Chapter Four: 4.1 History

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CHAPTER FOUR

History, Structures, Practices and Theology of the


Mountain of Fire and Miracles Church

4.1 History

In this chapter, the writer examines the beginnings of the MFM church, her belief,
structures, practices and some factors which may have accounted for its burgeoning growth.
The MFM church belongs to the new genre of churches in the global South Christianity
whose emphasis, according to Phillip Jenkins is on healing religion par excellence, with a
strong belief in the objective existence of evil, and (commonly) a willingness to accept the
reality of demons and the diabolical.
1
These are churches given to spiritual warfare and
breakthrough theology as a way of succeeding in life. There is a widespread belief in these
churches that there are hindrances and obstacles to ones progress in life occasioned by the
activities of malicious spirits and their agents. One needs Gods favour and help to break
through this man made and Satan orchestrated barriers in order to enjoy the good and
prosperous life and the blessings thereof. Because of the prevalence of this teaching in many
of the new generation churches in Nigeria, theologians have come to regard this prevalent
teaching in these churches as a breakthrough theology. It has its roots in the teachings of
one of the foremost Nigerian Pentecostal pastors, Bishop David Oyedepo of the Living Faith
Church (aka Winners Chapel) Nigeria. The belief is that a Christian has no business with
poverty, as the favour of God that brings abundance of prosperity in the form of health,
wealth and a life free from lifes vicissitudes is guaranteed under the new covenant
established in Christ.

The Mountain of Fire and Miracles Ministries began as a small prayer group of about
twenty five persons at the home of the General Overseer, Dr. Daniel K. Olukoya, in Yaba,
Lagos, Nigeria in July 1989. It was then a gathering of people of like minds who were
passionate about combative prayers considering the perceived prevalence of evil in the
Nigerian society. The fellowship metamorphosed into a full-fledged church in 1994 when

1
P. Jenkins, The New Faces of Christianity, Believing the Bible in the Global South, New York: Oxford
University Press, 2006, 98.
Sunday services started. According Ayegboyin, the name Mountain of Fire and Miracle was
chosen because the name implies that the church is considered to be a mountain higher than
any problem that one may have. Fire is indicative of both the presence and power of God that
can be invoked to consume, roast, and burn their stratagem to ashes.
2


At the inception of the church, the Nigerian nation was going through immense
economic throes as unemployment was high, poverty was on the increase, cultism was rife in
tertiary institutions in the country, and a general societal dysfunctions. People were desperate
for solutions to their survival needs. This was when the MFM Church began as a prayer
fellowship to cater for the numerous needs of participants. Soon, membership increased as
people came in drove to seek for God, miracles of deliverance and healing. A revival was in
the making as aptly described in the Church and Mission magazine, a non-denominational
periodical in Nigeria
It was an era of history being made again. This time, not on Azusa street in
California, where the spark of the Holy Ghost Fire gave birth to the Apostolic
Faith Church; not in the American woods, where Charles Grandison Finney
was set ablaze for reverberant global revival; not in Scotland where the
prayer of John Knox deposed the queen; not in Southwark London, where the
lips of Charles Hardon Spurgeon burned with eternal flames; but in Lagos,..
3
.

The church has grown tremendously in the past twenty years and now has its presence
in many nations of Africa, Europe and America and in other continents of the world. The
church claims that the Mountain of Fire and Miracles Ministries Headquarter meetings is
the largest single congregation in Africa with attendance of over 120,000 in single
meetings.
4
This positions the church as one of the largest in Nigeria and Africa.

The General Overseer of the church has a first class honours degree in Microbiology
from the University of Lagos and a PhD in Molecular Genetics from the University of
Reading, United Kingdom. Like many leaders of the AICs and African Pentecostal churches
in Nigeria, Dr. Olukoya did not attend any Seminary nor school of Theology, but began his
ministry as a the coordinator of a prayer fellowship which later metamorphosed into a full

2
D. Ayegboyin, ...But Deliver us from evil... The Riposte of the MFM and its implications for the Reverse in
Mission. Orita- Ibadan Journal of Religious Studies, vol.xxxvii, June & Dec. 2005), 33-64.
3
From a Living Room to the Worlds Stage, the phenomenal growth of MFM at 20, Church and Mission
Magazine, Vol 1, 9, Nov/Dec. 2009, 18.
4
Dr. D.K Olukoya, Dominion Prosperity, Lagos, Nigeria: Battle Cry Books, 2003, .52.
fledge church. Many of the new generation churches are not given to theological education
but emphasize on demonstrating the power inherent in the gospel. John Mbiti had said that
there are three main areas of African theology today. These are written theology, oral
theology, and symbolic theology.
5
He considers written African theology as the privilege of a
few Christians who have had considerable education and who generally articulate their
theological reflection in periodicals, books and articles written in different European
languages. Oral theology is produced in the fields, by the masses, through song, sermon,
teaching, prayer, conversation etc. It is the theology in the open air, often unrecorded, often
heard only by small groups, and generally lost to libraries and seminaries.
6
The third type of
theology present in Africa today is the symbolic theology which is expressed through art,
sculpture, drama, symbols, rituals, dance, colours, numbers, etc. The Mountain of Fire and
Miracles can be classified into the second category of Mbitis analogy of Afro-theology, i.e.
oral theology. Leadership here is not given to biblical scholarship, but seeks a demonstration
of power over existential circumstances and needs in the African context, particularly as it
relates to their understanding of evil and diseases. .

The Mountain of Fire and Miracles church has its roots in the Christ Apostolic Church
(CAC) founded by one Apostle Joseph Babalola and others in the early1930s. The CAC is
one of the foremost indigenous churches in Nigeria founded by some indigenous Christians
in south west of Nigeria desirous of the true apostolic faith experienced in primitive
Christianity. They were not contented with the spirituality or piety of the mainline churches
that were perceived to be devoid of power to meet the exigencies of their times. Olukoya, the
founder of MFM acknowledged the deficiencies of the mission churches then as he said that
the European missionaries were not acquainted with the spiritual terrain of the Nigerian
environment and so they made a lot of mistakes. The missionaries did not understand the
spiritual problems of the people; hence they could not address them.
7
According to him, the
missionaries made a lot of difference in the areas of social ministry by building churches,
schools, hospitals etc, but they presented to the Africans Christianity that is bereft of power to
rid the people of evil experiences that was a common feature in African societies.
Missionaries and researchers who have worked extensively amongst tribal people in

