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Nigerians mock TB Joshua for wrong prediction on US election.
 
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Wed, 9 Nov 2016   ||   Nigeria,
 

After  Prophet Temitope Joshua had predicted on Sunday a “narrow” win for Hilary Clinton in the just concluded U.S. presidential election, Mrs Clinton lost to Donald Trump of the Republican Party on Tuesday in which Mr Trump won over 270 Electoral College votes to secure victory.

According to CEOAFRICA’s source, Premium times, on Wednesday morning, Nigerians trooped to social media to mock Prophet Joshua (popularly known as TB Joshua), the founder of The Synagogue Church of All Nations, for the failure of his prophesy to come to pass.

A few hours later, Prophet Joshua deleted the prophesy posted on the church’s official Facebook account.

In its place, he posted a seven-line prayer on the church’s official Facebook account urging his members to join him in prayer.

“Ask Jesus to give you the grace to live your life in purity and honour, to listen to the Spirit of God and resist the evil spirits coming to you,” said Prophet Joshua.

“This is the prayer that will strengthen you forever. Ask Jesus to reveal the weakness in your heart and break that spirit. In Jesus’ name we pray. Amen!”

Last Sunday, Prophet Joshua had predicted a “narrow” win for the Democratic Party’s Mrs Clinton ahead of the November 8 poll.

“Ten days ago, I saw the new President of America with a narrow win,” Mr Joshua had said in his church sermon which was later posted on the church’s Facebook account.

“The new President will be facing several challenges over many issues, including: passing bills, attempts to possibly pass a vote of no confidence on the new President. The boat of the new President will be rocked.

“By the way, in order not to keep you in suspense, what I frankly saw is a woman.”

His wrong prophecy notwithstanding, Prophet Joshua’s followers besieged the church’s Facebook account on Wednesday praising “Papa Prophet T.B Joshua for his powerful and amazing prayers.”

Less than two hours after his Wednesday call for prayers on Facebook, the post garnered nearly 4,000 comments.

Charles Ehimen wrote “Thank you Lord Jesus Christ for all you have done and still doing in my life, Holy Spirit give me the grace to live a life of purity and honour to the glory of your name and assist me to overcome every evil spirit against my life and family. Thank you God for in Jesus mighty name I pray amen.”

Janet Bweendo wrote “Thank you Lord Jesus for your mercy, help me to stay pure and in honour to listen to the Holy Spirit so that I can resist the evil spirits coming to me, Lord Jesus I pray in the Name of Jesus that reveal my weakness in my heart so that I can break that spirit in Jesus Name.”

Jok Yet John wrote: “Lord Jesus I kneel before and ask for kindness make me strong to resist evil spirits and stand before, purify my heart and make me clean from bad thing in me. Lord bless my thought and accompany me in my pray during morning ours.”

Moments later, prophet Joshua posted a second message telling his members “Don’t let your dream die within you” and referencing the Biblical Joseph who went from being a prisoner to leading the people of Israel.

It was not the first time prophet Joshua had come under public scrutiny over his acclaimed prophetic powers. When, in 2014, a refurbished six-storey building inside his church premises collapsed killing 116 people, mostly South Africans, many questioned the preacher’s inability to foresee an incident of such magnitude.

A week after Nigeria’s presidential election in 2015, Mr Joshua said he told then President, Goodluck Jonathan, that he would lose the election.

Muhammadu Buhari of the then opposition party, All Progressives Congress, defeated Mr. Jonathan in the election.

Prophet Joshua said ‘God’ spoke to him with a message for Mr Jonathan several weeks before the general elections.

He said God told him “This message should be delivered to your president, that whatever the outcome of this election, his regime has come to an end. He should accept to save the lives of millions,” he told the congregation.

Prophet Joshua claimed he called Mr Jonathan by phone, adding that he had previously shared with him many revelations about Nigeria which eventually came to pass.

The seriousness of the revelation was such that it had to be relayed personally so as not affect votes; prophet Joshua said Mr Jonathan promptly sent a close aide to meet the cleric.

After the presidential aide had worshipped at his church during a Sunday service, prophet Joshua said, he met him and relayed the revelation that Mr Jonathan’s regime had come to an end.

“Soft landing " that is the language I sent to the president,” he told attendees.

 

 

 

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