MEN OF GOD IN AFRICA: AGENTS OF LIBERATION OR AGENTS OF EXPLOITATION?
MEN OF GOD IN AFRICA: AGENTS OF LIBERATION OR AGENTS OF EXPLOITATION?
The Afrisocrat – Special Editorial Report
A Tale of Two Faiths
In the Bible, Jesus was never wealthy. The Apostles were not wealthy. Yet, the Bible says in Acts 4:34 that “no one among them lacked anything.” They shared what they had. They broke bread together. They lived as equals.
Fast forward to the 21st century: today’s pastors are millionaires and billionaires with fleets of cars, mansions, and even private jets, while their members trek barefoot, cannot afford three meals, and die in hospitals because they cannot pay for treatment.
This is the contradiction of our age: Did Jesus die on the cross to enrich pastors and their children—or to save humanity?
Private Jets vs Empty Plates
Why does a pastor need three private jets while his congregation cannot afford a plate of rice? Why are the offerings and tithes that were once meant to feed the poor now used to buy Gulfstream jets, build $100 million churches, and send pastors’ children to Ivy League universities abroad?
The New Testament never said offerings should enrich the clergy. It said offerings should feed the poor. But today, churches build schools their members cannot afford, hospitals their members cannot enter, and estates their members cannot live in.
The Greediest Religion?
Christianity, as practiced by many Pentecostal leaders today, has become the greediest religion on earth. Pastors manipulate scriptures to demand “seeds,” “prophetic offerings,” “redemption sacrifices,” and “first fruits,” telling believers that unless they give, God cannot bless them.
Compare with Islam: Have you ever seen an imam with a private jet? Have you ever seen a Muslim without a place to sleep where there is a mosque? Islam has Zakat, an obligatory charity that directly feeds the poor, houses the homeless, and pays off debts. Mosques welcome anyone; churches often turn away the desperate.
This is why Islam is the fastest-growing religion on earth: Muslims live a life of discipline, dedication, community, and sincerity.
Exploitation in the Pulpit
Pastors use fear as a weapon. They tell members that demons will kill them unless they sow a seed. They preach prosperity while enslaving their flock.
Bishop David Oyedepo: Living proof of empire-building in the name of God. He retires others at 60 but clings to power past 70, controlling billions while members struggle.
Paul Enenche: Known for public charity, yet critics point to his anger, family neglect, and the abandonment of faithful workers like the late Pastor Philip Abah, whose widow still cries six years later.
Jerry Eze: Famous for “What God Cannot Do Does Not Exist” prayers, yet accused of monetizing prayer to the tune of millions daily from YouTube, and of encouraging women to leave marriages for his gain.
Shepherd Bushiri: Master of “arranged miracles.” A prophet to some, but to many an international fraud.
Johnson Suleman: Dogged by endless scandals involving women, lust, and power. Called “charismatic,” but more as a player than a prophet.
T.B. Joshua: Remembered as generous to the poor, but overshadowed by allegations of sexual misconduct and manipulation.
Beyond these names, thousands of smaller “prophets” and “apostles” across Africa are opening churches daily, not as ministries but as businesses.
Churches as Businesses, Not Communities
The truth is bitter: The church has become one of the fastest-growing businesses in Africa. No taxes, no regulation, no accountability. If governments demanded that every church build at least one industry, Africa’s unemployment crisis would vanish overnight.
If every church ran a farm → hunger would end.
If every church opened a factory → youth unemployment would be history.
If every church invested in free schools and hospitals → Africa’s education and health systems would rise.
Instead, churches hoard wealth while millions languish. Pastors build estates for themselves, hire bodyguards, fly abroad for medical treatment, while members are told to use “anointing oil” for cancer.
A Culture of Hypocrisy
Christian schools and hospitals are the most expensive—ironically built with offerings from the poor.
Many Christian marriages are collapsing daily, even among pastors, while Islamic marriages often endure with discipline and fidelity.
Christians preach love but practice division, while Muslims open their doors to strangers and feed the hungry.
How can a Christian pastor who drives Rolls Royces look his members in the eyes and still preach humility?
Human Cost
Behind the bright lights of mega-churches are broken lives:
Women abandoned by families because pastors told them to “sow everything.”
Young girls exploited in the name of “deliverance.”
Men discouraged from working, told to “wait for prophecy,” sinking deeper into poverty.
Widows ignored while pastors’ wives flaunt designer bags.
The fastest way for an unemployed African youth to become a millionaire today is not through education, farming, or innovation, but by opening a church. That is the tragedy of our time.
The Modern Slave Masters
The modern slave masters are not colonialists in Europe—they are pastors in our neighborhoods. They bind not with chains, but with fear. They exploit not with guns, but with scriptures twisted for gain.
They tell you God cannot bless you without a prophet’s touch. They enslave you to their altar, making you believe your destiny is tied to their bank account.
But God is not a merchant. God’s love is unconditional. Jesus never charged for miracles. The Apostles never owned palaces. Early Christians sold what they had and shared so that no one lacked anything.
The Afrisocrat Call
Africa must rise and expose this religious exploitation industry. We must separate faith from fraud, shepherds from wolves. The church must return to its true mission: feeding the poor, healing the sick, educating the children, and liberating the oppressed.
If not, history will judge Christianity in Africa as a golden empire built on the bones of the poor.
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THE AFRISOCRAT

This is so direct to the point
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