5
J. Mbiti, The Biblical Basis for Present Trends in African Theology in K. Appiah-Kubi and S. Torres (eds.),
African Theology En Route, Maryknoll, New York: Orbis Books, Dec. 1981, 132.
6
J. Mbiti, The Biblical Basis for Present Trends in African Theology, 132.
7
D.K Olukoya, Dominion Prosperity,37.
developing world share this view of differences in worldview of Europeans and Africans.
Robert C. Blascke observed:
The concerns of the missionaries on the need for repentance from sin and
mans need for salvation are both genuine and biblical. However as some of
the missionaries argued, this emphasis is a reflection of Western puritan
culture of the 18
th
century. Africans will nevertheless seek a religion that
provides answers to the reality of their daily experiences.
8


This forms the thrust of the theological emphasis of the Mountain of Fire and Miracle
Church. Blascke believes that the initial approach for the presentation of the Gospel to
animists should first be the other part of the Gospel; the power of Jesus that can provide
answers to their dilemma of dealing with evil spiritual powers. In African societies and
Traditional religions, the belief in the ubiquity of evil forces is rife. In Yoruba cosmology for
example, Wande Abimbola asserts that ...there are eight agents of evil. They are known
collectively as ajagun (warriors against human beings). They include iku (death), era
(disease), ofo (loss), egba (paralysis), oran (trouble), epe (curse), ewon (bondage/
imprisonment), and ese (accident or and other evil thing that affects human beings).
9
The
essence of religion for the African is the provision of relief, safety and protection from this
array of evil agents. AIC and Pentecostal churches that share in this belief about the cosmic
struggle between the forces of good and evil have grown over the years in Nigeria. This is
because their belief in cosmic struggle resonates with the worldview of the people and that of
African Traditional Religion. This solution to this struggle lies in regular prayer sessions and
exorcism. Ayegboyin avers that the AICs overemphasis on evil has virtually changed the
church from divine truth to power religion.
10
They take seriously matters relating to spirit
possession, powers and occult forces that impact negatively on humans. These churches,
often referred to as deliverance churches make it their sole aim to rid the African society of
evil powers, and their prayers are often targeted at the devil with all its agents as the sources
of evil, misfortunes, poverty, diseases and vicissitudes of life that people suffer.

The notion that every disease has its source in the manipulations of evil forces derives
from their New Testament understanding and literal interpretation of texts related to Jesus
healing activities. Jesus in most cases simply cast out evil spirits out of victims of maladies

8
R. C. Blascke, Quest for Power, 27.
9
D. Ayegboyin, ...But Deliver us from evil... 33-64.
10
D. Ayegboyin, ...But Deliver us from evil..., 33-64.
especially those suffering from mental disorders. This, according to Aylward Shorter was
because in Jesus time there were no precise ideas about sickness. It would be going too far
to say that a spirit theory of disease took the place of germ theory, but there was no germ
theory in Jesus day and spirits were very often identified as the cause of disease. Moreover,
cures often took the form of exorcism during which a dialogue took place between Jesus and
the spirits who were accounted responsible for the sick mans condition.
11


A onetime missionary to Africa assesses mainline churches failure to meet the heart
and spirit needs of Africans as a failure to recognize the reality of the spiritual world and
therefore, a lack of expectation or even acceptance of a ready recourse to spiritual power.
12

Aylward Shorter describes the current trend of a drift from the mainline churches to new
generation churches in Africa on account of seeking for power to meet existential needs this
way:
Large numbers of so called independent churches and new religious
movements are coming into existence. As long ago as 1968, David Barret
identified as many as 6,000 such movements in Africa alone... These have
spread with surprising rapidity in many countries of the Third World. These
millenarian teachings and their tenets concerning demonic illness and faith-
healing are often attractive to Christians who are dissatisfied with the attitude
of the mainline, mission-related churches, Catholic included, towards healing
and exorcism.
13


The MFM Church has a large followership of people who before now belonged to the
mainline churches and other denominations that do not dwell on spiritual warfare. The
churchs emphasis is on holiness and Pentecostal power as experienced in the New
Testament, with a particular stress on exorcism has attracted many into its fold. A recent
public acclamation by the governor of Ogun state in Nigeria, Chief Gbenga Daniel drives
home the point on the prime focus of the MFM church. He said during a visit to the MFM
prayer city during the monthly Power Must Change Hands Programme
14
I am aware we have

11
A. Shorter, Jesus and the Witchdoctor, An approach to healing and wholeness, Maryknoll, NY: Orbis
Books,1985, 11.
12
Robert C. Blascke, Quest for Power, p.27.
13
A. Shorter, Jesus and the Witchdoctor, An approach to healing and wholeness, 12.
14
One attractive feature of the MFM church is the regular monthly Power Must Change Hands programme. it
holds on every first Saturday of each month in the sprawling prayer city along the Ibadan Lagos Express road
devoted to prayer, fasting and healing. This programme is akin to the pool of Bethesda experience in John 5,
where the sick and impotent gather awaiting the turning of the pool by the angel of God. People gather at this
a lot of Pentecostal churches, but definitely, the MFM is different. When you look at
churches where prayer is the issue, MFM is number one. I have heard about it and I have
witnessed it today.
15


The church started as an offshoot of the Christ Apostolic Church, one of the foremost
indigenous churches in Nigeria. The MFM church however is often categorized as a
Pentecostal church because of its emphasis on Holy Spirit, power, divine healing and
exorcism. The church shares similar doctrinal beliefs with the CAC and same ministry
emphasis on prayer-healing. Besides the late Apostle Joseph Ayodele Babalola who was one
of the founding fathers of the CAC church is highly revered by Daniel Olukoya as his
mentor. Many of his publications are dedicated to Babalola, whose demonstration of the
power of God over evil forces was overwhelming
16
. He said this about the late Babalola,
(referred in the following text as Brother J.A),
Brother J.A and his team of aggressive evangelist and prayer warriors entered
forbidden forests, silenced demons that demanded worship, paralysed deeply-
rooted anti-gospel activities, emptied hospitals by the healing power of the
LORD Jesus Christ, rendered witchdoctors jobless and started the first
indigenous Holy-Ghost filled church in Nigeria. So far-and we stand to be
corrected-none has equalled, let alone surpassed this humble Brother in the
field of aggressive evangelism in the country.
17


