Skip to main content

THE ENCHANTERS

June 13, 2006
ERNEST OMOARELOJIE

 

Kris Okotie

 

A trained lawyer and pop idol of the 1980s. Okotie’s Household of God Church in Lagos is located in a former warehouse he bought for

N40million and converted into a sumptuous building mirroring his taste. With its marble-clad front walls, reflecting glass windows and well-tended decorative plants, it is regarded as one of Nigeria’s most beautiful church buildings. Though not of spectacular size, it offers a swishy ambience for worshippers. The auditorium is fully air-conditioned and well decorated. Okotie’s office on the upper deck of the building has glass- covered walls, a guitar and giant portrait of Muhammad Ali. His congregation largely consists of young company executives and well educated businessmen.

Okotie’s teachings are delivered in high-sounding grammar, earning him accusations of promoting style over substance. But he has always been a man of style. He is a chic dresser, a lover of fancy automobiles and

when driving on Lagos roads, he is provided security cover by armed

policemen. He also owns a gun, which he acquired after a robbery attack on his home in the upscale Opebi area. The former pop star has an

impressive dog kennel, featuring various breeds. At the end of every year, he holds an awards ceremony–Karis Awards. The award, which carries a cash prize of N500,000, is given to aged persons who have distinguished themselves in public life. Mrs. Magaret Ekpo and Hajiya Gambo Sawaba have been beneficiaries. The ceremony also attracts top politicians. The last edition was chaired by Deputy Senate President, Alhaji Ibrahim Mantu.

Then, Okotie is also a politician. He contested the last presidential

election and has already declared his interest in the next one. Okotie’s major companion may be the Bible, but he is also within a

touching distance of  controversy. Separated from his wife, Tina, for many years, he is often romantically linked with every available beauty

queen and beautiful celebrity women, many of who are members of his church.

Okotie also has a reputation for taking on other pastors. In 2001, he

accused Chris Oyakhilome of fetish practices because Oyakhilome visited

Prophet T.B. Joshua of The Synagogue of All Nations. The same year, he

released a book, The Last Outcast, which many branded heretical. Yet,

it was feverishly bought and sold by his followers.

His property portfolio is impressive. A few years ago, Okotie bought

the huge stretch of land opposite his church, making him the owner of

virtually everything on the street, named after his church. His roots in music have not withered. He released an album in 2001. His ministry,

however, has just one parish.

Okotie’s reason for opposing spread is that it is through church

branches that doctrines are corrupted.

 

Matthew Ashimolowo

An accomplished motivational speaker with tremendous following and a

glamorous lifestyle. Ashimolowo is a prolific writer, who teaches that

faith brings wealth. He is also popular for recorded sermons which are

bought even by members of other denominations. Formerly based in the

United Kingdom, Ashimolowo’s church, Kingsway International Christian

Centre (KICC), is one of the biggest in England. Established 20 years ago in London, with a congregation of 17, the church has grown to 12,000 members. It also has branches in Accra and Lagos, where he currently resides.

Ashimolowo left Britain in 2002, following allegations of tax evasion

and mismanagement levelled against him by the British Charity

Commission. He was accused of living in a rent-free house owned by a charity organisation established by him, and of using the charity’s credit card to buy a timeshare property in Florida, United States. A timeshare is an arrangement under which joint owners have rights to a property to be used as a holiday home. Ashimolowo was said to have received £120,000 as a birthday gift and spent £80,000 on a Mercedes. The Charity Commission’s investigations also concluded that the church had mismanaged its £8.5million income and that its leaders’ personal interests conflict with their duties. Investigations added that the assets of Ashimolowo’s charity were not used for the purposes stated in its registration.

In addition, the pastor and his wife were alleged to have received

tithes totaling £384,000 between October 1992 and September 2000. Of this, £338, 334 was paid into the account of one of his companies for

“pastoral services.”

The church was eventually taken over by receivers, who found boxes

containing cash, cheques and invoices being loaded into a car. Last year, the charity was handed the control of the church, making it a charitable company rather than a trust. The new arrangement stipulates that Ashimolowo pay back £200,000. Prior to the crisis, the church was controlled by a pastoral board which included Ashimolowo and his wife, Yemisi. In an address to his congregation, Ashimolowo admitted that the church made a couple of mistakes in its transactions, but insisted  no fraud was found. He said if fraud had been found, the church would have been closed down rather than re-opened under a new administrative structure. The pastor is now planning to build a 10,000-capacity auditorium on a land allocated to the 2012 Olympic Games.

 

William Kumuyi

A former university teacher, Kumuyi is the founder and head of the

Deeper Life Bible Church and Deeper Life Christian Ministry. Until the

Pentecostal boom of the late 1980s and 1990s, his church was Nigeria’s

biggest Christian movement. The church still remains big, drawing huge

crowds to its cathedral in Gbagada, Lagos and other branches spread across the African continent. It also has large camp grounds in Lagos and on the Lagos/Ibadan expressway, the preferred site of pastors. The Deeper Life Ministry sells tapes of his teachings. He is also a prolific writer and has a satellite television arm.

Kumuyi’s teachings place the accent on holiness. He avoids the showbiz

mode favoured by modern pastors. He prescribes staid dressing, a

development that resulted in some members leaving Deeper Life for hipper churches.


googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('comments'); });

googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('content1'); });

googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('content2'); });