Another COZA church member, Japheth Omojuwa has written yet another
robust letter to the Abuja based pastor, Biodun Fatoyinbo asking him
vital questions that he needs to answer urgently over his love affair
with his female church members, especially Ese Walters. The note appears
to be very long, but have patience and read on:
“Now read my
lips, I know there are people here that are not part of our church, read
my lips, we are going to speak but we are consulting to come out with a
robust reply.”
“When we asked God, God said be quiet.” Pastor
Biodun Fatoyinbo in his non robust reply to the Ese Walter accusations
on Sunday 25th August 2013.
One shouldn’t need a robust reply to
say “I didn’t do it!” but I digress. The Miss Ese Walter – Pastor Biodun
Fatoyinbo affair has since come and for many, who’d rather the truth be
buried, should be gone by now. Unfortunately, this will not go yet. The
reason is simple; pastor Biodun Fatoyinbo just has to speak up. This
was my initial take on the issue and you may need to read it to
understand where this writer is coming from. If you haven’t read that,
you’d not understand my mind with respect to how, no matter what we
think or assume, we should never judge until all sides are heard. I now
know more than I did from that last time and all sides have had at least
3 weeks to be heard.
Before I continue, let me address the men
worshippers who go to church on Sundays and during the week sincerely
believing they are worshipping God but in reality are bowing to the
carnal desires of fellow men. My last year in Nigeria saw me spend more
time in Abuja than any other Nigerian city. Anytime I found myself in
Abuja, I’d always attend the Commonwealth of Zion Assembly (COZA) or on
select occasions The Everlasting Arms Parish (TEAP) of the Redeemed
Christian Church of God.
My Lagos church has no branch. COZA was
convenient for me for many reasons but the most appealing part was the
fact that it was a church I could go without being treated specially.
Yes, a few people would know and notice me but I’d largely be just
another member of the congregation and my life needed just that. I was
not just attending COZA though; I truly liked the church. I was
committed to the church financially.
I may be did not give as
much as many people but I at least gave enough to receive a gracious
call from Pastor Fatoyinbo himself. I am yet to give anyone – including
my mother – as much of my resources as I have given to COZA. More often
than not my donations were in hard currency. Given a chance, I’d do this
again. Giving is my culture anyway.
This point needs to be made
because some hypocrites will come up here to pretend they love the
church more than people they’d consider evil like myself because one has
chosen to ask questions. I don’t know how else to prove one’s love for
where one’s heart is without spending one’s money on same. I gave not
because I was moved by words but because I was impressed by the church’s
dedication to excellence. Hate him or love him, pastor Biodun Fatoyinbo
was a man driven by excellence.
I was impressed because after
each journey away from Nigeria, I’d visit COZA to see the aesthetics
have been improved upon markedly. I was just impressed and I was even
more impressed because being a man driven by excellence myself, it was
great to see it in display in a Nigerian organization. That mattered to
me because Nigerian positive outliers gain my attention for obvious
reasons – excellence remains a scarce commodity in here.
I saw
pastor Biodun Fatoyinbo for the first time in Abeokuta, Ogun State,
Nigeria, I think in 2007 when he came to preach at The Father’s House
where I worshipped at the time. His depth impressed me. Again, hate him
or love him, he knew his word. He knew (knows) the bible and he had – of
course still has – the God given ability to not just preach the word
but to teach it and impact people. His strongest attribute for me though
would be his vocals. I don’t think there is a better singer than the
man in COZA!
I have made all the above points because some would
come here, not to read this or in search for the truth, but to defend
their illusion and the lie they want protected in their hearts. I have
said the above to let you know if you love the man, I love him too and
if you love the church I do too. Unfortunately, I love the truth more
and that was the reason I opened myself up to hearing the experiences of
the many people who reached me after this article.
I exchanged
emails with Ese Walter – she had reached out to me to encourage me
during my Arik matter but I didn’t know that until after I sent an email
to her to say to be strong – I was speaking from my understanding of
what being in the media storm is. I received a call from an Abuja based
counselor and had exchanges with people who had worshipped at pastor
Fatoyinbo’s church in Ilorin. I did not reach out to any of these people
myself; they sought me out themselves.
Loyalty is a necessity in
every relationship. There must be a purpose and truth behind it. Should
one remain loyal when one discovers that, that loyalty was pledged on
the wrong premise? Every loyalty has a foundation and once that
foundation is destroyed, loyalty must find a new shelter.