The area of interests and similarity had always been in the aspect of healing through
the power of Jesus Christ, and confronting and silencing demons, witches and other evil
spirits. The difference between these churches however lies in methods employed in healing
and casting out evil spirits. The CAC depends on prayers, use of holy or sanctified water for
healing of the physically and mentally ill people, the MFM church believe in the practice of
exorcism that includes severance of covenant relationship with dead spirits, ancestral
spirits, idols and local deities, witchcraft etc. These are the major sources of illness and
diseases and other cases of misfortunes such as barrenness, ill luck, disasters, and setbacks in
life endeavours. The MFM believes that exorcism was an integral part of Jesus ministry and

venue from all over the nation to pray as led by the man of God, Dr. Daniel Olukoya, for deliverance from all
their ailments and difficulties. Many who attend this programme though are not members of the MFM church.
15
Daniel thanks MFM for Prayers, The Nation on Sunday. June 15, 2008, 58.
16
D.K. Olukoya, Prayer Warfare Against 70 Mad Spirits, Lagos: Battle Cry Ministries Publication,2004, 10.
17
D.K. Olukoya, Prayer Warfare Against 70 Mad Spirits, 10.
go as far as suggesting that Jesus dealings with the demon possessed is key to understanding
the earthly ministry of Jesus Christ.

4.2 Structure

The MFM metamorphosed from a prayer fellowship into a full fledge church in 1994,
and immediately started a network of new branches in all state capitals of Nigeria, and in
other prominent cities and towns across the nation. This church movement also spread to
other African countries and regions of the world as pioneer missionaries were sent bearing
the churchs emphasis on deliverance. Today, international branches exist in all the
continents of the world. It is remarkable that a church of a Nigerian origin can make such
impact in the space of twenty years and be found in the major cities of the world.

The General Overseer of the MFM church as noted earlier is Pastor (Dr.) Daniel
Kolawole Olukoya. There are four Assistant General Overseers (AGOs), overseeing
different departments of the ministry. Working under these AGOs are eight Senior Regional
Overseers, 41 Assistant Regional Overseers all over the country and twenty one others who
oversee the churchs mission abroad. There are other senior pastors who are directly
responsible for one function or the other in the ever growing church ministry. Local pastors
take care of local parishes. In the MFM church, the major form of evangelism is through
church planting and by invitation to church programmes and activities.

4.3 Theology

4.3.1 Vision and Mission Statement
The following are the goals and aims of the Mountain of Fire and Miracle
Ministries,
To propagate the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ all over the world.
To promote the revival of apostolic signs, wonders and miracles.
To bring together the children of God who are lost in dead churches.
To train believers in the art and science of spiritual warfare; thus making them an
aggressive and victorious army for the Lord.
To train believer to receive the Holy Ghost baptism and fire as well as a daily
walk and relationship with the Holy Spirit.
To turn the joy of our enemies to sorrow. That is why we would always have a
deliverance ministry wherever we are. If you do not believe in deliverance, you
are not supposed to be in MFM.
To build an aggressive end-time army for the Lord. MFM is an end-time Church
where we build an aggressive end-time army for the Lord. WHAT IS AN END-
TIME CHURCH? An end-time Church is a Church where a sinner enters with two
options. He either repents or does not come back, contrary to the present day
Church where sinners are comfortable and find things so easy and convenient.
To deliver those who have become slaves to Pastors, Prophets and Apostles.
To build up heavenly-bound and aggressive Christians. The priority in MFM is for
people to make heaven. It is not a worldly Church.
To purify the Pentecostal dirtiness of this age.

The MFM church is critical of churches that do not share their view on African
worldview and exorcism. Indeed, it is their aim as stated in their vision and mission statement
to bring together children of God who are lost in dead churches.
18
These churches are often
regarded as dead churches as noted above. Some of the indigenous churches that fall into
their categorization of dead churches engage in syncretism such as adopting elements of
African culture and traditional religion in their worship. Some of these churches are
sometimes called spiritual churches because of their perceived occultist practices (as they
sometimes use extra-biblical sources such as the seven books of Moses, the worship of
angels, practices which are not found in the Bible).

This tendency of discrediting churches with dissimilar beliefs or practices has been
acknowledged to be common to the Pentecostal-charismatic churches by some writers on
evolving trends in African churches. Meyer, for example, noted that although charismatics
tend to critique mainline churches for seeking to accommodate local culture through
Africanisation, they dismiss Spiritual churches for drawing on occult forces, making use of
allegedly idolatry elements such as candles and incense and thus linking up with the powers

18
http: // www.mountainoffire.org. 2. Accessed 4/1/2008.
of darkness.
19
Some of the Aladura churches in Nigeria, such as the Celestial Church of
Christ and the Sabbath Churches are often regarded in the pejorative term as spiritual
churches because of their inclusion of elements mentioned above in their practice. Also
included among dead churches are mission churches, whose views on exorcism are
moderated by the post enlightenment view of Western churches that does not subscribe to
existence of spirits, let alone practice exorcism.

The allusion to dead churches is one reason that in the view of Appiah-Kubi that
many are attracted to indigenous churches. He reasons that the African elements-
particularly the supernatural powers of the prophets and healing miracles that counteract the
forces of evil, disease and witchcraft-are sought by those unhappy and dissatisfied with the
strictly western nature of most of the mission churches.
20
However, it is to be seen that such
stance on labelling churches of different views or practice as dead churches hardly promotes
an ecumenical spirit. Many of the AICs erroneously consider their churches exclusively as
where Gods presence is active, and not in any other.

This belief and orientation of labelling other churches that imbibe certain cultural
elements in their practices as syncretistic is the basis which Harold Turner
21
used in
categorizing the African Independent churches into two. The first of these classifications are
Ethiopian churches that seceded from Euro-American mission churches and strongly
accentuate African traditional elements in their worship context. The other group according
to Turner is the Zionist or Apostolic churches. These are indigenous churches that emphasize
prophecy, healing and possession by the Spirit and are intolerant of any measure to adopt
elements of African traditions into their new found Christian faith as they always insist on
strict adherence to their perception of biblical principles. They are sometimes regarded as
belonging to the holiness movement. The Mountain of Fire and Miracles can be classified
into the latter category.

