Reverend Lucy Natasha has ignited heated online reactions after declaring during Wednesday midweek service at her Empowerment Christian Church along Haile Selassie Avenue that “This December, you will receive millions you never expected, even if you are jobless. If you believe it, say ‘I receive.’”
The Oracle House founder delivered the prophecy while pacing the altar in a white designer suit, prompting thousands of congregants to leap to their feet shouting “I receive” in unison.
The glamorous preacher, known for her luxury lifestyle and celebrity-filled services, told the packed 5,000-capacity auditorium that December 2025 carries a “divine wealth transfer” for faithful givers who sow dangerous seeds before the year ends.
“God showed me people waking up to M-Pesa messages from millions they never laboured for. Some will get tenders they never applied for, others will receive inheritances from relatives they forgot existed. Even the jobless will eat with kings this festive season,” she prophesied, waving a gold microphone. She then urged members to send seeds on MPESA labelled “December Millions Activation”.
Online reactions split Kenya into three clear camps. Supporters flooded comment sections with screenshots of past fulfilled prophecies, claiming Natasha accurately predicted their 2023 job breakthroughs and 2024 car blessings. A Nakuru matatu driver posted a video crying in his new Probox saying he sent KSh 15,000 last December and cleared the logbook in March.
Atheist Society of Kenya chairperson Seth Mahiga called the prophecy “spiritual fraud,” arguing that promising millions to the unemployed encourages laziness and exploits poverty. “If her God is sending millions, why must congregants first send her thousands?” he asked.
Natasha’s team appeared unfazed. Her official Instagram story posted Thursday morning showed overflowing offering baskets with the caption “The seed always speaks louder than the need.”
As December has barely begun, yet Reverend Lucy Natasha has already turned it into the most financially charged month of the year. Whether the millions will rain or the sceptics will feast on fresh memes in January remains the question keeping Kenyan Twitter awake at night.


















