A Tennessee preacher claimed there's demons among the congregation in his church. How does he know? Because demons told him, obviously.
Reverend Greg Locke is the controversial preacher at Global Vision Bible Church, a religious figure who's been marred in controversy and brands himself as an 'outspoken pastor that is unashamed of the gospel of Jesus, who refuses to bow to the politically correct idols of our culture'.
In August last year, he went on a ridiculous rant about Target's restroom policy, which allowed people to choose a restroom according to their gender. 'What you are targeting are perverts, paedophiles, people that are going to harm our children... I’ve never been that stupid,' he said. Locke also predicted Donald Trump would beat the 'demon-possessed' Joe Biden in the presidential election.
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On Sunday, February 13, the congregation had just finished singing Oh How I Love Jesus when Locke revealed his recent conversations with demons, who also divulged the identities of 'full-blown, spell-casting' witches in his church.
'To God be the glory, I lie not. We got first and last names of six witches that are in our church. And you know what’s strange, three of you are in this room right now,' he said, as per Religion News Service, explaining how he was given the names while casting a demon out of a new member of the church.
'Three of you are in this room right now. Three of you in the room right now. You better look in my eyeballs, we ain’t afraid of you, you stinkin’ witch, you devil-worshipping Satanist witch. We cast you out in the name of Jesus Christ! We break your spells, we break your curse. We got your first name, we got your last name, we even got an address for one of you,' Locke continued.
'You so much as cough wrong, and I’ll expose you in front of everybody in this tent, you stinkin’ witch! You were sent to this church to destroy us. You were sent to this church to lure us in. You were sent to this church to cast a spell — listen, some of you been sick? Cause you befriended that witch!
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After it was shared online, where it was met with mockery across social media, Locke later said the clip of his devilish sermon had been taken out of context, while maintaining two of the witches were men and 'trouble-makers' who were sent to 'disrupt... we will not tolerate that!'.
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Topics: US News