The Mountain of Fire and Miracles Church abhor the use of cultural paraphernalia of
worship such as local musical instruments like drums, tambourines, flute, xylophones etc.,

19
B. Meyer, Christianity in Africa: From African Independent to Pentecostal-Charismatic Churches, Annual
Review of Anthropology, June 2004, 33:447-74.
20
K. Appiah-Kubi, Indigenous African Churches: Signs of Authenticity, in K. Appiah-Kubi & Sergio Torres
(eds.), African Theology En Route, Maryknoll NY: Orbis Books, 1981, 120.
21
R. E. Hood, Must God Remain Greek? Afro-Cultures and God-Talk, Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1990,26.
common in other AICs and stick to imported musical instruments, like the piano from Europe
and America for soul winning and edification of the body of Christ.
22
The probable reason for
this is the fear of contamination of spirits because of the cultural linkage, as the African
ancestry and culture are believed to be the source of demonization and negative or evil
happenings, according to their teachings, which the ordinary Christian must be wary of. This
was the perception adopted earlier on by the white missionaries who in the word of Meyer
23

demonized and diabolized African traditional religion. Not only were the use of local
instruments prohibited in the churches, traditional African music was not permitted in and
outside the church because they regarded everything in African culture as pagan and
devilish, and therefore unsuitable for the church.
24


Philip Jenkins reasons that the pagan inheritance has a complex impact on
contemporary Christianity in Africa. He said some Christian thinkers have a highly
inclusive view of the older religions, recognizing the presence of God in traditional faiths.
Other believers, though, are less tolerant. The mere presence of alternative religions
reminiscent of those condemned in the Bible allows some Christians to frame these practices
in terms of devil worship, giving credibility to the objective existence of satanic evil.
25


Does this imply that these churches are unwilling to cultivate an appropriate
Christology suiting for their people? This seems not to be the case. Brinkman avers that there
are some newer Pentecostal churches in Latin America and Africa that are not particular
about the inculturation process as They do not reflect very much at all on the cultural attire
in which Jesus comes to them,... neither are they much concerned about the Western
development of doctrine about him, but their concern is how they draw directly as it were
from the source of living water that the New Testament Jesus has remained, unchanged for


22
The Church & Mission Magazine, Vol.1, No.9, Nov/Dec, 2009,20. It was reported that the G.O of the MFM
church purchased an Allen organ for $200,000 (two hundred thousand dollars) which is said to be the biggest of
its kind in Africa. This lends credence to the fact that the church does not give attention to the acculturation
process because of its suspicion of anything that has to do with African culture.
23
Birgit Meyer, Christianity in Africa: From African Independent to Pentecostal-Charismatic Churches,
Annual Review of Anthropology. 2004, 33, 447-76. Meyer argued against the incorporation of spiritual entities
common to Africa tradtional religion to fit into the Churchs image of the devil.
24
D. Oyinloye, Christology from Below: A Reflection on Christological elements in selected Yoruba Songs in
S. O Abogunrin et al, ed. Christology in African Context, Ibadan: NABIS Publications, 2003, 262.
25
P. Jenkins, The New Faces of Christianity-Believing the Bible in the Global South, New York: Oxford
University Press, 2006.101
millions of people.
26
Kwesi Dickson, a Ghanaian theologian posits that there is an affinity
between the Jewish culture of Jesus time and contemporary African culture
27
so that the
experiences of the New Testament characters resonates in many African cultural contexts
today. This is probably why these churches will want the Biblical Jesus not to be tinkered
with by the call or clamour for a contextual or an African Jesus.

4.3.2 Theology of Healing and Deliverance

The theology of healing in the MFM is predicated on sin being the root cause of all
diseases. At the beginning everything God created was good. But sin came, and along with it,
sickness and diseases. This is why physical healing is closely associated with spiritual
deliverance and forgiveness of sin.
28
Jesus Christ brought relief and deliverance for the
infirmed through forgiveness of sin by destroying the works of Satan. Jesus Christ has power
over sickness and diseases, and freely offers healing and deliverance to those who are willing.
The concept and practice of healing in the Mountain of Fire and Miracles Church is
predicated on faith-healing and on belief on spirit theory as against the orthodox medicines
germ theory. These concepts of spirit theory and germ theory were coined by Aylward
Shorter to describe the prevalent practice amongst AICs and Pentecostal churches to fault
every malady on the activity of demons or evil spirit which have to be exorcised through the
means of deliverance. In one of his publications, Olukoya confirms Shorters assertion, when
he said More and more people are coming to grips with the fact that it is impossible to enjoy
ones life on earth without going through some form of spiritual deliverance. This situation is
more pertinent when we consider that Africans and blacks in the Diaspora are products of
negative foundation.
29


The MFM Church believes emphatically that the African is surrounded by
innumerable evil spirits that seeks his destruction from which he must constantly extricate
himself by means of deliverance or exorcism. This belief in pervasive evil ruling the African
sphere is corroborated by the claims of David Tuesday Adamo who reasons that, The
existence of evil is painfully real in the African indigenous tradition. Witches, sorcerers,

26
M.E. Brinkman, The Non-Western Jesus-Jesus as Bodhisattva, Avatara, Guru, Prophet, Ancestor or Healer?,
8.
27
D. Stinton, Jesus of Africa, Voices of contemporary African Christology, Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 2004,
28
D.K.Olukoya, Prayers to Destroy Diseases & Infirmities,11.
29
D.K Olukoya, Deliverance by Fire, Lagos: Battle Cry Christian Ministries, 2000,1.
wizards, evil spirits and all ill-wishers are considered enemies. The awareness of these
enemies is a major source of fear and anxiety in African indigenous society.
30
In other
instances Olukoya believes that infirmities are caused by curses, and until these curses are
done away with, the victim will continue to suffer.
Hidden curses can hinder several people from being healed. A minister who is
worth his salt will know that the first thing to do in a healing meeting is to
break the curses of infirmity. If the curse of infirmity is in place and you
continue to shout your voice hoarse without breaking the curse, no single
healing will take place. The prayer of healing will not work if the victim is still
under the umbrella of infirmity.
31


This makes healing intractably linked to deliverance as one cannot be done without
the other. According to Olukoya, the enemy has poured legion of angry spirits into the
world. These spirits act in a rage, and exhibit unthinkable madness and wickedness.
32
At the
MFM church headquarters, this writer interviewed a member who was once a member of one
of the mainline churches on why he joined the MFM church, he said he was married for many
years, but had no child. This was a disturbing experience for him, especially the pressure and
the embarrassment he received from the extended family. He was invited for one of the
Power Must change Hands prayer programmes for the barren. He went with his wife and
here they were told the root cause of their problem, the evil forces in their ancestry. They
began attending these programmes regularly and praying vigorously to overcome these forces
responsible for their barrenness. To their surprise, his wife became pregnant, and today they
have two children.

