Nigerian Prophet T.B.
Joshua has opened up as to why his church does not have foreign branches
despite his popularity abroad.
The cleric, who spoke on Sunday 24th
August 2014 at The Synagogue, Church Of All Nations (SCOAN), stressed on the
need for God’s character to be fully established before ministerial expansion.
“I would have loved to
have branches all over the world because people want T.B. Joshua everywhere,” he told the congregation. “But
it is not yet time because it will be too much for my character. When the load
is too heavy for you, it will become a burden.”
He further added that he was not moved by pleas
from people but rather relied on God’s instruction. “Not where they want me but where God wants me,” he emphasised,
adding that he was not in a haste or hurry and would not jump ahead of God’s
timing.
“If you run before God,
you cannot run after God,” he continued, explaining
that this had been the bane of many businessmen and pastors as their desire to
expand superseded their level of character.
His views stand in stark contrast to the popular
notion that the amount of branches a church has is indicative of its level of
success.
“In a situation where
you become so great without God’s character, it means the end is going to be
bad,” Joshua went on further to explain, reminding
congregants of Jesus’ words in John 14:27 that the world too could provide
wealth and fame although with conditions attached.
“When you see someone
who is great without God’s character, don’t admire him – pray for him because
the beginner is not the owner but the finisher... The beginning and middle are
off-record; the end is what will put the record straight.”
The cleric stated that it was even better not to
have fame and popularity than to achieve what would eventually end in calamity.
“Character is the one
that carries whatever we become. If your wealth is bigger than your character,
that wealth will be spending you, not you spending it.”
Joshua stated that one of the secrets of his
ministerial success was not being driven by money, explaining that some
worshippers were still under canopies in his church not because he lacked the
financial capacity to expand but because he was waiting on God.
“There is money to build
but money cannot dictate for me. We could expand this place (The SCOAN) and
build the biggest church in the world but I allow the Source of money to tell
me what to do, not the money itself.
Joshua also bemoaned the way people complained
about their problems as if they bore no responsibility for them, adding that
their challenges were not a consequence of God leaving them but rather their
choice to live contrary to His ways.
“God does
not want you to suffer but you want to suffer,” he soberly stated. “God is always with you but you are not
with Him.”
Joshua, who has been the center of several
controversies especially within the fold of Nigerian Christendom, added that if
not for his persecutors, he would have remained a street-preacher.
According to him, detractors motivated God to
bestow more favour and mercy upon his ministry, adding that no billboard can be
found advertising The SCOAN yet visitors flock from around the world
“If God has called you,
the more they block your way, the more that trouble and temptation, the more
God’s love is provoked… Each attempt to stop you asks for more evidence from
God.”
The cleric concluded with some profound advice for
Christians, calling on them to change their style of prayer. According to
Joshua, prayers for blessing, healing and protection were redundant as God is
fully aware of the challenges of His children and does not require reminding.
“You need to block the
avenue satan is using to afflict you – your weaknesses,” Joshua counseled. “Your prayer
should be against weaknesses.”
He further clarified that prayer alone was not
enough, stating that genuine desire to desist from bad habits and weaknesses
was also essential.
“Live the life of your
prayer,” he told the congregation, citing an example that
praying for God to help you stop smoking and then picking up a cigarette
immediately was akin to hypocrisy. “God
always leaves us to play our role before He comes to our rescue,” he
concluded.
Ihechukwu Njoku -
freelance journalist currently in Lagos, Nigeria
Tags
Society