By Ihechukwu Njoku




Embattled Nigerian ‘Prophet’ T.B. Joshua declared in his church



service today that he will be visiting South Africa once in a month



‘in memory of the martyrs of faith’.















Joshua relayed the message in his church service on Sunday 21st August



2014 following the tragic building collapse at The Synagogue, Church



Of All Nations (SCOAN) that left 84 South Africans dead and hundreds



more injured.







"Those who are affected in one way or another and those who passed



onto glory, their greatest desire is to see that the work of salvation



they died and suffered for continues and reaches unreachable places,”



Joshua declared, a message subsequently relayed via his official



social media portals on Facebook and Twitter.







“For that, what they are coming here for should be taken to meet them



in their country,” he stated to applause from foreigners but a muted



response from Nigerian congregants.







“Once in a month, I will be travelling to South Africa to meet people



from South Africa and other nations who find South Africa easier to



visit, in memory of martyrs of faith," the controversial cleric stated



in a broadcast transmitted live on Emmanuel TV, one of Africa’s most



popular television stations.







Joshua quickly countered any insinuation that his visitations will be



to challenge other South African churches. "My ministration in South



Africa will not be on Sunday so that people will have the opportunity



to attend their respective churches,” he explained.







“This kind of faith expressed by South Africans deserves this kind of



blessing from God," he added.







Joshua thanked people for the messages of condolence and encouragement



The SCOAN had received from supporters around the world. "I have been



your pastor, preaching to you. Now, it is your turn that you are



preaching to me. It is your turn that you are giving back what you



have received in terms of preaching, teaching and counselling,” he



said.







Referring to the biblical principle in Ecclesiastes 3, Joshua



continued, “There is a time to give and a time to receive. There is a



time to laugh and a time to cry. There is a time to be born and a time



to die. Thank you for understanding the time that I am in.”







The cleric acknowledged that the decision would have some adverse



effects on Nigeria but insisted it was a ‘revelation from God’ that he



must obey.







He further called on the South African government to be involved in



organising the monthly meetings, knowing that ‘mammoth crowds’ would



attend.







Taking a trip down memory lane, the embattled pastor played a clip of



a man he claimed was the first South African to visit The SCOAN 15



years ago. The Emmanuel TV archive clip showed a pastor named Francois



Van Zyl telling the congregation that 'persecution' would soon cause



T.B. Joshua to travel worldwide.







Strangely, the broadcast on Emmanuel TV was intermittently disrupted



due to technical problems before Joshua arrived to deliver the



message.







via nigerianeye

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