TB JOSHUA; Remembering the Exit of a World Changer
BY DARE ADEJUMO
The month of June is a significant month in the annals of the Synagogue Church of All Nations (SCOAN). It was the birth and passing of its founder, Prophet TB Joshua, that made him a great world changer.
Its fifth day marks the second year of his glorious exit from earth, and on the twelfth, the great man of God who cherished marking his birthdays would have been 60 years old.
Nations across the world would have been agog for an extraordinary Prophet of God whose footprints of wonderful deeds touching the lives of millions across the globe remain in the sand of time. TB Joshua came to revitalize the face of Christianity and made the physiognomy of practical Christian living as given by Jesus Christ already in abeyance real to mankind once again.
There’s no hide-and-seek in his life. He was love personified. The humbliest human being I have ever come across. Firm and stern, even in his moments of severity, you would still find love encapsulated. You cannot offend him. He’s extra sensitive, with propulsively radiating wisdom, unfathomable knowledge of life, charming and a paragon of magnetically illuminating character. He was completely acidic to vanity, envy, and jealousy. human comparison, imitation, vulgarity, and wonton desires. He described them as one of those “foolish things” not to be entertained for a moment in one’s life.
TB Joshua was a divinely self-made man. Here was a man with little elementary education. Yet with your degrees, prodigy of erudition, and western exposures, you would be humbled by the self-discovery of your personal hollowness or quasi-emptiness when you sit to discuss or share a view with TB Joshua, a shying rustic village man. TB Joshua was an attestation of God’s omniscience, Omnipresent, Omnipotent and greatness lies in simplicity.
I personally witnessed several cases of some other so-called men of God who, out of ignorance and envy, once persecuting him but, after receiving the touch of God in different dimensions, including the mere touching of EMMANUEL TV while praying, came to weep before God for forgiveness.
Joshua would only say to them: “I didn’t fire one single arrow back from all your arrows against me; otherwise, you won’t be here today to talk. One thing we should always know is this: I did not choose myself to do God’s work. He, in His wisdom, just chose me, and I know He is with me. God would never give anybody this kind of power He gave me if the person would use it for selfish purposes or against his perceived enemies. No!”
TB Joshua was a puzzle, an enigma. He was the light shining in the darkness that many couldn’t comprehend. He looked too simple and ordinary, having not been commissioned by the earthly papacy or religious authorities of the day, for him to be performing miracles of diverse kinds like breathing. This was clearly indescribable, incomprehensible, a mystery, and a shocker to the spiritual ignoramuses and empty, flamboyant oratorical, motivational preachers with big congregations.
That great English thinker and philosopher John Locke once said: “New opinions are always suspected and usually opposed without any other reason but because they are not already common”.
In God’s adamantine and inscrutable will, TB Joshua came to the scene when the acts of Christianity seen in Jesus Christ and His early disciples and apostles as captured in the Bible were gradually becoming moonlight tales to this generation. Religious leaders had already metamorphosed into careerism and polarised with pervasive, unhealthy, cacophonous standards. It was obvious that these religious leaders no longer knew what they were doing then, even today in several quarters without any tangible impacts on the lives of atrophied worshippers!
That was the turning point
There was no way T.B. Joshua could have had it easier. He faced satanic conspiracies and persecution galore, but the man remained focused with unmitigated perseverance, vision, and mission on his divine assignments, which he tenaciously upheld victoriously ill the last.
He took his persecution joyfully, and that vonspiracy against him at home was launched to the outside world in God’s agenda and design for his mission on earth.
Hear him:
“I began discovering the good life when I was only 15 years old.” My objectives and motives were determined at once. I wanted what God wanted, and I wanted it for the reason God wanted it”. That’s Prophet TB Joshua for you. Till the end, he carried his childhood with him. With malice to no one but love, charity, and firmness to all in God’s righteousness. To him, love is pure. Take good care of your heart because that is your communicating point with God and must ever remain pure to know and flow with Him. You can never love God if you don’t love your neighbours and your neighbours include your percieved enemies, those not in the same faith with you, the poor, and those in needs, who you must give love unconditionally.
