Well known Nigerian film actor, noted as Jim Iyke has broken the internet with a shocking assertion after proclaiming that he will never forgive TB Joshua even after demise.
Jim Iyke reportedly accused the founder and General Overseer of the Synagogue Church of All Nations, Late Prophet T.B Joshua for what he did to him when he (the actor) took his sick mother to the church for deliverance.
The controversial video of Jim Iyke’s purported ‘deliverance’ at The Synagogue Church of All Nations (SCOAN), led by Pastor T.B. Joshua went viral and led to an intense debate on social media. The ‘evil spirit’ supposedly confessed that it was behind Iyke’s inability in getting married.
“And I said common men, this is childish, this is not what we came here for. Let’s move mom out of here and keep looking for medical help. Then we were about going to South Africa, there was this young man that was recommended to us, a specialist as well.
“Then the gentleman in question looked at me and saw the amusement on my face and touched me. Now I can’t explain what happened within that space of time. Within that 5 minutes whatever happened happened.
I’m not here to start proffering explanations to spiritual things that are way beyond me. I’m a man that understand how things work. That I cannot explain and nobody can suggest anything otherwise because personally I know what happened to me.
“Within that time lacks explanations, they said I said stuffs, did stuffs I found out its extremely embarrassing.”
According to the actor, he was ready to go to hell in search of cure for his mother at that point.
He spoke on Channels TV, “At that point even I’m told there’ll be a cure in hell I’ll go. You are talking about your mother. So we went.
“I can remember I went there with my security man, my sister and PA. And when we got there, I was upstairs but there was constant insistence that I come to church. And I said, ‘but that wasn’t the arrangement because I kept my mum in the hospital and was expecting that you’ll lay your hand on her and she’ll get better’, but they said ‘no you must come to church.’
“Then my sister forced me and we went to church downstairs. I was there when the whole stuff of touching people started, I found it a little laughable seriously because this is a national TV and people watch from all corner.
I can remember my sister pinched me and said, ‘you’ve got to stop.’