump camp generally since their shock victory in the November 8 polls, Spicer was all fire in his maiden press conference at the White House last Saturday. However, what became news after that outing was not his hauteur nor the fact that he chose not to answer questions to his rather tempestuous briefing in what seemed a continuation of Trump’s self-declared “running war” with the media.

    Fresh dust was raised by his rather sensational claim that the crowd that witnessed his boss’ inauguration on January 20 was “the largest in history”. Ah! But trust CNN not to take the line, hook and sinker in the circumstance.

    The sheer ugliness of that fat lie was soon exposed when the popular global TV channel flashed an over-view of the audience at the epochal Washington event. With the many empty patches in the broad canvass, it was crystal clear Trump and Spicer had, as usual, sexed things up.

    Trust CNN still, another of Trump’s spin doctors, Ms. Kellyanne Conway, was soon cornered shortly afterwards on the same issue. In a moment of costly verbal indiscretion (mental exhaustion?) on a live programme, she cautioned the CNN corespondent not to “over-dramatize” Spicer’s comment, defending that her colleague was simply “giving the alternative fact”.

    Like shark smelling blood, CNN thereafter made a sing-song of “alternative fact” for the rest of the day. Forty-eight hours later, it was an evidently subdued Spicer who showed up at another world press conference with a new spin. Clearing his throat, he clarified that his theory of “the biggest audience” actually referred to those physically “present and watching across the world”. Ah! Well, perhaps the joke is actually on the rest of us.

    From the mere intimation of his name, it would completely be out of character if Spicer did not “spice” things from the outset. Many thanks to Conway, “alternative fact” should henceforth serve as further annotation to “post truth” – a new word added to English lexicon in 2016. Roughly put, post-truth refers to circumstances when the reality does not correlate with the objective facts.

  • Ex Rep. member accuses divorce-seeking wife of sleeping with Pastor

    Mr Leonard Dilcon, a former member of the House of Representatives, has accused his divorce-seeking wife, Joy, of sleeping with her Pastor, and blamed him for the crisis in his marriage.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Dilcon made the accusation while defending himself in a divorce suit filed by his wife at a High Court in Jos.

    Joy had asked for a dissolution of the 20-year-old marriage in a case she filed on Sept. 14, 2014, and also requested the court to grant her custody of their three children.

    The defendant, in his submission, accused the wife of neglecting the marriage and further accused her of having extra marital affairs with Pastor Danjuma Fwenji of God’s Grace Divine Mission, Jos.

    He accused his wife and the said Pastor of committing sexual immorality at her parents’ home and the Church.

    “Each time I try to resolve our differences with my wife, the Pastor will appear and confuse everything,” Dilcon, who represented Pankshin/Kanam/Kanke Federal Constituency at the National Assembly, alleged.

    But Fwenji, who appeared before the court on Friday, denied ever having sex with the petitioner.

    He told the court that he only met the petitioner in 2006, when she was brought to his ministry for prayers and counselling.

    The Pastor said that he and other elders of the Church prayed for the woman after listening to her.

    Under cross examination by the defendant’s counsel, Mr Francis Okafor, Fwenji said that he could not recall seeing the petitioner again, owing to the large number of people that worship in the Church.

    The Pastor said he did not know the woman’s residence and had never had any private affair with her.

    He also denied the allegations that he was responsible for the crisis in the petitioner’s marriage and rejected the allegation that he was instrumental to her desire for divorce.

    Fwenji also told the court that the Church had asked Joy to stop attending its programmes due to the crises in her marriage, to which she complied.

    “Ever since she stopped attending the Church’s Programmes, I have not seen her again,” he said.

    Okafor then pleaded with the court to adjourn the matter to enable both parties to file and adopt their written addresses.

    Justice David Mann, who granted the request, adjourned the matter to Feb. 20. (NAN)
    ADY/ETS/NKO

  • “How I dumped flamboyant life to become pastor”

    “How I dumped flamboyant life to become pastor”

    General Overseer of Christ Apostolic Mission Church (CAMC), Pastor Adesoji Ajayi, was a business tycoon and socialite. He spoke about his life then and now with Sunday Oguntola 

    Can you relate events leading to your emergence as general overseer of the church?

    The founder of Christ Apostolic Mission Church (CAMC) is Apostle John Ajayi Agbona. The ministry belongs to God. It was founded in December 1952 and it has grown in leaps and bounds. We have parishes all over the world.