The
Nigerian society is what it is because we do not care about the truth as
a people, we only care about our interests. People think they care
about the truth when the truth does not affect them, as soon as the
table turns; their only care is about the protection of their own kind
of truth or their own interest. It is the reason the same people say to
you one day, “I love the way you write and focus on issues and the fact
that you are unbiased” and the next time they go “what’s your interest
in this? What is the point? I used to be your fan but not anymore!” I am
so used to this yo-yoing from readers I never care about fans, friends
or foes, I just care to put the word out based on what I think is right
only being at peace with my conscience and my God. I don’t care to be
loved or hated. I think I can do without caring for people whose
feelings change at the direction of whether the matter affects them
directly rather than whether the matter deserves one’s sincerity. This
will open me to abuse but who cares about people whose lives and souls
are subjected to what fellow men feel rather than what God cares about?
We
may not be acutely aware of this as Nigerian Christians but while a man
of God is truly a man of God, he becomes just another man when it comes
to his own failings and addictions. A man of God who is addicted to
drugs for instance is not addicted to drugs as a man of God, he is
addicted to drugs as a man. The same thing goes for sex, stealing,
adultery and all the other vices listed by the bible and our
understanding of morality. When a man of God who is not married to you
touches your breast, he touches it as a real man not as a real man of
God. The hardness that comes with it is of his own blood, no matter what
you want to assume.
Of course men of God have a special kind of
grace, a certain level of Grace, but that grace has its purposive
boundaries. You can have grace to pull 100,000 people into a stadium as a
preacher but that grace may not be available to you if, say you invited
people a year after to come hear you declare yourself to run for a
public office. Every form of Grace has a purpose and a place for it.
Will Pastor E.A. Adeboye gather as much people in Redeem Camp if the
event was his declaration to run for a political office? I have gone at
length to make this point about grace because as Christians in Nigeria,
some of us have become passionate church going zombies! My words sound
harsh but think mot juste – it is what it is. As long as pastor says it,
it is right.
As long as pastor does it, it is right. So then,
pastor is always right. Our thin line between pastor and God, which was
supposed to be a clearly marked reality, has since become eroded.
Pastors have indeed become our gods! We literally worship them now. My
last service at COZA on the 25th of August showed this a lot. It was the
loudest I had heard the church and trust me, COZA on a regular day is
loud. On this day, I sat there in church and asked myself sincere
questions;
Why is this church overly loud today, is it because of
God or because of man? The extraordinary praise and worship session –
which I really danced to because of my weakness for praises – and the
loud cheers and applauses had a note to them that never used to be
there. This was no longer about God, it had become about “our pastor.” I
ordinarily would not tweet during a church service but I did on this
day because I was so sure in my mind I was no longer in church. I
realized I was in a theatre.
Everything was a show and it was at
best a world-class show. It was no longer about God, it was about “our
church, our pastor” and you are sure to see that put up here in the
comments. Why have we suddenly assumed and believed that defending our
pastors mean defending God? Who told us that when our pastors fall God
will fall? Are we mad or are we just spiritually insane? Our
Christianity is no longer about God, it has since become about pastors
and our church’s brand. We are more obsessed with what people perceive
of our church’s reality than what God cares about. Even the most
seemingly independent minded among us lose their ability to rationalize
anything as long as it is about defending these pastors and their
increasingly way ward ways. In our usual way, we misinterpret the bible
for our end, saying for instance “touch not my anointed and do my
prophet no harm.” I leave you with thisWhat does it really mean when it
says not to touch the anointed? article.
This is our way of
putting pastors above board, beyond questions and their actions
protected inside our common ignorance of God’s word. People continue to
perish for lack of knowledge. And you better not think this is a
Pentecostal thing, it is as ubiquitous as you’d find religions. There is
a fake version of anything that is original. If your religion has no
fake version of its good leaders, your religion itself is fake!
There
are of course true men of God and real churches dedicated not just to
getting men and women focused on God and the things of God, but
contributing extensively to the development of men, women and families
including underprivileged in the society. The existence of a fake thing
is proof there is an original. I work with some men of God fully
committed to this and the works of the likes of Daystar and the
Elevation Church in Lagos inspired this piece on what the church can do
about poverty in Nigeria . I think pastor Biodun Fatoyinbo is a real man
of God but he is a real man too; much more real a man than a god at
least. And when these realities come clashing, we must not treat these
separate phenomena as one. You can tear yourself to pieces over these
questions as one of these folks with suspended minds, but he really
needs to answer them or just let silence do the talking.