The church has a Healing and Deliverance Information Questionnaire which every
counselee has to fill, to enhance effective deliverance ministrations. The questionnaire
comes in this format below:

Religion and Practices
Fathers religion: Idols/Juju, Islam, Aladura, Celestial, Occultism, Others,
Christianity?
Mothers religion: Idols/Juju, Islam.

30
D. T. Adamo, African Cultural Hermeneutics, 71.
31
D.K. Olukoya, Dealing with Hidden Curses, Lagos: Battle Cry Christian Ministries, 2001, 54.
32
D.K Olukoya, Prayer Warfare Against 70 Mad Spirits, Lagos : Battle Cry Christian Ministries, 2004,15.
Your religion: Idols/Juju
Spiritism: Have you any idol? Have you been to native doctors before? Have you
slept there before? Have you been to palmists, mediums, oracles before? Do you go to
what stars foretell? Have you cast horoscope before? Do you belong to a cult? Are
you in any of these faiths- Bahai, Eckankar, Grail, Hare Krishna? Do you belong to
Aladura prayer Houses? Have you cut marks in your body and rubbed medicines?
Have you been bathed with medicine before, Has your head/life been placed under
any special juju? Has anyone put a curse on you before? Do you have ancestral
shrines? Were your parents juju priests/ priestesses?
What things make you afraid in your dreams-snakes, cows, dogs, cats, masquerades,
armed persons, mad men/ women, monsters? Do they attack you, catch you, and
pursue you? What do you do during such attacks-hide, attack back, sand bank, another
world? Do you struggle through a jungle in your dreams? Do you wake up to find
scratches on your skin, pain in your lower ribs? Do you wake up feeling all beaten up
and tired?
In your dreams, do you find yourself in witch coven, planning evil, sent to harm
people, or peoples businesses, or to cause sickness? Have you given anyone to be
killed, or killed anyone, or butchered? Have you eaten the meat of anyone killed?
Are you afraid of enemies, death, or just simply afraid? Do you dream of open pits,
graves, coffins, and corpse? Do you see dead relations, dead friends/ mates? Have you
planned suicide, attempted suicide? Do you get trapped in your dreams, or locked up,
or put in chains, or bound up, or put in a fence? Do you fall from heights, hill, or tree,
or upstairs? Do you ever dream at all, or often cannot remember your dreams? Do you
get biting/ pinching sensations? Do you worry? Do you dream of your former office,
house or school?
Is your sleep disturbed? Do you find it hard to sleep again if you wake up? Have you
ever had complete sleepless nights? Have you ever had brain lag? Or gone mental?
Do you have to take sleeping pills? Do you hear voices saying strange things to you?
Do you discuss with them? Do you have heat in your head? Or odd movements in
your head? Or a complete black-out at times? Have you ever smoked Indian hemps?
Do you take hot drinks? Do you dream-walk
Do you dream and often see yourself naked? Do you do courtship, romance, caressing
in your dream? Have you had an engagement or rejected a suitor in your dreams?
How often do you have wet dreams? Do you mate- actually have the sex act? Do you
always mate with the same person? Have you had a wedding/ marriage in your
dreams? Do you suspect your sex partner is a spirit-mammy water/ mermaid? What
has your sex-mate promised you? Do you have snakes round your waist? Do you
masturbate? Or are you homosexual, do you dabble into oral sex, find it hard to stop
these habits? Do you fornicate, commit adultery, and find it hard to stop the habits?
Have you ever mated with an animal? Are you barren, find it hard to obtain child/
children? Are you single, find it hard to obtain a mate? Have you committed rape,
been raped? Have you committed incest?

Demonization
Spiritual Power: Have you given foods, drinks or sacrifices to spirits before? Do you
buy and sell in your dreams? By looking, can you know people who are familiar
spirits, witches, wizards, people who have seducing spirits, people who will be mad in
future, people who will soon die, people who have crown, thrones, servants, palace,
princely regalia, dress of a priest or priestess? Have you a company of spirits whom
you command, send on errands, who are attendants? What is your post in the spirit
world? Have you ever met Lucifer or Satan or some demonic princes in person? Do
you have birds in your chest? Do you know things before they happen, by dreams, by
voice? Can you turn into any kind of animals, reptiles, bird? What is change in your
body? What is hidden inside? Have you powers that when you say things they
happen? Do you always battle uncontrollable evil thoughts?

Olukoya who is the sole theologian in the MFM church sees everything from the
perspective of spiritual warfare and demonology. The emphasis in this church therefore, as
said before is to battle these evil spirits and set their captives free. They teach on spiritual
warfare and encourage members to be violent in the spirit. Olukoya said that to undo the
wicked acts of the evil forces, spiritual violence is needed. You must have violent anxiety.
You must burst forth with holy anger, violent determination and faith. You must also possess
holy fury, fierceness, rage and madness. No soul that ever cried violently to God has been
disappointed.
33
The negative foundation Olukoya alludes to in his book has to do with the

33
D.K Olukoya, Prayer Warfare Against 70 Mad Spirits, Lagos : Battle Cry Christian Ministries, 2004, 15.
individuals ancestry. Our roots, according to him, play a significant factor on the kind of life
we live and the progress we make. As Africans, we often trace our roots to our villages,
clans, tribes, families, ancestors etc. According to Olukoya, The destinies of most black
people have been buried alive by satanic relatives.
34
The orientation in the church is anti-
African culture tending to follow in the line of early European missionaries who demonized
the culture of the people as pagan.

Whereas some African theologians seek recourse to their ancestral roots as a means of
explaining or contextualizing the gospel in Africa, the MFM considers such associations as
negative because recourse to usage of ancestral past will bring further harm to the Christian.
African theologians for instance will consider Jesus Christ as the super ancestor, ancestor per
excellence, proto-ancestor etc. Olukoya and some pastors of same theological leaning in the
new generation churches would have none of that, because ancestors, ancestral spirits and
ancestor veneration in African culture are, according to them, the root cause of the numerous
afflictions and ailments bedevilling Africans. Olukoya said in other publications
There is no denying the fact that many of our forefathers were wicked. Many
of them served idols and made terrible covenants with very powerful entities.
Again a good number of them received terrible curses. In many families,
powerful idols are worshipped till date. Since you cannot isolate yourself from
your ancestors, the influence of idols will affect you.
35


Deliverance is to dismantle the evil platform prepared for you by your ancestors
36


Deliverance is refusal to pay the evil bill of your ancestors
37


4.3.3 Statements of belief
38

1. The Scriptures are the inspired Word of God; the only basis for our faith and
fellowship.
2. The one True God, ETERNAL EXISTENT in three Persons. God the Father, God
the Son and the Holy Spirit.