    Towards his demise, the Holy Spirit directed him to choose me as his successor so I succeeded him in year 2000. The Holy Spirit directed all pastors to gather here apparently to vote but when they got there they couldn’t vote; the Holy Spirit did the job himself.

    He commanded our father in the Lord to choose his successor without casting any vote. I was picked by the Holy Spirit. Before then I was Chairman/MD of businesses when the Lord spoke that I should be the president of the mission. There was nothing I could do than to hands off earthly things I was doing.

    Did you fold the company up?

    No. I didn’t fold them up, they are still surviving to the glory of God. They are still there. Outside the work there is nothing I did outside the vineyard of God than to take care of God’s vineyard and the work has grown in leaps and bounds.

    We are not the people working; we are just assisting the owner, who is Christ to work and we can’t do anything outside his directive and to his glory we have not done anything outside his directive and what is his directive?

    It is to spread the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ and what is the good news? It is the gospel of Christ and what is the gospel of Christ? It is telling people about the new order. Tell people about the new order, the new covenant and what do they stand for?

    They stand for God who allowed His son to come to planet earth to die for our sins, that’s the main essence and a lot of people are still ignorant of these clarion call. It is our responsibility to preach the gospel.

    A lot of people still worship these idols and it is our responsibility to make people know they don’t need to sacrifice anything again; the last sacrifice has been made by Christ and to the glory of God the mission has been growing numerically, financially and in every realm to the glory of God.

    How easy was the transition from the corporate world to the ministry?

    I won’t say it’s been tough because we are operating under His guidance. It is when you want to think on your own, you want to do things outside His directive that things become difficult.

    I told my people in the morning while we were having the morning devotion, don’t you ever do anything on your own without asking for directive from God.

    The only battle King David lost was the one he failed to tell God. He felt he could do it without God and he lost the battle. If you want to win all your battles leave them in the hands of God. The reason this nation is having problems is that we feel we can do it on our own.

    I told them some two years ago that we should do what Israel does. They call it Yom Kippur. Nigeria fails to do it and that is why we are still in this quagmire. We pray it shouldn’t last long. The right person is there but the people that surround him are the problems.

    In 16 years of being on the pulpit, how would you define ministerial success?

    As a man of God, it is the progress the mission has been able to make through the help and assistance of the Holy Spirit, not making an effort to help the Holy Spirit. Not in terms of material things.

    Are they really growing spiritually? These days, a lot of pastors lay emphasis on finance. I also teach them on finance. Some pastors travel to Europe and America and what have you and they would think that is success.

    It is our parishes in Europe that would ask me to come. Since I became the president, I think I have travelled three times.

    Why?

     I believe I should take care of the flock here. I don’t believe in an ostentatious lifestyle.

    But you were a business man, you should be used to all of these

    I used to be. I rose to the level of owning houses and riding Rolls Royce and what have you but that was in the past. Now I am contented. If I still stay with all those things of the world, then my followers would follow suit.

    But I teach them about contentment, I teach them how not to run after things of the world. I teach them about the virtues of the word of God and the reason is that I have seen it all. I have done it all. So there is nothing in it. Let them know.

    There is nothing to die for. I used to dine and wine with governors, deputy governors in the past but I am satisfied with a reclusive life; an obscure life. A lot of my friends don’t even believe it that I could live a regimented life.

    I don’t go to parties. I don’t do anything flamboyant anymore except when I go out to preach. So what am I going to see in the UK or in Europe generally?

    Is it the city of fashion, which is Milan? I used to wear the best; virtually all the fashion houses knew me. If I go to Ikeja, Allen they all know me. I used to patronise them then. But now it doesn’t mean anything to me anymore.

    Have you heard people say why won’t he teach contentment after seeing it all?

    What I teach them is contentment. I let them know that there is nothing in the world. So the best teacher is the man that teaches by experience. When I teach people now I smile, I tell people I am in the best position to let people know.

    They are people who came to me saying, ‘daddy, you were once among the socialites.’ I tell them it doesn’t mean anything to me. I’m not saying you should not enjoy your life but do it within your available resources, not flamboyantly.

    All the denominations that profess Christ are all good. I’m not saying everyone should join this church. Whatever denomination you belong to, be it Anglican, CAC, Baptist, etc, I will never plunder any church for my denomination or ask anyone to leave for my denomination.

    People would say that is why the denomination is not big

    I don’t want it to be bigger than this. Let it be as it is and get to heaven. How many did Christ gather? It is not about the size that matters, it is the quality. There is this animal they call the lion, it does not enjoy 10% of what the domestic cat enjoys.

