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Christian Oyakhilome (born 7 December 1963), known as Pastor Chris, is a Nigerian pastor, author, televangelist and president of LoveWorld Incorporated, a Christian ministry based in Lagos. He is the founder of Christ Embassy , a large congregation with branches in several countries, and the author of the daily devotional Rhapsody of Realities .
Rhapsody of Realities is a Christian daily devotional publication by Pastor Chris Oyakhilome. It was first published January 2001 in English and by August 2022, it was reported to have been published in over 7,000 languages. [1] In 2011, it distributed 2 million copies each month globally. [2]
Christ Embassy is a registered charity in the UK, established in 1996. [8] In July 2013, the Charity Commission launched an inquiry regarding the use of charitable funds; however, inspections of records did not resolve concerns about its financial management, and in August 2014, the Charity Commission appointed an interim manager to run the charity until 2016.
Chris Oyakhilome (1963–present) Christ Embassy General Butt Naked (1971–present) the End Time Train Evangelistic Ministries Inc. Preachers with secular professions
Chris Oyakhilome Foundation International (COFI), is a faith based non-profit, non-political, philanthropy and charity Non-Governmental Organisation founded by Pastor Chris Oyakhilome in 2008.
Jerry Uchechukwu Eze (born 22 August 1982) is a Nigerian Pentecostal pastor, best known as the founder and Lead Pastor of Streams of Joy International. [2] He is also recognized as the convener of the New Season Prophetic Prayers and Declaration (NSPPD), a popular online digital prayer meeting platform. [3] [4] [5] [6]
Chris Kwakpovwe went into full gospel ministry in 1992, after a stint in pharmacy and preaching for nine years. He served as an assisting founding pastor of the Chapel of Praise Church. Chris Kwakpovwe became a Christian writer when he started authoring and publishing Our Daily Manna with readership in several countries in Africa and beyond. On ...
Pastor Chris English, in an email to The Christian Post, said the use of the word nigga was "clearly over the line, and offensive". [6] He thought the video, parody or not, perpetuated many negative stereotypes about Christians, and as such, would have never worked in an outreach program for young people.