We all see what’s going on. Kennedy Agyapong has suddenly turned “Christian,” moving from church to church, courting prophets and priests like he’s on a holy campaign trail. I’m not shocked. The man walks into churches like he owns them, not with humility, but with pompousity. And instead of pastors checking him, they treat him like a spiritual celebrity. That’s why he can stand there and say, “The church should be bold to decide who leads Ghana.” Really? Since when did politics become part of the Great Commission? Let’s be real that message wasn’t for the whole body of Christ. It was coded talk aimed at his friends, Brother Charles Agyin-Asare and his so-called “spiritual son.” Bishop E. O Ansah . The rest of us just happen to be the audience.
But let’s be honest, what business does Kennedy Agyapong have preaching to the Church of God? Since when did he receive spiritual authority to mount pulpits and start counseling pastors? Once upon a time, Kennedy Agyapong preached that going to church was a waste of time. He mocked tongues, laughed at deliverance, and compared believers to his dogs. The same man now mounts pulpits to “advise” the church. Ah, Ghana! When mockers become mentors, confusion becomes revelation. You can’t call pastors clowns yesterday and expect to sit in their chairs today. You can’t insult the congregation and suddenly claim to be their counselor.
None of these prophets or pastors who opened their pulpits for him have told the world that Kennedy Agyapong has confessed Jesus Christ as his Lord and Savior. Not one. But the moment a politician with deep pockets shows up, excitement takes over. Money speaks, and the same pulpits that should rebuke sin are now silent. That’s why Kennedy feels bold enough to “advise” the church from his carnal and streetwise mindset.
Mr. Kennedy Agyapong, next time you climb a pulpit, kindly remember: God is not your campaign manager. You can’t call pastors clowns yesterday and expect to sit in their chairs today.
You can’t insult the congregation and suddenly claim to be their counselor.
Leadership is not a costume you wear when it suits the cameras. it’s consistency, not convenience.
But here’s the problem: the church is losing its sacred ground. When pulpits become political stages, we invite confusion and ridicule. Today it’s political advice; tomorrow it will be persecution. Church work is not government work, in the church, everything must be led by the Spirit, not by man’s ego. And Brother Charles, respectfully, you know better. You lived and ministered in the North for years among Muslims. You never faced hatred or rejection from them. So why now fuel this “Christians versus Muslims” narrative? That path only leads to tension and tribalism.
This holy hypocrisy won’t help the Church. We can’t call it “righteous” when a Christian leader says Christians should vote for Christians, then call it “immoral” when a Muslim says the same thing. That’s not faith that’s bias. The Church must wake up. Politics can romance religion, but the Church must never romance politics. Once that happens, reverence is gone and the pulpit becomes a podium.
Osɔfo Nii Naate Atswele Agbo