    It is only big for nothing. The cat would eat roasted food. It would live with you in the house. Go and see how lions live in the wild inside rains, inside the holes. It would struggle sometimes for days without food and have nothing, yet the cats and the dogs at home eat well.

    There was a time the plate they used to give my dog its food was not washed. They gave it food in it by mistake, it refused to eat. That is just it. It is not the size that matters but the quality.

    But some people would say in 16 years and with your background, your experience, influence, the church ought to have exploded

    I want you to see where that objective of the growth some people are talking about is to make money. I know the tricks they play. My heart would convict me if I do any of it.

    Evangelism is less than 10 percent of earthly prosperity. The number one perquisite of any pastor is how to lead his people to heaven and the hallmark of evangelism is not a flamboyant life. Living flamboyantly is not evangelism to me.

    Some pastors would take you on because everyone wants to have private jet

    Go and look at the embarrassment those who own private jets are facing and those who bought them for these people. I won’t go beyond that.

    It is better for you to get condemned by man than to get condemned by God. I would expire someday like my fathers in the Lord. What would I say when I get to heaven? Those are the things we should consider and the earth is not the end of our lives.

    I became a multi-millionaire in 1983. God has been helping me ever since then. I have been wearing Oxford Street London suits since 1976 at the age of 26.

    Owners of the fashion homes in Lagos used to be my friends, so nothing exists. The best car is the Rolls Royce followed by Bentley then and Jaguar. I have seven of them.

    I’m here now; I still have four S-class cars. If you are rich and you don’t have those things how do you express your riches? You are not rich. To me when I started here what I met here was a small car. I didn’t buy car until the mission had the money. Or where would the mission have money to maintain a Rolls Royce? I am contented.

    If you see where I live now, it is nothing; you can’t live there. I was using water bed at the age of 28 in 1978 before I got married. I had five cars before I wedded and I had a very small wedding. I don’t bother.

    How were you able to convince your family to buy into this your obscure lifestyle?

    I initially had a lot of problems. My wife didn’t understand me initially.  But I love my Christ more than anyone else, not even my children. For months I may not even see any of them. My life now is in Christ, Christ is my life.

    If you are in Christ nothing is more important again. All the records I listen to have shaped my life a great deal. If you have money you want to have more. If you are a boss you want to continue being a boss.

  • Pastor remanded for alleged rape

    For allegedly defiling a five-year-old girl, a pastor, Gabriel Asateru, was yesterday remanded in prison custody by an Ado-Ekiti Magistrates’ Court.

    Police prosecutor Insp. Bayo Ajiboye told the court Asateru, 53, committed the offence on December 23 at Ifisin-Ekiti in Ido/Osi Local Government.

    Ajiboye said the accused, on that date, unlawfully defiled a five-year-old girl by petting her to sit on his lap.

    According to him, the offence contravened Section 31 of the Child Right Laws of Ekiti State.

    The prosecutor added that he had sent the case file to the Office of the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) for legal advice.

    The plea of the accused was not taken as his counsel, Tunde Olayemi, sought a date of adjournment, pending the outcome from DPP.

    The Magistrate, Mrs. Modupe Afeniforo, who frowned at incessant  rape cases in the state,  ordered the accused remanded in prison custody.

    She adjourned till February 15 for further hearing.

     

  • Pastor remanded in prison for impregnating teenager

    An Abeokuta Chief Magistrates’ Court on Wednesday ordered the remand of a 48-year-old pastor, Micheal Adeniran, in prison custody for allegedly impregnating a teenager.

    The magistrate, Mrs Oriyomi Sofowora, ordered that the accused be remanded for the facts of the case to be stated.

    She then adjourned the case till Nov.30.

    The accused, whose address is unknown, is facing a charge of sexual abuse.

    The prosecutor, Insp. Kayode Emnmanuel, told the court that the accused committed the offence in June at El- Bethel Church, Ita Aka, in Abeokuta, Ogun.

    Emmanuel said that the accused, a pastor at El- Bethel Church, sexually abused a 17-year-old girl, which resulted into pregnancy.

    The prosecutor said that the pastor failed to take responsibility of the teenager in the last six months of his impregnating her.

    The prosecutor said that the offence contravened Section 32 of the Child Rights Law of Ogun, 2006.

    The accused, however, pleaded not guilty.

