Religion of Monday, 22 April 2019

Source: mynewsgh.com

Owusu Bempah’s Prophecies are pure guess work -Islamic Cleric

Rev. Isaac Owusu Bempah is founder of Glorious Word Power Ministry Rev. Isaac Owusu Bempah is founder of Glorious Word Power Ministry

Mallam Shamuna Jibril , the popular Ghanaian Islamic Cleric, Numerologist, Philosopher who in 2015 and 2016 predicted accurately with numbers that Trump, Akufo-Addo and Buhari will win in past general elections has questioned the credibility of the founder and leader of Glorious Word and power Ministry International Church, Reverend Owusu Bempah.

Reverend Isaac Owusu Bempah touts himself as the nation’s prophet following past predictions over happenings that have come to past but the Islamic Cleric believes what he does is not prophecy but guess work.

In an interview he granted Tamale-based Sagani TV, he revealed unlike him who uses the Holy Quran that guides him on his predictions with figures, Owusu Bempah does what can best be described as guess work.

“I am using the Holy Quran…I memorized the Quran 17 years ago and then I also memorize the Holy Quran without a teacher. I am not like Owusu Bempah, who predicts by just using the words “he will lose” or “he will win”. Sorry to him anyway. When he says “he will win or lose”, he says nothing. The ordinary man on the street prediction that has come or you the preacher? Because everybody says one candidate or another will win or lose. So I need to support it with spiritual calculations”, he revealed.

Mallam Shamuna in 2015 Nigerian Election gave a detail break down of the state by state results in percentages and decimals which largely came to pass, with slight variations.

In September 2016, months to Ghana’s polls, he predicted that then president John Mahama was going to get 44.93% of the votes in 2016 while Akufo-Addo will get 53.7% of the votes.

In the 2016 election in Ghana, John Mahama actually had 44.4% while Akufo-Addo had 53.9%, with only decimal differences from Mallam Shamuna’s prediction. When asked to explain the slight decimal differences, he said “human factors” accounted for it.