34
D.K Olukoya, Dealing with the Evil Powers of Your Fathers House, Lagos: Battle Cry Christian Ministries,
2004, 68.
35
D.K Olukoya, Dealing with the Evil Powers of your Fathers House, Lagos: Battle Cry Books, 2002, 8.
36
D.K. Olukoya, Deliverance: Gods Medicine Bottle, Lagos: Battle Cry Books, 2002,16.
37
D.K. Olukoya, Deliverance: Gods Medicine Bottle, Lagos: Battle Cry Books, 2002,19.
38
Mountain of Fire and Miracles Ministries: Vision and Mission Statement. www.moutainoffice.org/mfm
ministries html. Accessed 12/9/2007

3. The fall and deprivation of mankind, necessitating redemption through the Blood
of Jesus Christ.
4. The Salvation of Mankind is through the Redeeming Work of Jesus Christ and the
Regenerative Work of the Holy Spirit. Sanctification is seen as an act of
separation from that which is evil.
5. The Baptism of the Holy Spirit-Acts 2:4; 10:44 and 19:1-6
6. We believe in Restitution for past wrongs where possible.
7. The Ordinance of the Church, i.e. the Lords Supper and Water Baptism.
8. The Church Universal, both visible and invisible.
9. The Ministry, divinely called and scripturally ordained as that approved of
Almighty God.
10. Divine healing as provided by the Lord Jesus Christ.
11. The Rapture ushering all believers into the Marriage Supper of the Lamb, and the
second advent of the Lord Jesus Christ when He will physically land on the earth.
12. The Millennial Reign of Christ.
13. The Fire Judgment.
14. The New Heaven and Earth.

Of notable interest here is the belief in divine healing as provided by the Lord Jesus
Christ. Olukoya emphasize the centrality of the blood of Jesus in the process of deliverance.
He claims that the blood of Jesus is a potent weapon against spiritual wickedness in high
places and to demolish the stronghold of satanic forces. The MFM as observed earlier teach
that the root cause of every infirmity is an evil spirit. These spirits inflict all manner of
sickness and diseases on people. In order to heal the infirmed, the spirit responsible for the
sickness has to be identified and cast out or exorcised. Many whose ailments have defied
Western orthodox medicine troop to this church as a last resort. Others who are impoverished
by the worsening economic situation in the country and cannot afford cost of treatment at the
hospitals also come trusting God for divine healing.

4.4 Practises: Spiritual Warfare and Imprecatory Prayer

The belief and practice of the MFM Church is rooted in the axiom that prayer is the
key and solution to all human difficulties. It is a ministry given wholly to prayer as often seen
in their regular weekly and monthly programmes. People are encouraged to pray earnestly
and accompany such prayer with fasting in order to overcome problems in life. As it is, the
emphasis on prayer here follows the old theological maxim, Lex orandi, Lex Credendi, the
law of prayer (the way we worship), and the law of belief (what we believe)... how we
worship reflects what we believe and determines how we live.
39
The way of life in the MFM
is the way of prayer. Prayer is believed to hold the key and solutions to every human
difficulty. It is recommended that prayer be accompanied with fasting, as it is believed this it
potent. The length of fasting is determined by the gravity of the problem.

A visit to the headquarters of the MFM headquarters church by this writer revealed an
absence of the usual ecstatic and emotional experiences common in Pentecostal churches.
The people simply prayed and they prayed vigorously, clenching their fists, pounding the air,
stamping their feet on the ground as a sign of vehemence against the devil and its cohorts
responsible for their misfortunes. They prayed in response to the prayer points raised by the
man of God, the General Overseer, Dr. Daniel Olukoya, who earlier on the service had
exhorted them from the New Testament text, Mark 8:22-26 on the theme Dealing with the
spirit of Bethsaida.

In his sermon, he emphasised the importance of location in the fulfilment of ones
purpose or destiny in life. According to him, there are Christians who are presently in wrong
churches that do not emphasize deliverance. He cited the case of a man who belonged to one
of the holiness churches around but was living in bondage and tormented in his dreams by a
fair in complexion woman who always come into his room to have sex with him in the night.
It was not until he came to the MFM Church that he was delivered. All churches, according
to him, are not the same. He alluded to the fact that the town of Bethsaida where Jesus healed
the blind man was not merely a geographical location, but actually a spirit. This was why
Jesus led the man away from the town before he was able to perform the miracle. After he
received his sight, Jesus forbade him from returning to the town. Therefore, Bethsaida is a
spirit that every Christian has and must be delivered from. Bethsaida spirit represents a
cursed environment, continuous satanic attack, angels of darkness feigning to be angels of
light, spirit of retrogression responsible for drawbacks in life, barriers to achievements and
success in life, bad company or relationships, bondages, miracle aborters, stubborn

39
H.McNichol, Catholic Online, Lex Orandi, Lex Credendi, As We Worship, So Shall We Live,
www.catholic.org/featured/headline. php. (accessed 21/11/1010)
breakthrough resisters, charms and wicked spirits operating in fathers houses etc. To these,
he urged the members to pray to dislodge the spirit of Bethsaida.

He asked them to pray in this manner, O God, deliver me from my Bethsaida!And
the people began to pray. They prayed jabbing at imaginary enemies as they were made to
understand in the sermon. They were encouraged by the man of God not to pray silently as
the devil is not a gentle sort, and the stubborn spirit of Bethsaida will not let go easily. The
members resumed their prayer, praying violently shaking their heads and bodies as an
evidence of the seriousness of the spiritual warfare they were engaged in.

This particular experience in the church revealed the pattern of hermeneutics in the
MFM and in some other AICs, where meanings are read into Bible texts and the word of God
taking at its face value. Such Bible interpretations appeal to Nigerians because it makes Bible
narratives and characters resonate in their local African context. They are able to connect
their own situations to bible texts literarily and apply the same without seeking for what may
be considered as an appropriate interpretation. The word of God is made alive in their context
as they are not particularly interested in what is before the text or after the text, but how the
text applies to their current realities. This accounts for burgeoning growth of the AICs and
newer Pentecostal churches in Nigeria like the MFM.

