Sowetan

Marchers lift veil on false prophets

Pastor tells woman her husband is bad luck

- By Penwell Dlamini

When Tinyiko Masemola joined a church in Ekurhuleni she was hoping to receive prayers and find a job‚ instead she was consumed by drama that left her faith in tatters.

Yesterday, Masemola took part in a march to the SA Human Rights Commission and the Commission for the Promotion and Protection of the Rights of Cultural‚ Religious and Linguistic Communitie­s (CRL) in Braamfonte­in against false pastors and prophets.

She told TimesLIVE how an honest pursuit for divine interventi­on left her desolate. Masemola had been unemployed for two years when she was referred to a church in Ekurhuleni. At this church‚ a visiting pastor told her the cause of her predicamen­t.

“He told me that the reason I am not getting a job is because the pastor of the church where I am is manipulati­ng me to be spirituall­y bound. He said to me‚ ‘No matter where you go‚ you will never get a job’,” Masemola said.

The new pastor convinced Masemola to join his church‚ and that’s when the trouble started. “The pastor told me I need to divorce my husband because he is bad luck. He also told me that my mother-inlaw is a witch.

“He made me buy oil. Every midnight‚ he would pray with me and I had to immerse my feet in the water and call him‚ with the oil also in the water‚ and we would pray. He told me that he is breaking the spirit that is making me not to get a job and caused bad luck for me‚” she said.

“I was not aware what this was doing to me. You become so attached to these pastors and very obsessed … The unfortunat­e part about it is that you also have a very bad relationsh­ip with God. You end up thinking there is no God. There is no love. There is no solution in this world.”

Despite the rituals‚ Masemola did not get a job. In fact, what happened was that the pastor moved into her home where she lived with her parents. He wanted to start a church and people started coming to consult him. By then‚ Masemola’s parents had embraced the pastor.

“He prayed for people in the garage and wanted me to help him while people are coming to be prayed for. I sort of became the wife while I was not his wife.”

Masemola said the pastor was not pleased with the relationsh­ip she had with her husband.

“Unfortunat­ely with these pastors you are never at a point where you are fully healed. There’s always a problem that you are chasing to fix with them. You are always stuck.”

Things deteriorat­ed when her dad was admitted to hospital‚ leaving the pastor to take over as head of the house.

One day Masemola was scheduled for a job interview. The pastor prophesied that she would not get a job. The prophecy came true.

It was this experience that made her and her family end the relationsh­ip with the pastor. She ultimately got a job and now works for the City of Johannesbu­rg.

 ?? /THULANI MBELE. ?? Scores of marchers occupying the CRL offices in Joburg.
/THULANI MBELE. Scores of marchers occupying the CRL offices in Joburg.

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