Popular pastor Anthony Kahura Mwangi, widely known as Pastor T, has revealed the spiritual attacks he faced when he first started his church in Limuru.
Speaking with gospel singer Daddy Owen and DJ Mo on Friday, January 24, 2026, Pastor T said the church’s beginnings were far from ordinary.
On the first day of worship, he and his team held a service without realizing the church’s official launch was set for a year later.
“Tuliingia Limuru, tukaanza church na hata hatukuwa tunajua church hulaunchiwa after one year, sisi tulipiga ibada ya kwanza na hiyo ndio ilikuwa launch,” he said.
He recounted that the following Sunday, about 70 diviners visited the church, claiming to know when he had entered the area.
They wore red and green head wraps and traditional garments, signaling the start of spiritual battles.
“Day ya pili tukatembelewa na diviner kama 70 wakatuambia tunajua mumeingia hii area, walikuja church on Sunday during our second service kama wako na vilemba za red na green na garments zao. Hapo ndio nkajua church ni vita,” Pastor T said.
He also shared a disturbing incident where two black chickens were buried upside down at the church entrance and later at a neighbor’s home.
Tragically, that neighbor reportedly died of a heart attack shortly afterward.
“Kuna day Fulani tena walikuja wazika kuku upside down kwa entrance ya church, kuku mbili za black, na wakazika kwa neighbour hapo kado, huyo neighbour alikufa na heart attack, Sunday saa tisa,” he said.
Pastor T also revealed a past attempt to lure him into a money laundering scheme using his church.
The individual proposed mixing illicit funds with church offerings and sharing the profits.
“There was a time someone called me and told me, ‘I see you have a church project; we can wash money,’ and the kind of money this person was telling me we were going to make was good money,” he said.
Despite assurances of safety, Pastor T rejected the offer.
“And the person said everything was covered by security; nobody would know. Mix it with the offering, give us our cut, and you get your cut,” he stated.
He explained his approach to wealth and legacy:
“I want to hand over wealth and inheritance to my children that is legit and genuine and something that I know will bring blessings to them, no matter how small it may be,” he said.
“One thing about being a pastor: you get random money. I can even walk outside here, and somebody says, ‘Pastor, let me buy you lunch,’ and then boom, Ksh3,000. The largest honorarium I have ever received was Ksh1,800,000,” he concluded.