  • Pastor, four others kidnapped in Ekiti

    Pastor, four others kidnapped in Ekiti

    •Police: we’ve rescued two victims

    There was panic in Ekiti State yesterday when suspected kidnappers abducted five persons including a pastor along a major road in Ise Ekiti, headquarters of Ise/Orun Local Government Area.

    The latest incident occurred barely two days after the Administrative Secretary of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in the state, Dr. Muslim Omoleke was kidnapped in Iwaraja community in neighbouring Osun State along with his driver and child.

    Omoleke, who was abducted on Thursday, was released later on Friday.

    The driver and the child had earlier been released same day they were seized but the INEC chief spent another 24 hours in the den of kidnappers.

    Sources informed yesterday that the pastor whose name was given as Ojo, his driver, Jimoh and three other persons inside the same vehicle were seized at a location on the outskirts of Ise.

    Family sources said the whereabouts of the victims remained unknown at the time of filing this report.

    Their abductors had not established contact with the family to demand any ransom.

    Police spokesman Alberto Adeyemi confirmed the incident in a telephone chat.

    He stated that two of the victims had been recovered while three others are still in the kidnappers’ den.

    Adeyemi said the police are still on the trail of the hoodlums to ensure that they are rescued alive and returned to their families.

    He called on residents to always volunteer information to the police to assist in fishing out criminals and ensure safety of the law-abiding citizens.

    Adeyemi said the men of the state command are closing in on perpetrators of an attack on Ido Ekiti Police station on October 14 during which an inspector on duty was murdered in cold blood.

    The gunmen, numbering about 40, had attacked the police station at about 7.30pm with explosive devices and headed straight to the armoury where arms and ammunition were reported to have been carted away.

    Adeyemi said investigations have reached advanced stage with enough clues as to the whereabouts of the criminal gang already gathered.

    He said: “This is a very unfortunate incident. But we are pleased with the level of investigations that have been conducted by our officers.

    “We are getting enough clues and I can reliably inform you that we are closing in on them.

    “I want to say that very soon these criminals will be arrested and made to face the full wrath of the law.”

  • Pastor gets N10m bail for ‘N58m fraud’

    Pastor gets N10m bail for ‘N58m fraud’

    The Federal High Court in Lagos yesterday granted a pastor, Chris Anyalebechi, N10 million bail following his re-arraignment for an alleged N58 million fraud.

    The Police Special Fraud Unit (SFU) brought Anyalebechi before Justice Mohammed Idris on a two-count charge of conspiracy and obtaining money under false pretence.

    Anyalebechi, the General Overseer of Christ Glory International Gospel Centre, Ikorodu, Lagos, was remanded on September 5, following his arraignment before Justice Babs Kuewumi for the same offences.

    At the resumed hearing of the matter yesterday, the police said, Anyalebechi, between April 2014 and March last year, conspired with others now at large to obtain the N58 million from Nestor Nwankwo of Zicozeen Nigeria Limited.

    The cleric allegedly promised to buy a used ship for the company and sell it in parts or scraps on its behalf.

    The charge, marked FHC/L/367C/2016, reads: “That you, Pastor Chris Anyalebechi, General Overseer, Christ Glory International Gospel Center, Ikorodu, Lagos, sometimes between April 2014 and March 2015, in Lagos, within the jurisdiction of the Federal High Court, by false pretence and with intent to defraud, obtained the sum of N85 million from a company known as Nestor Nwankwo of Zicozeen Nigeria Limited, by telling the company that you will purchase for the company a used ship or vessel and sell same in parts or scraps on behalf of the company, a representation you knew to be false.”

    The cleric pleaded not guilty.

    Justice Idris adjourned till November 28.

