Entertainment
Apostle Tolu Agboola’s Prophecy Warned Ebuka Songs About His Current Outcome Years Ago (VIDEO)
Apostle Tolu Agboola says he warned gospel singer Ebuka Songs years ago that he stood on a spiritual precipice…

Apostle Tolu Agboola says he warned gospel singer Ebuka Songs years ago that he stood on a spiritual precipice, a warning that now resonates as the singer faces backlash over a viral video with comedian Peller,
Apostle Tolu Agboola once warned gospel singer Ebuka Songs about the path he was treading.
According to the Apostle, he told Ebuka a few years ago that he was “on a precipice—either headed for oblivion or higher levels in God within five years.” He said he personally cautioned the singer after noticing worrying signs in his ministry.

Those warnings now echo as Ebuka faces backlash from the Christian community over a viral TikTok video featuring comic skit-maker Peller. In the clip, Peller appeared to mimic speaking in tongues with incoherent gibberish, while Ebuka cheered him on.
The video drew widespread condemnation from believers, including prominent pastors, who accused him of mocking the Holy Spirit.
In response, the 33-year-old gospel star fired back at critics, insisting he is accountable only to his fans:
“If God sends me to the club, I will go. I owe no one any explanation,” Ebuka said, adding that anyone offended should “go hug a transformer.”
He further criticized pastors for preaching to the same congregation every week instead of growing their ministries, accusing some of lying to members and fostering dependency instead of teaching self-reliance in prayer.

Ebuka also made a startling admission about his personal life, claiming he sometimes patronizes sex workers—“I just pay them and ask them to go home”—but insists the media ignores this while questioning his calling.
Once mentored by gospel star Moses Bliss, Ebuka now claims the backlash is part of an “orchestrated industry agenda” against him. Meanwhile, Apostle Agboola reaffirmed that he once prophesied that this path could cost the singer his anointing:
“I ministered after him once, and the atmosphere was empty. I told him then – if he continued this way, he would lose his anointing. This is not the Ebuka of two years ago.”

Reactions remain divided: while some believe the singer’s career may soon decline, others argue that the controversy is overblown and that Peller’s skit was harmless.
