Audio By Carbonatix
Lead Pastor of Conquerors International Chapel in Kumasi, Prophet Emmanuel Worlasi says prophetic messages remain true in their divine source, but errors can occur during human interpretation, urging the public to show understanding when prophecies fail to materialise as expected.
Speaking on AM Show on Monday, February 2, Worlasi said he has never relied on political figures, pollsters or external sources to make prophetic pronouncements, stressing that such practices undermine the authenticity of prophecy.
“I will never go out and source any poster or anybody to give me figures to come and declare. For God’s sake, that will not help me. A true prophet will not do that,” he stated.
He acknowledged that Ghana has many genuine prophets who are diligently working in the interest of truth.
“There are a lot of true prophets in Ghana, and many of them are doing a great job,” Worlasi added.
Recounting his own prophetic declarations before the general election, Worlasi said several predictions he made publicly came to pass.
“Before the general election, I prophetically declared that the NDC was going to win some specific seats. I mentioned places like Takoradi, Sissala East, Asante Akyem North and even Obuasi. I gave about nine constituencies, and all of them manifested,” he said.
He rejected claims that such accurate outcomes could have been fed to him by political operatives.
“How can anybody give me that kind of accurate information? You cannot feed me with that and expect it to turn out like that,” he insisted.
According to him, prophecy itself is flawless, but interpretation by humans remains a challenge.
“God is still speaking, and God will never get it wrong. But we are mortals trying to communicate things from the supernatural,” Worlasi explained.
He likened prophecy to dreams, arguing that receiving a revelation does not automatically guarantee perfect understanding.
“You might get the revelation, but how you decode it also matters. It’s like having a dream—you don’t always understand it unless someone helps you interpret it,” he said.
Worlasi concluded by calling for tolerance and understanding when prophets miss certain details.
“Sometimes, decoding the revelation is where the challenge is. So let’s give the prophet the benefit of the doubt when they miss it,” he appealed.
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