In a similar vein, Alan Isaacson highlighted the differences between the Western and
Nigerian Christian cultures as seen in certain underlying assumptions and ideas in Western
Christianity which have no room in Nigerian Christianity. These assumptions include the
following:
(a) I dont believe in miracles;
(b) Dreams arent real
(c) There are no such things as demons
(d) Herbalists (local native doctors who are healers and diviners, but may also curse),
are never really harmful (if they really exist)
(e) Most illnesses are psychosomatic
(f) There is always a rational explanation.
(g) You cant take everything in the Bible at its face value
(h) All religions are basically the same.
40
As regards Bible interpretation, Jenkins is
of the opinion that Biblical texts and passages that the South makes central are
seen by many Northern churches as marginal, symbolic, or purely historical in
nature.
41


Pastor Olukoya addressed the congregation, sharing his thoughts and revelation
received about wicked activities of the devil and demons. He expounds from the Bible the
activities of the devil and its quest to dominate the world and even the affairs of the
Christians. There are works of hidden darkness he says that must be uprooted by all means
through concerted prayers. He also spoke about pastors of other churches who were critical
about the emphasis and methods of deliverance of the MFM church, but when they became
hard-pressed due to the interference of the evil one in their churches, are now resorting to the
same methods of MFM church which they once condemned. Deliverance is both imperative
and indispensable for the Christian if he/she is to achieve his/her destiny in life because
according to him, These are stubborn spirits that can only respond to violent prayers. At the
end of the exhortation he calls for prayer specifying particular prayer points. In response the
people pray in unison demanding for the demise of the spirits or agents of destruction who
are after their lives, chanting simultaneously Die! Die! Die...repeatedly. The prayer is
rounded up when the pastor shouts in Jesus name we pray, and the people chorus
Amen. The process is repeated again with fresh insights from the Bible on activities of the
devil and new prayer points. The people are encouraged to pray again attacking the host of
darkness, witches, demons etc. On why the MFM prays for the death of enemies, instead of
loving them, Olukoya said:
Many things we say at the MFM are not clear to many people. For example,
when we say a particular power should die, this baffles so many people. When
you carefully check your scriptures, you will find out that it was not always
that God pronounces death sentence on anyone. But when it came to the
matter of witchcraft, the Bible says that Gods death sentence is upon it. This
explains why we always tell certain powers to die. We know that spirits do not
die, but when we say, die, we mean they should become functionless,
useless, and disappear.
42


40
A Isaacson, Deeper Life The extraordinary growth of the Deeper Life Bible Church, London: Hodder and
Stoughton, 1990, 20.
41
P. Jenkins, The New Faces of Christianity, 98.
42
D.K.Olukoya, Dealing With the Evil Powers Of Your Fathers House, Lagos: The Battle Cry Christian
Ministries, 2004, 66.

In one of his publications however, Olukoya narrates an account of the relations of a member
who died because they were responsible for her inability to marry. It was during one of the
monthly programme, Power Must Change Hands, that a word of knowledge came forth
about someone there at the programme who, if not released by those in charge of her case,
would attend the burial ceremonies of all these adversaries within seven days.
43
One after the
other these relations, beginning with her parents began to die. Within an interval of one hour,
four people died. Thereafter, the sister got engaged and married within three months. Jesus
has killing power. He looked at the fig tree and spoke death to it and the tree died. When one
killing force meets another killing force, the lesser killing force must bow
44
It does not
matter therefore if there are spirit beings or human beings that are perceived to be the
enemies that have to be done away with. The important thing here is that the victim is
released by the evil one from any form of bondage through death of the enemy. Closely
related to this is imprecatory prayer. These are prayers said crying for vengeance on their
enemies. Prayer here often involves raining curses on perceived enemies responsible for
misfortunes or setbacks.

The church recommends always prolong fasting to undo the works of darkness.
Fasting here could last for between three to seventy days depending as earlier said, on the
gravity of the problem. The array of fruit and soft drink sellers (necessary to break prolong
period of fasting) at the headquarters church, creates the impression that fasting is not
optional in this setting. It is believed to be a major weapon in the spiritual warfare especially
when the victim suffers from stubborn spiritual problems that will not go easily except by
the means of prolonged prayer and fasting. It is a common practice for pastors in the church
to recommend prayers and fasting as a therapy for all manners of problems encountered by
the members, and even for those whose physical conditions would not ordinarily allow them
to participate in a prolonged prayer and fasting programme. They are encouraged to fast as a
means of delivering them from their afflictions. People with physical ailments which in this
context are attributed to spiritual causes seldom get referrals to the hospitals. They are taken
care by the church and provided for throughout their stay in the healing and deliverance
sessions which may last days, weeks or months. Such prolonged programmes often take place
at the Prayer City, the MFM camp outside Lagos. The infirmed are left in the care of

43
D.K. Olukoya, Dominion Prosperity, Lagos: The Battle Cry Christian Ministries, 2001, 13.
44
D.K. Olukoya, Dominion Prosperity (Lagos : Battle Cry Christian Ministries, 2004, 17.
seasoned pastors who are versed in the art of prayer and deliverance. Orthodox medicines are
hardly used, but simply prayer and fasting for deliverance. The church also provides
opportunity for one to one counselling through a special service entitled C.A.R.E, an
acronym for compassion, affirmation, restoration and encouragement.

Individuals are also encouraged to practice the act of self deliverance. In other words,
they can pray at home or wherever, without the help of any pastor or church leaders. It is
tagged a do- it -yourself prayer of deliverance. This process of self deliverance is facilitated
by the use of published prayer books by the General Overseer. These books contain
devotional studies on spiritual warfare and often give detailed accounts of the enemies
activities in depriving the ignorant of blessings, fruitfulness, productivity, joy, success etc,
through clairvoyance, witchcraft, ancestral spirits, and other sources that are ubiquitous in the
African society. Each section or paragraph of the prayer book is punctuated by a long list of
prayers attacking the source of the problems affecting the individuals health and well being
that are often linked to ones family background, ancestry or negative past often referred to as
bad foundation.

The one to be delivered is expected to recite the cited scriptures and pray with all
vehemence or aggression and sometimes violently as a sign of anger at the wicked spirits
who have brought about misfortunes on the individual. Some of the books list instructions on
how to go about the practice of self deliverance as contained below:

1. Locate your area of need by looking at the table of contents.
2. Select appropriate scriptures promising you what you desire. Meditate on them and let
them sink into your spirit.
3. Go about the prayers in any of the following ways as led by the Holy Spirit:
a. Three days night vigil, i.e., praying from 10:00 p.m. to 5:00 a.m. for three
consecutive nights.
b. Three days fast (breaking daily), i.e. praying at intervals and breaking the fast at
6:00 p.m. or 9:00 p.m. daily
c. Seven days night vigil, i.e., praying from 10:00 p.m. to 5:00 a.m. for seven
consecutive nights.
d. Seven days fast (breaking daily), i.e., praying at intervals and breaking the fast at
6:00 p.m. or 9:00 p.m. daily.
e. Three or more days of dry fast, i.e., praying and fasting three or more days
without any food or drink.
f. Pray aggressively
45



4.5 Evaluation

Some Nigerian theologians have reacted to some of these healing practices that tend
to see everything from the perspective of spiritual warfare and the tendency to demonize
everything relating to African culture. Oborji, a Nigerian Catholic theologian for example,
laments the proliferation of the healing churches on this account. He said:
What is serious about this situation is that with the appearance of these
churches, the true Christian faith of some Africans has been endangered since
they are now practicing their faith in these distorted churches; there is also the
possibility for syncretism to arise, because they consider it impossible for the
Western established churches to give a valid answer to their daily problem.
This is the great challenge which evangelization and inculturation of the
Christian faith has brought to Africa today.
46


He also contests the claim that AICs represent a true African religiosity on which the
inculturation of the Christian faith in the continent could anchor. Rather, he posits that AICs
thrive on ignorance as he said the ordinary peoples lack of knowledge of the riches found
in knowing Christ and believing in his church might partly account for the flourishing of the
independent churches in Africa today
47
He blames the proliferation of healing churches not
only on ignorance, but also on the tendency of Africans to see all illnesses as having their
roots in evil forces rather than physiological reasons. Besides he queries the AICs concept of
suffering, where suffering, like in the MFM context is regarded as evil, a punishment that
may be traced to ones ancestry or misdeeds of the past in ones lineage that must be
exorcized. As a Catholic theologian, Oborji believes that human suffering has its salvific
value as it draws the sufferer closer to God and works of piety. Olukoya however sees

45
D.K. Olukoya, Prayers To Destroy Diseases & Infirmities, Lagos: Mountain Of Fire and Miracles Ministries
Publications, 2000, ix .
46
Francis O. Oborji Towards A Christian Theology of African Religion Issues of Interpretation and Mission,
146.
47
Francis O. Oborji, Towards A Christian Theology of African Religion Issues of Interpretation and Mission,
141.
suffering as a season of life for the believer, a passing phase that must be endured, but which
can be vitiated by concerted prayers and fasting. He reasons:
Suffering means distress, anguish, trial and all forms of problems that are
unpleasant to the human body, soul and spirit. The saints who have gone
ahead of us had at one time or the other experienced their own time of
suffering. Therefore suffering is unavoidable...Do you want to be a champion?
If yes, you must pass through a season of affliction and suffering. I will never
suffer is a false religion of modern day Christians. The Scripture teaches that
you must partake in Christs sufferings...Some believers write themselves off
when passing through affliction and suffering. This type of Christians do not
realise that affliction is for short time and that it will soon pass away.
48



Suffering according to teachings in the new generation churches as the MFM as explained
above is a period of test that is certainly rewarded by God, and all who have been rich,
successful and influential in the Bible have undergone their periods of testing. The
expectations of suffering as a prerequisite for discipleship, is a recurrent theme in the
tradition or teachings of Jesus as noted by James Dunn.
49
For the followers of Christ who are
inheritors of the kingdom of God, sufferings in this world by way of rejection and
persecutions are inevitable, because ...the disciple is not greater than the master. Dunn
refers to the inevitability of suffering as the terms of discipleship, which involves hardship
and total commitment to the cause of Christ.
50
This is a far cry from what obtains in African
Pentecostalism and in some AIC churches like the MFM where the dominant teaching is on
how to live a life of bliss and prosperity, free from all the worries, pains and difficulties
prevalent in ones environment.

In addition, the MFM church has come to narrow the Christian faith to only deliverance
and spiritual warfare. Members come away with an orientation that all about Christianity is
exorcism and a need- oriented Christology, where Christians are always implored to make
demands on the name of Jesus and all the benefits they can derive, and not seek to enrich the
lives of others through aspects of discipleship that emphasize on demonstrating love. It is a
narrow gauge Christian emphasis that demonizes virtually all human experience and proffers
spiritual solution only in exorcism. As a corollary, the doctrine of grace is unwittingly denied

48
D.K, Olukoya, Seasons of Life, Lagos: The battle Cry Christian Ministries, 2005, 9-10.
49
J.D.G. Dunn, Christianity in the Making Jesus Remembered, Vol.1, Grand Rapids, Michigan: W.B. Eerdmans
Publishing co., 2003, 417.
50
J.D.G. Dunn, Christianity in the Making Jesus Remembered, Vol.1, 419.
as members are frequently subjected to acts of personal denial, praying and fasting, as though
that is what obtains salvation for them. The work of Christ is diminished in this setting by the
overarching emphasis on deliverance and what the individual can do for himself through the
process of self deliverance. Deliverance theology supersedes, as it were, Christological
emphasis in the MFM church and people have come to associate the church with this type of
theology rather than Christ of the theology. Many are becoming wary of what they aptly
described as the fall down and die theology (referring to process of exorcizing demons and
witches) and are moving to newer Pentecostal churches with emphasis on spiritual
development and prosperity.

Another criticism levelled against the MFM Church is her anti-ecumenism stance as
the leadership of the MFM openly condemns churches whose theology is at variance with the
deliverance theology they subscribe to. This, according to some Christian leaders in the
country does negate the high priestly prayer of Jesus Christ who prayed to God to the father
that his disciples be one. Does the MFM emphasis on deliverance theology preclude Christs
emphasis on the oneness of the church? Besides this, can it be assumed that the Christology
emphasised by the AICs and Pentecostal churches is best suited for the African Christian
context as against the that of the historic churches that is Western oriented and other
worldly? It can be deduced that the prime reason for the growth of churches other than the
mission churches is the emphasis on signs and wonders and existential concerns of the
people; and the Christology emphasised is one of power and victory over malignant spirits.

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