Dubbed ‘The Pastorpreneur’, he was
accused earlier this year of slapping the face of a young woman he said was a
witch. The assault case was struck out but is being appealed.
Branches of the church have sprung
up in major UK cities in a huge recruitment drive centred on Mr Oyedepo’s
‘prosperity gospel’. This claims that congregants who make regular donations
and pay tithes – a ten per cent levy on their income – will be rewarded
financially by God.
Followers are urged to target
vulnerable people such as the lonely, the sick, the homeless and the suicidal
as potential candidates for conversion.
Last night, Labour MP Paul Flynn
said Winners’ Chapel was cynically exploiting supporters. ‘They [Winners’
Chapel] are making clearly spurious claims and it seems to be a cynical
exploitation of the gullible,’ he said.
Referring to the slapping
incident, Mr Flynn added: ‘What is also alarming is the reported violence and
the lack of respect for the status of women. It’s taking us back to a previous
age of ignorance and prejudice that we all thought the church had escaped.’
This newspaper’s investigation can further disclose:
·
Congregants are handed
a payment slip requesting payments using cheque, cash or debit card when they
enter London’s Winners’ Chapel.
·
Donations to the
ministry in England almost doubled from £2.21 million to £4.37 million between
2006 and 2010.
·
Mr Oyedepo’s
superchurch in Nigeria received £794,000 or 73 per cent of the charitable
donations paid out by the British Winners’ Chapel between 2007 and 2010. This
was despite claims in Africa that he is enriching himself at the expense of his
devotees.
·
The registered charity
has spent £6.81 million on evangelism and ‘praise, worship and fellowship’.
·
The church’s ‘Joseph
Squad’ preaches in British prisons and has a weekly broadcast named ‘Liberation
Hour’ on satellite and cable TV here.
In the past three years, Winners’
Chapel churches have been established in Liverpool, Birmingham, Leeds and
Bradford, adding to those in London, Manchester, Dublin and Glasgow.
An undercover Mail on Sunday
reporter attended Sunday services at Winners’ Chapel’s ‘London HQ’
in Dartford, Kent, which attracts 1,000 congregants – chiefly African and
Caribbean immigrants. It is run like ‘a business conference’ by Mr Oyedepo’s
son, David Oyedepo Jnr. Packed buses deliver singing worshippers from South-East
London, Essex and Kent to the huge auditorium.
The reporter saw a payment slip
being given to every person entering the church encouraging them to donate
money by cheque or cash or to fill in a form with their debit card details. The
slip said tithes should be paid separately using a ‘Kingdom Investment Booklet’
and the reporter was informed that payments could also be made by phone. A
pastor told the worshippers: ‘You shall be financially promoted after this
service in Jesus’s name if you are ready to honour the Lord therefore with all
your givings, your tithes, your offerings, your Kingdom investment, your
sacrifices.’
Congregants were told to fill in
their slips and hold them above their heads while the donations were blessed.
The service was
interspersed with testimonies. ‘I received a bill from the bank that I
didn’t understand, so I prayed,’ said one congregant. ‘A few days later, the
bank wrote to apologise for their mistake – Hallelujah!’ ‘Hallelujah,’ the
audience shouted back.
Congregants were told they could
gain favour by persuading others to follow Mr Oyedepo’s teachings. His son
said: ‘Look around you. Someone is sick and already wishing he or she were
dead, that is a fruit ripe to harvest. Someone is confounded and considering
suicide as an option, that is another fruit that is ripe to harvest.
‘Someone else is lonely and
wondering if there is any future for him, that is another fruit ripe to
harvest.
‘Also there are many men and
women, young and old that are homeless, these are fruits ripe to harvest.’
The reporter was taken, with 20
other new recruits, to a room where preachers gave sermons claiming acceptance
of the Lord would prevent them ever being ill or suffering misfortune.
The Mail on Sunday has seen video
footage of Mr Oyedepo striking a woman across the face and condemning her to
hell after she said she was a ‘witch for Jesus’. He attacked her in a Winners’
Chapel superchurch, believed to be in Nigeria, in front of worshippers. A
separate video shows him saying: ‘I slapped a witch here last year!’
In May, he was sued for £800,000
over the alleged assault. The case was struck out – a decision which is now
reported to have been appealed.
The Winners’ Chapel movement, also
known as the Living Faith Church, has hundreds of churches in Nigeria and
across Africa, the Middle East, the UK and the US.
Mr Oyedepo has received fierce
criticism in Africa. One Nigerian journalist accused him of ‘leading a growing
list of pastorpreneurs – church founders exploiting the passion and emotion
that Christianity commands to feather their nests’.
Catholic Cardinal Anthony Okogie criticised such preachers for placing materialism above Jesus’s message. He reportedly said: ‘They have been skinning the flock, taking out of the milk of the flock.’
Among Mr Oyedepo’s fleet of
aircraft are said to be a Gulfstream 1 and Gulfstream 4 private jets. It is
also claimed he and his wife, Faith, travel in expensive Jeeps flanked by
convoys of siren-blaring vehicles. He is the senior pastor of Faith Tabernacle,
a 50,000-seat auditorium in Lagos reputed to be the largest church in the world,
and runs a publishing company that distributes books carrying his message
across the world.
His other business interests span
manufacturing, petrol stations, bakeries, water purification factories,
recruitment, a university, restaurants, supermarkets and real estate. The
latest addition is a commercial airline named Dominion Airlines.
A Charity Commission spokesman
said: ‘The Charity Commission is currently assessing what, if any,
regulatory role there is to play with regard to the complaints made against the
World Mission Agency. It is important to clarify that this does not constitute
an investigation at this stage.’
Winners’ Chapel administrator
Tunde Disu declined to comment.
Source: MailOnline. www.dailymail.co.uk
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