This Godly character often made TB Joshua misrepresented by low spiritual human beings whenever they saw him attend to other people who were not Christians, just as his Master, Jesus, was accused of dining with Republicans and sinners, which made the religious authorities persecuted Him.
The truth of humanity, as once put by that foremost existentialist Italian philosopher, Soren Kierkegaard, is that history would always repeat itself because man will never learn from history. Many never discovered Joshua, not until he had departed! What a painful loss.
You can never find TB Joshua criticizing or talking about other men of God. He moved on quietly on his own, even though he lamented the pervasive discrimination and disunity in christendom.
Several people from other churches who received healings and miracles in his church, Synagogue Church Of All Nations (SCOAN), wanted to come and do thanksgiving in his church, but Joshua would not allow them. “Go back to your church and do your Thanksgiving and give your offering there. We are the same. God had already answered your prayers there before you came here” for you to see how selfless he was in all his dealings.
TB Joshua was more interested in the quality of your Christian life and character. He would ask you, ‘Do you hear from God? Do you listen to Him? Does He speak with you? Do you know how much you need Him? Do you have a relationship with him? The God’s General believed that your highest achievement on earth was to hear from God.
To TB Joshua, Christianity is not a religion but a relationship with God. If you don’t have that relationship with Him, you have missed it, and you are worshipping in vain. “How can you be worshiping a God you don’t know?” He would spiritually jerked up his congregants to move away from spiritual docility, complacency, and indolence.
TB Joshua was never an academic preacher. He spoke words of life that transformed the lives of ardent and fervent seekers of God and salvation.
I remember a woman nurse I once encountered where she had come to treat a patient as she stood looking at Emmanuel TV. On enquiries whether she knew of the television station, she said that she used to attend SCOAN. “I was a nurse and member of the church’s medical team. Then the church was not rich; it was just managing to survive. It was what happened during the man of God’s birthday that made me stop going, and besides, I had relocated to a farther distance. We all, on our own, contributed money to give TB Joshua a present. When we got there to present it, the man just asked us to put all the money in one sack. He asked us to choose some people among us to take the whole money to the disabled people’s home at Oko Baba. He instructed that one of us should just dip his or her hand in the sack and be distributing the money to them one by one with whatever the hand could gather at once, like that to the less privileged living there, and nothing should be left in the sack. I couldn’t believe it. I was shocked that the man could take everything there like that, not minding that the church itself was very poor”. This woman completely missed the beauty of life and essence of humanity the prophet symbolized. TB Joshua believed that your giving is only meaningful when you give what you cherished most. He would never give in to half measures. He was extraordinarily generous and at home in humility with all categories of people as a friend however commonised other people may look at them. Every human being is unique and important to TB Joshua and must be treated with dignity.
TB Joshua was never a burden to anyone but carried all human burdens that crossed his paths. He was the only man of God holding crusade abroad without asking for any donations or collecting offerings from worshippers. He would rather go there with loads of charity work for the people and the country. There was a time in Cameroon when the airwaves were jammed with announcements that TB Joshua would be coming to hold a crusade in Yaounde, asking for people to donate money. This was a scam because the scammers were capitalizing on Joshua’s popularity and the perceived pressure of the country’s request for his crusade program in Cameroon. TB Joshua, in holy anger, countered the announcements, saying: “That cannot be my TB Joshua of the Synagogue Church Of All Nations, SCOAN. I have no plans to go to Cameroon. God has not directed me to go there. Have you ever seen my pictures or envelopes asking for donations of money from anyone or anywhere? Please disregard this announcement. When God gives you an assignment, He will also send to you what you would need through His chosen vessels”. This is a symbolic message for you to differentiate the chalk from the cheese in the religiously distorted world. He never allowed himself for a moment to be carried away by anything.
The lofty principles and legacies of TB Joshua remain enduring and represent a high watershed in Christendom. The joy today is that SCOAN is in the capable hands of a down-to-earth and visionary successor, Pastor Evelyn Joshua, a woman who had gone through the spiritual mills and rigorous discipline of TB Joshua, the spiritual mentor extraordinaire who strongly believed that life’s biggest decision is what you do with Jesus.