A UK-based Nigerian man has shared his experience regarding a C&S prophet who reportedly saw him giving his aunt ₦100,000 and then issued a revelation advising him not to drive for seven days during his short visit to Nigeria.
This was made public in a post on X (formerly Twitter).

The individual, identified as @olajideobe, explained that during his recent trip to Nigeria, he visited his aunt, and coincidentally, a C&S prophet was present when he gave her ₦100,000.
After leaving her home, his aunt called him to reveal that the prophet had a message for him, warning him not to drive for seven days.
He shared his thoughts on the situation: “I visited one of my aunts last week when I was in Nigeria, and coincidentally, a C&S prophet was at her place when I got there.”
“When I was leaving, I gave my aunt ₦100,000, and she was ecstatic when she saw the credit alert. She prayed for me, and the prophet joined her in praying too.”
Later, his aunt informed him that the prophet had called her with a message for him.
The prophet mentioned that he had seen an “ìṣípayá” (a divine vision) and strongly advised him not to drive for seven days. His aunt even provided him with the prophet’s contact information.
Responding to the message, @olajideobe joked, saying: “Prophet don see who he go catch as a maga. 😁😁🤣 I’m a bad market for this kind of level o. Abi I don call ni? Me wey dey resume back to work tomorrow.”
“Don’t drive for seven days, my foot. Nigerian spiritualists have only one modus operandi — they plant fear in the minds of their ‘customers.’”
He went on to express his personal spiritual journey: “I’ve grown past this level in my own journey of spirituality. Jesus has torn the veil, and I have direct access to God in heaven without any third-party intermediary. I pray to God directly in the name of Jesus, and He answers me. Why do I still need to be looking for a ‘prophet’?”
In a humorous twist, he revealed that after receiving the prophecy, he dismissed it and immediately drove to a service station to fill up his car, saying: “The first thing I did when I got home was drive to the service station to fill up my fuel tank and wash the car, since I’ll be resuming work tomorrow.”
The post quickly gained traction, with many concerned individuals flooding the comment section to share their thoughts.
See some reactions below:
@Celeb_Shoemaker: “One said I will travel after school. Till date,I don’t even own a passport.”
@HSG1018: “Bro my question is have you been driving after the so called prophet gave you that message?”
@EvangelistOgunz: “This kind of manipulation is a classic case of “prophetic extortion through fear conditioning” A spiritualized psychological manipulation tactic where fear is planted to induce obedience, dependence, or financial gain under the guise of revelation or divine instruction.”
@AlliOlabisi5: “Just like a prophet who said my mom and daughter would die within 3 months of each other if I fail to give him 40k for irapada. I told him that it is his own child that would die – his daughter died of course. It’s been 11 yrs now and my mom is alive at 75 while my daughter is 19”
@sam_strongest: “Dem no dey see “ìṣípayá” for people wey dey stay makoko, na only people wey come from abroad.”
@DarewellO58421: “U need to be careful of ur aunt,it could be a set up.Imagine even if the prophecy is real, is the prophet d one that will cancel d whatever. You’re d best prophet over ur life. If God has a message,it’s a confirmation of what u already know. Nevertheless pray abt it & be free.”
SEE POST: