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Pastor Chris Oyakhilome teaches a whole lot of nonsense. He keeps adding random things to God’s word, and I truly pity those who sit under him thinking they are learning about the kingdom of God.
Take for instance his claim that Christians can evade death by faith because Jesus has already defeated death. That statement alone is proof of how deluded he is. I will not even get into the many erroneous and in some cases outrightly demonic twists he has made on prosperity. Let’s stay with this one.
Why is his teaching on death absurd?
The resurrection of Jesus is not about granting Christians superpowers to cheat mortality on this earth. It is about guaranteeing that when we die, He will raise all who belong to Him into eternal life.
Scripture also consistently speaks of human life as fragile and finite. James describes our lives as mist, here for a moment and gone the next. Hebrews declares that “it is appointed for man to die once, and after that comes judgment.” Death is therefore expected for all mortal men.
The only exception to this is at the return of Christ, when those alive at His coming will be caught up with Him without tasting death. Apart from that, death is definitive.
Anyone teaching otherwise, that faith can somehow bypass something God has clearly appointed, is gravely misguided and has no business instructing people on the Christian faith.
The "WHITE supremacist" that, from far across the Great Pond, so loves humanity and cares about the lives of BLACK African Christians in Nigeria, is a "white supremacist" I love.
...even more than a black Nigerian neighbour with loud silence over the genocide.
Rest in the LORD, @charliekirk11 ❤️
Charlie Kirk knows he was going to die, he might not have known exactly how, but you can’t be Charlie and not expect to be killed one day by the very people who don’t share in your convictions. History has shown that men like Kirk hardly die a natural death; either murdered by assassination, poison, unfounded accidents, sudden disappearance, gunned down just like Charlie or through many other means of silencing. The people that killed Charlie and many others in history killed him for his ideologies and convictions.
I deeply mourn his death with hope of the mass revolution his death will spark all of the world especially the revival in the Christian faith.
Charlie Kirk died for something worthwhile. Something he believed and something he was sold out for. Be it Jesus Christ, racism or his personal ideologies and political radicalism. The most important thing is that he died for something significant. Am I justifying his death? Hell no, but even him asked days ago would tell you he sees death daily knocking on his door.
90% of revolutionists, idealists, reformers, pace setters, rebels, transformative preachers, unconventional nationalists, the list goes on, often always die in similar way Kirk died.
If you dream of becoming one, changing the status quo, creating unconventional path, you would have to make peace with such kind of death before embracing such conviction.
It takes boldness to speak about things the masses won’t agree with.
Even more boldness to speak out the secret of the powerful.
Unflinching audacity to speak out personal conviction
So when you see people like myself do it, it’s not that we are immune to death, not that we are not aware we might be building up hatred from people who don’t agree with us or people who might be out of business, power, influence or limelight because of the truth we speak, but the gist is, if we don’t advocate for what we believe, our convictions and certain hidden truth from the masses, we are better of not born into this world. Some people have sold out their souls for their beliefs and ideologies and they’re not afraid to die upholding them.
If you’re the next Kirk, Martin Luther King, John F Kennedy, Abraham Lincoln, Rosa luxemburg, George W Lee, Malcolm X, even down to the recent planned assassination of the prominent bank CEO (I'm sure you know him) for closing the doors of Europe and US using Nigerian politicians to grow their economy through the stolen funds politicians move to their Nation as well as the helping to raise funds for the completion of the first corporate owned refinery in Nigeria, amidst certain secrets I can't mention online.
Not to talk of men like Myles Munroe who was assassinated via plane crash.
Have you forgotten Pan-Africanists like Muammar Gaddafi, Patrice Lumumba, Thomas Sankara, and others even in Nigeria like Zik of Africa and the rest of the founding fathers of Nigeria, all planned assassination in the bid for power & control.
In a nutshell, If you've a voice and convictions, keep speaking it, don't turn off the light but also know there exist consequences for speaking out. While you live, make the most of your time, yes everyone will die one day but all deaths are not the same.
That's how legacy is built, that's how a generation is transformed, that's how the Nepal protest started, that's how the founding fathers of Nigeria obtained independence, although, for lack of knowledge, it was hijacked, that's how the corporate corruption in Nigerian & politics can be takled.
The gist is, both earth and heaven repulse cowards, don't live in avoidance, silence, servitude and subservience and die a nobody with nothing to be remembered for.
Everyone mustn't be transformative at national or global level but anyone can make a mark even in family level.
APOSTLE AROME'S MESSAGES ON PROSPERITY IS THE MOST BALANCED MESSAGE ON PROSPERITY THAT I HAVE EVER COME ACROSS.
MAN HAS MET JESUS INDEED.
#pfn#arome#prosperity
If you successfully pastor people who love Jesus in a way that reflects as hatred for sin and consistent demonstration of the character of Christ, you have raised a mighty army in God's hands and your reward is sure.
Demons believe in God too. There's a difference.
“If you love Me, you will keep My commandments. - John 14:15
"If you keep My commandments, you will abide in My love; just as I have kept My Father’s commandments and abide in His love." - John 15:10
““Not everyone who says to Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father in heaven.” - Matthew 7:21
The notion that in this kingdom we do not pay prices may be right and also may be wrong depending on the context.
There is a sense in which all the gifts and graces a man carries are freely given to him by the benevolence and magnanimity of God but there is a sense in which a man 'qualifies' to be honoured by God to represent him as holy before the people of God.
As philanthropic as God is, he does not set a stone that is not tried. There are always conditions that a man who will receive the grace of God will meet and this is not because anyone who meets these conditions will receive the gift. It is actually because you would have to meet these conditions because God has chosen you.
When the mother of Jacob(James) and John came to Jesus and appealed that her children be given seats of relevance in the kingdom of Jesus, Jesus asked them if they are able to drink the cup he is drinking or be baptized in his baptism. This implies a 'price' in a manner of speaking for if you are unable to drink of my cup you indeed are not worthy of the honour of my kingdom.
The boys answered in the affirmative then Jesus said something more profound; something that should puzzle you just in case you think it is all about the price you pay. He said to them you will indeed drink of my cup and be baptized with the baptism I am baptized with but doing these alone does not guarantee the honour you are requesting for because there is something greater than the price you will pay; it is divine predestination.
So the condition to have what you are requesting is divine predestination but not that only, the person who has been so predestined would also have to pay the price.
When Joshua the High priest stood before the Angel of the Lord, the Lord gave him some conditions he must meet before he could come into his spiritual inheritance as the priest of God. Is it not ironical that Joshua was recognized as a priest here but not there where it matters the most?
Paul communicates this concept and lays out both sides of the principle in just one verse: 1 Corinthians 15:10 "But by the grace of God I am what I am: and his grace which was bestowed upon me was not in vain; but I laboured more abundantly than they all: yet not I, but the grace of God which was with me."
Does Paul mean that there is a way that the bestowed grace of God upon a person can be in vain? Well yes. The responsibility is then on the one who has been bestowed to do the labour still by the grace of God.
Luke 19 tells of Zacchaeus who sought to seek Jesus for who he was and ran ahead onto the sycamore tree so that he could see him. At the climax of that story we see that it was Jesus who actually saw Zacchaeus and that made all the difference yet it was Zacchaeus who had to run ahead to the sycamore tree.
Young man, like Zacchaeus, you will run ahead in prayer, you will run ahead in the study of the word, you will run ahead in fasting, you will labour.
Young woman, there must be a genuine desire in your heart to seek the Lord if haply you will feel after him then you will realize that he is not far from us.
Seek the Lord.
It is why I don't believe in discouraging people who are seeking the Lord because I think they are doing it for selfish reasons. Even Jesus said do not forbid the little children from coming unto me.
If the reason someone is 'paying the price' is because they want to carry power, Heaven will not bear record that I cautioned him.
If it is the Lord she is seeking, Jesus knows how to find the seeker.
Zacchaeus was not setting out to seek salvation that day, he just had a celebrity crush (strange for a man of his calibre in Israel) and he went to bed that night hosting the King of Israel and having his name engraved throughout human history.
Pay the price o. You will end up with suprises.
You have to be excessively delusional to see all that the apostles went through and conclude that the Christian faith is about material prosperity. They could die like this rejoicing because their hope was not in anything this world can offer — For if we live, we live to the Lord, and if we die, we die to the Lord. So then, whether we live or whether we die, we are the Lord’s.
The twisting of Pauline theology regarding the poor manifests in several toxic ways:
a) The Gospel of Shaming the Poor
In many circles today, poverty is no longer seen as a condition; it is labeled a curse, a failure, a sin, or evidence of spiritual laziness. People are told:
“You are poor because you lack faith.”
“If you gave sacrificially, you would be rich like us.”
“Check your life; your poverty is proof of your disobedience.”
This messaging weaponises wealth and demonises the poor—something Jesus never did, and Paul never taught.
b) Seed-Sowing as the Only Escape Plan
In the twisted version of Paul, giving to the preacher is presented as the only way out of poverty. The poor are coerced into "sacrificial giving" under manipulation, guilt, and fear, often giving away their last money in the hope of breakthrough.
But Paul’s teaching on giving was clear:
“Each one must give as he has decided in his heart, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver.”
(2 Corinthians 9:7)
When giving becomes a coercive transaction, it is no longer cheerful—it becomes exploitation.
c) Equating Wealth with Divine Approval
Another twist is the dangerous teaching that wealth is the ultimate proof of God's favour, while poverty signifies disapproval. But Paul warns sternly against such thinking:
“They have an unhealthy interest in controversies and quarrels about words… who think that godliness is a means to financial gain.
(1 Timothy 6:5)
Paul calls out this gospel of gain explicitly—it is not new.
4. The Greatest Danger of This Twist: Excluding the Majority from the Gospel
Here lies the gravest danger: the moment the poor perceive that the gospel is against them and not for them—when they are excluded socio-economically from the message of Christ—we will have effectively alienated the majority of humanity from the gospel itself.
The harsh truth is that most people in the world today live below the poverty line. The poor are not a minority; they are the global majority.
The Lord Himself foresaw this reality when He said:
“The poor you will always have with you…”
(John 12:8)
Not as a dismissal, but as a reminder that the gospel must always have a place for them.
It is why the Lord could commend the poor widow who gave two mites:
“Truly I tell you, this poor widow has put in more than all the others…”
(Luke 21:3)
She was not despised for her lack but celebrated for her heart.
It is also why the Lord taught:
“When you give a banquet, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, the blind, and you will be blessed.”
(Luke 14:13–14)
James echoes the same rebuke to elitist Christianity:
“Is it not the poor who are rich in faith and heirs of the kingdom? But you have dishonoured the poor.”
(James 2:5–6)
5. The True Gospel: Honouring All Without Class Distinction
The true gospel does not shame the poor. It dignifies them.
“Is it not to share your food with the hungry and to provide the poor wanderer with shelter—when you see the naked, to clothe them…?”
(Isaiah 58:7)
Paul, while teaching giving and generosity, never weaponised wealth as proof of godliness. Instead, he taught equality and mutual care:
“Our desire is not that others might be relieved while you are hard pressed, but that there might be equality.”
(2 Corinthians 8:13–14, NIV)
“As it is written: ‘They have freely scattered their gifts to the poor; their righteousness endures forever.’”
The twisting of the poor is perhaps one of the most underestimated apostasies of the modern church. It has birthed elitist Christianity, where the wealthy sit on thrones and the poor are left to grovel at their feet.
The Lord Jesus never preached such a gospel. Neither did Paul. The true gospel calls the rich to humility, the poor to dignity, and all to mutual love.
To despise the poor is to despise the Lord Himself:
“Whoever mocks the poor shows contempt for their Maker…”
(Proverbs 17:5)
No one is good but God. Part of the reason why you think you're so great is because God is proactively restraining evil and shielding us from temptations too great for us to bear.
If God were to remove His hand, there are temptations that you will face and you will behave like an animal. You will manifest the most brutal, depraved, selfish behaviours you can't imagine.
You are not a good person, Bro. You're a broken person who has not been given opportunity or proper temptation to fully manifest their wickedness.
If you see any good in this world, it's because of a good God's grace, common to all His creatures.
-P.Sam
The simple question I ask is why would Christ come to earth and suffer to give you something that others can and have gotten without him? We all want to live comfortable lives if possible but prosperity is not the kernel of the gospel. This hyper-focus on it is dangerous and borderline satanic.