Bishop Oyedepo Says Ladies Attitude Today Is Why Marriages Are Failing Much

Founder of the Living Faith Church (Winners Chapel), Bishop David Oyedepo, says that the high rate of divorce cases in the world is due to the belief in women liberation.

Oyedepo who presided over the third service of his church in Ota, Ogun State on Sunday, noted that the increasing call and approval of equality between women and men have spilled into their marital lives.

Adding that, such women now equate themselves with their husbands against the biblical doctrine that advises women to be submissive to their husbands and that men should love their wives.

He said cases of divorce were most in the western world because people in such places have thrown
the dictates of God away and have instead started imbibing self-made laws that confer on them near-absolute freedom.

This, he said, was partly the reason behind the laws approving homosexuality in such countries. He noted how he once mentioned that soon, it would no longer be news to find men and women marrying animals.

“Very soon, you would see a male President and the First Lady would be a man,” he said comically, but with some seriousness in his tone.

He lamented what the world, especially the west, was now turning into saying nowadays, “they take churches to court for refusing to marry men. That is how the world has turned.”

He told the congregation that women must be submissive to their husbands and that if they follow such with prayers, even if such men are wayward, God would return them to the family.

He concluded that men should avoid being blown away by the things of the world as they must learn to love their wives as the Bible had warned.

Stockbroker Sues Bishop Oyedepo, Nigeria Stock Exchange For Breach Of Contract

A stock brokerage firm, Valueline Securities and Investment Limited, has instituted a legal action against the founder of the Living Faith Church, popularly known as Winners’ Chapel, Bishop David Oyedepo, over alleged breach of agreement on a N9bn worth of investment.

The firm along with its Managing Director, Samuel Enyinnaya, are seeking an order of the court compelling Oyedepo and others to pay them the sum of N1.86bn jointly and severally as professional fees and damages.

Besides Oyedepo, the other defendants in the suit filed before a Federal High Court in Lagos are Oyedepo’s wife, Abiola; his children and blood relatives, Priscillia, Jesutobi, Makinde and Isaac.

Others are the World Mission Agency Inc, which is the overall ruling organ of the Winners’ Chapel; Covenant University, Ota, Ogun State; and the Nigerian Stock Exchange.

The plaintiffs, in their statement of claim, averred that Oyedepo and the other defendants entered an Investment Portfolio Management Agreement with them and appointed them as the portfolio managers to oversee and to ensure the profitability of the said investment worth about N9bn in the Nigerian Stock Exchange.

According to the plaintiffs, it was agreed that 2.25 per cent of the net asset value of the portfolio and an annual incentive fee of 10 per cent of the returns on the investment would be paid to the plaintiffs.

The plaintiffs said that in order to enhance profitability of the investment, they went ahead to obtain some margin loans from some Nigerian banks, which turned out to be a great boost to the investment.

They however said trouble started “when the first defendant wanted to buy his first private jet and the World Mission Agency Inc ordered the sale of majority of the securities in the investment portfolio, and that despite the professional advice to the contrary, the plaintiffs were made to sell the securities to raise the N3bn needed for the jet, a development which brought about huge losses to the investment.”

According to the plaintiffs, following the said sale of securities coupled with the global economic meltdown which caused stock market across the globe to crash at the time, the investment recorded losses.

But the plaintiffs said, “In a bid to avoid their financial obligations to the plaintiffs, Oyedepo and his organisations wrote a petition to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission alleging fraud and embezzlement against the plaintiffs.”

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