These are questions for the real man in pastor Biodun Fatoyinbo to answer:
Did
he do what Ese Walter accused him of doing? When she came back to
Nigeria and asked that he needed to step away from the pulpit, did he
meet up with her, even tried to kiss her again and later called her to
say he forgot something in her car after he left? Did the thing he
forgot turn out to be N500,000 cash! Was this part of his personal
earnings in church or was it part of the church’s income? Did they meet
at another hotel – not in England – where he tried to pay for his own
accommodation and had his cash refused because the hotel wouldn’t take
cash so Ese had to pay with her card? Does he use an aphrodisiac
perfume? Is that for the fun of it or for some kind of fun? Did he
insist Ese Walter stay back in London after she came back to Nigeria
defying his earlier demand? Ese Walter might have held back many details
in her blog because no one gets to write it all on matters like that,
but will the real man please stand up and say something? Oh, and our
ultra-super-religious-and-spiritual-we-are-all-clean society has
crucified Ese Walter, making sure others like her never dare come out to
cast other pastors again. And trust me, there are other named ones. You
see, we think we are a free people but we are not.
The person
whose body is shackled is freer than the person whose mind is. We have
been manipulated to assume certain things. It is so bad it has become so
tough to confront falsehood in our society. In contrast, it has become
the norm to confront those who dare ask questions around such. We
remember the Bible verses that justify our ways as though even the devil
doesn’t quote the Bible for his own end. Here is one thing you should
take home; “He who justifies the wicked, and he who condemns the just,
both of them alike are an abomination to the LORD” (Proverbs 17:15).
The
sheer number of women who cannot speak up on their experiences like
these shows how much the society condemns the brave and gives the halo
of holiness to their mental oppressors. This is not limited to pastors,
leaders of other religions are very much involved in immoralities with
wives and daughters of trusted members but this is a mirror for my home.
I ignored my Muslim followers who insisted I speak about their own
leaders for obvious reasons. This remains Nigeria. I know they will have
fearless people who will show them their mirror too. Some even already
started with tweets on those yesterday.
One thing appeared
constant in all the other alleged affairs; the pastor always used
disparaging words for his wife, telling the other women his wife is
“pretty on the outside, empty upstairs,” a theme that appeared in all
the stories. This set me off over and again, hearing it from people who
even as I write have never met themselves. Did the real man in pastor
Biodun Fatoyinbo tell these women his wife is too fat and tried for
years to lose weight but just couldn’t; and to think that the woman in
question is not fat. There is more on this but better to reserve some
questions. Is it true the wife is aware of the pastor’s issues to the
point she makes sure to regularly keep tabs on him with phone calls? Is
it true some of the pastors are well aware of this? Are they party to it
like some of the women in this loop suggest?
What about these other stories?
One
of the women – who admitted she was seeking counseling not because she
felt abused by the pastor but because she felt used and dumped, because
the pastor had abandoned her – had much to say. She said that it started
when she went for counseling with pastor Fatoyinbo. That, they
exchanged numbers and they started calling each other at odd hours. It
went from phone sex to the bedroom.
There is no need to give the
graphic details of the wildness she said transpired. The second story
as relayed by the Abuja counselor was exactly like the first, from
marital counseling to wild sex. This second person is actually married,
and remains married. One of the ladies admitted she was so addicted to
him she threw all caution to the wind.
The money according to
them was another attraction they’d not deny. They didn’t say they were
abused, they said they felt used and dumped. She said the pastor has a
huge appetite for sex but gets bored easily and this explains his
constant change of girls.
Hard to believe, but these stories from
Ilorin make the hardness go a bit softer. Had an Ilorin student, who
lived off campus, who was at the time his member, ever drive out pastor
Biodun Fatoyinbo out of her room? Did he ask her to sit on his laps? Did
he try to touch her breasts? Did he try harder until she threatened to
shout?
Would the pastor remember if I added he used to visit the
family, that they used to push his car at the time? Did any pastor at
the time reprimand pastor Biodun Fatoyinbo after the lady in question
had reported him? Does he still remember the words that man of God told
him? Did the lady continue to come to church after the incident? She
left the church eventually when she couldn’t stand seeing the pastor
preach. People know about this, families know about this. These are open
secrets.
