Founder of Living Faith Church Worldwide, Bishop David Oyedepo, has stirred fresh controversy after asking members to hand his phone number to abductors if they are kidnapped.
He
said he has the spiritual authority to secure their release.
Speaking
during a service at Canaanland, the cleric told worshippers not to panic in the
face of abduction but to direct kidnappers to contact him.
“If
anybody picks you, give them my number,” he told the congregation in a sermon
that later circulated widely on social media.
The
comment, delivered in a message tagged SupersonicSunday, quickly gained
traction online, drawing attention amid persistent concerns over kidnapping
across the country.
Oyedepo
anchored the unusual instruction on what he described as previous interventions
involving abducted church members.
Recounting
one incident, he said a pastor linked to the church was kidnapped and the
abductors allowed communication with him.
According
to him, he warned the kidnappers to release the victim or face death within 24
hours, after which the captive was freed.
In
another account, he spoke of a female church member who, while in captivity,
declared by faith she would regain freedom by 7am.
He
claimed the woman was later released after what he described as unusual
developments among her captors.
The
cleric said such experiences were evidence that his members possessed spiritual
authority over fear and violence.
“You
have been raised far above the devil,” he said, while urging members to
confront threats with faith rather than terror.
Oyedepo
further maintained that members of the church carry the same spiritual force
and should learn to exercise it.
His
remarks come at a time when kidnapping for ransom remains a major security
challenge in parts of Nigeria, with religious leaders, traditional rulers and
communities increasingly speaking on the crisis.
While
the sermon was delivered as a message of faith and confidence to worshippers,
its viral circulation has placed it at the center of public discussion over
insecurity and the role of religious conviction in confronting violent crime.







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