
Head Pastor of the Prophetic Hill Chapel Nigel Gaisie has abandoned Ghana in his prophecies for the 2022 and moved to Umuofia.
In his sermon he said: ” I am not talking to the people of Ghana, because of the repressive system prevailing in Ghana. I am prophesying to the nation of ‘Umuofia’. I am talking as a religious leader and a divine spirit has entered me,
If you have read Chinua Achebe’s ”Things Fall Apart” then you will certainly not miss Umuofia, which is a representation of tribal societies that have not yet been altered by colonialism.
Nigel Gaisie’s 31st night sermon was on a regional tour he moved from Umuofia through to Nigeria, Togo, Cameroon, Guinea and Uganda.
In Uganda Prophet Nigel Gaisie intimated that, a Ugandan Special Prosecutor will resign, like his predecessor due to government interference.
“The Lord carried my spirit to a place called Uganda and I saw in Uganda that the Special Prosecutor, the second one will also resign. In Uganda, there was a first Special Prosecutor who resigned and I am seeing another Special Prosecutor who will also resign because the system will not help,” he stated.
This prophecy though evasive, many on social media have interpreted it to mean the resignation of Ghana’s second Special Prosecutor Kissi Agyabeng is imminent.
31st Night ‘prophesies of ‘doom’ became part of Ghana’s end of year rituals, however, the Inspector General of Police (IGP) George Akuffo Dampare issued a statement that, churches should not engage in their usual ‘somebody will die prophecies’, because such prophesies cause fear and panic in the citizenry. He therefore warned that any Pastor who dabbles in fake prophecy will be brought to book. This statement by the police drew mixed feelings from the Ghanaian populace, some where happy that this will bring some sanity into the Ghanaian society, others like Sam Dzata George Member of Parliament (MP) for Ningo-Prampram felt the new directive is infringing on people’s right to worship.
In a Facebook post he wrote: “Now to the vexed issue of prophecies, trust me, I am fully against any charlatan using prophecy as a way of fleecing the public. I denounce those ‘fakes’ who after eating bad food, claim to have ‘seen things’. I am however also against any attempt to use those few unscrupulous elements to describe the entirety of God’s Generals”.
In the same post he questioned how the police determine which prophecy is authentic and which is fake.
“There is a good reason why our criminal jurisprudence is silent on religious expressions of spirituality so long as they sit within the context of societal acceptability. How would you legislate the Holy Spirit for example? He quizzed.
He also suggested that as a way of bringing sanity; “We can start ensuring all churches are properly registered with the Registrar-Generals.