  • Demolished shrine: Ogun Pastor recounts experience

    Demolished shrine: Ogun Pastor recounts experience

     A Pastor, Prince Adewale Fagbire,  who was alleged to have been struck dumb and motionless when he invaded his community shrine at Ketu – Ayetoro in Yewa North Local Government Area of Ogun state while pulling it down, has told The Nation that though the town’s traditionalists assaulted him with “charms and other fetish objects,” but was not “harmed” at all.
    Fagbire, who is a Pastor at the Christ Apostolic Church (CAC) in Ayetoro area, said he actually entered the shrine, evacuated all the fetish items that were kept there and also took a position beside the entrance to it in quietness as instructed by God.
    Prince Fagbire, son of the past Alaye of Ayetoro, Oba Taiwo Fagbire, who joined his ancestors in 1981 after his 20year reign in the agrarian community, said his late father and monarch, used to take him to the said shrine occasionally when he was alive.
    Narrating his experience to The Nation and a handful of reporters, at the Office of the  Chairman, Ogun State chapter of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Bishop Tunde Akin – Akinsanya, Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, Fagbire said he elected to “remain calm and mute” during the assault and interrogation at the shrine by the traditionalists and some villagers.
    Speaking in the presence of over a dozen of Christian leaders from CAN and Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria (PFN) in Ogun State, said God instructed him to stay calm and not utter a word at the shrine.
    The father of two noted that his not talking or not uttering a word on the site of the shrine had nothing to with his being beaten with “charms and fetish objects” by the traditionalists as what they did had no physical or spiritual effects on him.
    According to him, it was also not true as reported in some section of the media that the priests and custodians of the shrine upon the intervention of the Alaye of Ayetoro, Oba Abdulaziz Adelakun,  treated or healed him before he  could regain his consciousness.
    “I was conscious, physically and mentally sound, during and after the incident because God was already with me. I followed the instruction of the LORD to enter the shrine and packed all the items there away. I followed God’s instruction to be quiet aa instructed by God.
    “God told me to go there (the shrine), create a scene, step aside and watch the film (the unfolding events). They struck me with charms and nothing happened to me. They know the truth, nobody treated me and I spoke when I got to the Palace of the Oba,” he said.
    Our Correspondence gathered that although the traditionalists demanded N300,000 from a church in the community where Fagbire had once preached and also N200,000 from the pastor’s family to perform sacrifices to appease the gods for his alleged sacrilege but nothing was given to them eventually.
    The church in the community incurred the wrath of the traditionalists and was attacked following the allegation that it instigated Prince Fagbire to carry out the alleged sacrilege on the shrine.
  • Pastor arrested for child abduction, trafficking

    Pastor arrested for child abduction, trafficking

    I only help people, says suspect

    THE Delta Police Command has arrested a syndicate which specialises in child kidnapping and trafficking in persons.

    The alleged leader of the gang, Chinedu Strongson, is a popular tele-evangelist based in Anambra State.

    Pastor Strongson, 48, the founder of Gospel Fire Army, Nwkele-Ogidi, Anambra State, was arrested alongside four others.

    As ringleader, Pastor Strongson allegedly pays N400, 000 for each child sold to him, the police said.

    The state’s Police Commissioner, Zanna Ibrahim, who briefed reporters in Asaba, the state capital, said that two members of the syndicate were apprehended following a complaint by one Aisha Yahaya of Umuezei Quarters about a kidnapped one-month-old baby girl.

    Ibrahim said that the two suspects, Chidinma Anikwesiri, 20, and Nnoruka Obioma, 21, were arrested while attempting to escape. Said the police boss: “One Aisha Yahaya ‘f’ of Umuezei Quarters, Asaba, reported at the ‘B’ Division that two ladies identified as Nnoruka Obioma and Chidinma Anikwesiri introduced themselves as members of State Anti-Robbery Squad(SARS) and told her that her husband sent them from Ogwashi-Uku prison.

    “The complainant further disclosed that she followed them to a junction where they met Abigail Nwakama aka Madam Cash who gave her N3, 500.00 to alleviate her poverty and asked her to buy clothes for her baby Fatima Yahaya aged one year and one month. In the process, the said baby was stolen by the syndicate.”

    He added that the baby was recovered from Onyinye Nwakama, the 11-year-old daughter of Abigail Nwakama, at a drinking bar in Asaba. Abigail Nwakama aka Madam Cash and another suspect were arrested at Okpanam, Oshimili North Local Government Area.

    He said that the suspects led detectives to Nkwele Ogidi where 12 children were recovered from Pastor Strongson. Two of the recovered children have been handed over to their parents while the remaining ten children within the age brackets of six months to two years are being kept at an orphanage.

    Strongson denied heading a child kidnapping and trafficking syndicate. He said: “I help people. So people bring people for me to help. I announce it on Odenigbo programme on 99.4 FM station that I am willing to help anyone pay school fees. There is an allegation that I am involved in child trafficking. I give people money generally.

    “Nobody brought any person; the police only recovered two children who were brought for help. People bring children for me to help to pay their school fees. People come to me for spiritual help.”

    On the source of the enormous wealth with which he helps people, Strongson explained that he runs five businesses ranging from land prospecting to restaurateur and football proprietor.