The Synagogue Church Of All Nations (SCOAN) is a charismaticChristianmegachurch located in Lagos, Nigeria.[1] The Church was founded in 1987 and has a presence across the globe with over 50,000 individuals attending service weekly.[2]
The church is most associated with its founder T. B. Joshua, who died in 2021. It is also known for its television network Emmanuel TV which live streams services to viewers around the world.[3] In 2024, the BBC reported allegations of widespread abuse and torture by Joshua.[4][5] In 2024, Joshua's widow, Evelyn Joshua, became church leader.[5]
History
T. B. Joshua wrote that in a heavenly vision he received 'divine anointing' and a covenant from God to start his ministry in 1987.[6] The church started with eight members, but has since become one of Nigeria's most influential churches, attracting over 50,000 people[2] to its weekly Sunday services at the headquarters in Ikotun-Egbe, Lagos. Joshua, the church's founder and senior Pastor, died in June 2021 shortly after leaving an ongoing service.[7]
Religious tourism
SCOAN is especially known for the huge number of foreign visitors it attracts with The Guardian reporting the church receives more weekly attendees than the combined number of visitors to Buckingham Palace and the Tower of London.[8]This Day newspapers reported that "about two million local and inbound tourists" visit SCOAN annually.[9]
It has been described as "Nigeria's biggest tourist attraction"[10] and "the most visited destination by religious tourists in West Africa".[11] Figures released by the Nigerian Immigration Service indicated that six out of every ten foreign travelers coming into Nigeria are bound for SCOAN.[12]
SCOAN's contribution to Nigeria's religious tourism was highlighted[13] when the cleric hinted at the possibility of relocating his ministry to Israel during a Sunday service.[14] The announcement proved controversial; several prominent Nigerians[15] urged him to remain in the country, citing the economic setbacks[16] Nigeria would probably experience if he moved out of the country. The church's popular services have significantly helped local businesses and hoteliers.[17]
Television
The church's weekly services are broadcast live on Emmanuel TV as well as on SCOAN's social media platforms.[3]
In April 2021, YouTube suspended Emmanuel TV's channel as a result of alleged hate speech by Joshua in videos on the channel. At the time the channel was suspended, it had over 1,800,000 subscribers and 400 million views. The allegations of hate speech referred to claims made by Joshua in at least seven videos that homosexuality is the result of possession by demonic spirits and that homosexuality can and should be cured via spiritual deliverance.[18] At the time of the channel's suspension, it was the most-viewed Christian ministry on the platform.[19][20]
In January 2024, days after Joshua's sexual abuse scandal was revealed, Emmanuel TV's satellite channel was removed from DStv by MultiChoice, a South African media company as well as from YouTube for a second time.[21]
Controversies
In 2009, the Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria publicly disassociated itself from TB Joshua's church, calling on him to "repent and convert to Christianity." Ayo Oritsejafor, leader of the organization, criticized Joshua for serving as pastor without study in the field. [22]
On 12 September 2014, a guesthouse at SCOAN's compound in Lagos collapsed, killing at least 115 people, of whom 84 were South Africans.[23]
Purported healings and miracles
SCOAN claimed that Joshua regularly facilitates miracles at the church.[24] Hundreds of weekly visitors to "prayer lines" at the church were prayed over by Joshua, and the church claimed he cured people of HIV/AIDS,[25][26][27] blindness[28] and open wounds.[29][30][31][32]
Joshua's followers attributed miraculous properties to anointing water that had been prayed over by Joshua, claiming that it healed wounds,[33][34] or saved them from explosions or helicoper crashes.[35][36] In 2013, four people died in a stampede in Joshua's Ghanaian branch when an unadvertised service in which the water was being distributed drew huge crowds that exceeded the church's capacity. The incident nearly brought Ghana's capital city, Accra, to a standstill, and led to criticism of Joshua.[37]
In 2014, during the West African Ebola virus epidemic, Joshua also made headlines when he claimed his anointing water could cure people suffering from Ebola. He subsequently sent 4,000 bottles of the water and $50,000 to the Ebola-stricken nation of Sierra Leone.[38][39] A Sierra Leonean politician claimed that the water cured Ebola.[40] Lagos State Health officials visited Joshua and asked that he use his influence to publicly discourage Ebola victims from visiting his church for prayers.[41]
In 2024, Joshua's former chief lieutenant, Agomoh Paul, who left the SCOAN compound after ten years, said that Joshua was a "genius" manipulator.[5] Paul said that he was in charge of faking "miracles" purportedly performed by Joshua.[5] Paul and others interviewed by BBC News said that those who seemed to be "cured" at the church were frequently paid to "perform or exaggerate their symptoms before their supposed healing took place" and in some instances were drugged or medicated as part of the "faith healing" process.[5] Some were falsely told that they had HIV/AIDS but had made a recovery due to Joshua.[5]
Posthumous abuse accusations
In 2024, the BBC published findings from a two-year investigation, reporting that Joshua had abused followers over more than 15 years.[5] The BBC reported that at least 150 people lived in Joshua's secretive Lagos compound as disciples, sometimes for years or decades, and many interviewees described SCOAN as a cult.[5] More than 25 church followers from various countries, including Nigeria, Ghana, Britain, the U.S., South Africa, Namibia, and Germany, revealed alleged abuse within the church and by Joshua personally, including multiple rapes, torture, and forced abortions.[5]
One Namibian woman said that Joshua repeatedly raped her, the first time when she was seventeen years old, and that she was forced to have five unsafe abortions while at the compound.[5] A British woman also said that Joshua had assaulted her, and that she was held under solitary confinement in the compound, where she made numerous suicide attempts.[5]
Multiple other interviewees reported that they were regularly subject to physical abuse, such as being beaten with electrical cables and horse whips, and were subjected to sleep deprivation.[5] Other witnesses in Nigeria said that after publicly disclosing abuse, they were attacked.[5] SCOAN denied that Joshua had committed any wrongdoing.[5]
The BBC report led to negative response in African media, with the report being condemned as 'propaganda',[42] and "dirty lies",[43] and other sources questioning why the BBC chose to publish the report long after Joshua's death, where no response would be possible.[44][45] SCOAN itself condemned the BBC for "descending into fictional narratives and propaganda, thus turning itself into a weapon for a hatchet job as gangsters in the gab of journalism with a destructive ulterior motive for personal gains against a perceived enemy".[46]
^ Pieter Coertzen, M Christiaan Green, Len Hansen, Law and Religion in Africa: The quest for the common good in pluralistic societies, African Sun Media, South Africa, 2015, p. 311
^Ndlovu-Gherke, Nomsa (16 July 2010). "By Divine Connection". The Voice (Botswana). Archived from the original on 2 May 2014. Retrieved 18 December 2012.