What about this other girl pastor Biodun Fatoyinbo
allegedly dated in Ilorin? She admitted they had a steady relationship,
and that he would tell her how his wife was not homely, how his wife
couldn’t cook. Pastor Biodun, according to her would tell her how he
felt very homely and welcomed around her, how she was just like a
mother. She admitted she dated the pastor for a very long time and even
got pregnant and aborted for the man of God. People say there can be no
smoke without fire but I don’t even agree with that because I know at
least one gas that produces smoke without fire. Unfortunately, this is
beyond the smoke of a gas, this is a thick, fat, carbon soaked smoke
with burning flames that can only be associated with fire! Like Moses’
burning bush, something is wrong somewhere and silence will not help on
this one.
Silence can be beautiful, silence can be ugly, silence
can be so subtle no ones hears it and silence can be so loud it screams
“guilty!” I defended pastor Fatoyinbo’s rights to be heard and I still
do but I cannot defend his long silence. This silence is so loud it is
too distracting. This silence is too robust to be ignored. Anyone who
says it is better for the pastor to remain silent at this time is not
only a hypocrite but also a church zombie. This is not me being abusive,
this is me saying it as it is. Just look out for the meaning of the
word.
When God created things, he said it was good, after God
created man He said it was very good. God did not do all that so that
we’d suspend our ability to think when it comes to matters of our
pastors or anyone for that matter. Even God called out to Adam after he
committed the first sin. God did not convict him, he gave him a chance
to defend himself and Adam did present his case.
You see, after
all said and done, we all like Adam, we fall short. King David fell
short and prophet Nathan told him to his face. We all know what he did
and the price he paid for that but we all know that several millennia
after, King David remains an iconic figure in Israel. Israel’s flag and
major national symbols bear his insignia to this day! King David said
“hata al-Yahweh” (Hebrew for “I have sinned against God”) and his
admission of his own human failings is the reason we can all read Psalm
51 today and raise our heads knowing God is able and willing to forgive
us. God of course did forgive David but he never let go of the
consequence of that sin. His life was spared – against the Law of Moses,
which at the time meant David himself should have died – but he lost
the child born by Bathsheba. Of course we never read of David committing
that sort of sin again because the chastisements of God helped clean
him like David himself wrote in Psalm 51.
Talking about Joseph;
is this what the pastor says Joseph did not defend himself for? Would
Joseph have defended himself if he was offered the chance and he lived
in the society as a free man and not the slave he was? How did Moses
write the account of what happened inside a room between Joseph and
Potiphar’s wife if Joseph never made a point to defend himself at one
time or the other? Would Joseph have kept quiet if he had a congregation
to account to? How come a young lady in Abuja who had been in the COZA
Ilorin choir knew Joseph was going to form part of the message on Sunday
the 25th of August even before the pastor came on the pulpit?
Had
this happened in Ilorin and pastor Fatoyinbo had to offer the same “the
people who lived in Joseph’s time did not know he did not do what he
was accused of, we are the ones that know” excuse? Should we forget
these questions and wait for those who will be on earth in 5000 years
time to know all these were supernatural co-incidental lies or would it
be better for pastor Fatoyinbo to accept he is a real man of God yes but
he is indeed a real man with flesh, with the ability to indeed fail?
Can
pastor Biodun Fatoyinbo do what David did and admit his wrong to his
congregation and let those who will stay, stay and those who will leave,
leave? Is it better for the church members to know exactly what they
are getting or should they all just continue to live a lie or in-between
a lie and confusion? Sir, can we even just let go of the robust
response and just say “I never did what Ese Walter accused me of,”
because you were true to your conscience enough on Sunday the 25th of
August not to deny it happened.
I remembered clearly no words
were said to that effect. If indeed it did not happen, can we get an “I
did not do it” short, simple and direct response before this robust
reply is ready for our consumption? How can all sides be heard if one
side decides silence should do the talking?
At least no one can
say I wrote this because of the new COZA land or building project
because I worked for the money I contributed to it. And I hope to visit
when this project is completed. But our Christianity needs to rise above
this carnality and obsession with buildings and what toilets and church
seats should look like.
These are all cool and I’d always be
likely to worship in a church that pays attention to all these but at
the end of the day, this is not what Christianity is about. Our faith is
about Christ and we were called Christians at Antioch for the first
time not because of how beautiful our churches looked or how well our
pastors/apostles spoke, it was because of our Christ-like attitude. Is
this what the Nigerian church is about today or should we forget this
question was ever asked?
Are we still worshipping The Way, The
Truth and The Life or have we redefined God? We need to ask these
questions and more about our Christianity. Let us even for a while
forget what others think or say about us, who really are we? Now let the
abuses rain on me. I need to shower myself. May the peace of the Lord
be upon His church!
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