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Alleluia Ministries church pastor Alph Lukau, who is said to have resurrected a man who was in a coffin at the weekend, said the man was already alive when he arrived at the church.
Speaking to Gauteng broadcaster PowerFM's Power Drive host Thabiso on Wednesday evening, Lukau said he was busy with a sermon on Sunday when he was interrupted and told that a person in a coffin had been brought to the church.
"Before entering the premises of the church, the coffin began to shake, meaning the person was alive," Lukau explained.
He said when they heard that the man in the coffin was alive, they began to pray for him, they made him stand and ushered him inside the church.
When asked by the host why the man had been brought to the church in the first place, Lukau said: "I am not sure if I can make a statement that I was brought to me. We are the house of God and I'm just a pastor serving in the house of the Lord. "
Lukau said the man was brought to the church by his family, who believed that something would happen if he was prayed for.
I have added that further questions about why the man was brought to the church would be answered by the man's family.
"I think that they brought the person to church because they believed that God had the ability to resurrect the person," Lukau said.
The pastor seemed to dodge the subject's questions on whether he had the ability to bring a dead person back to life.
After repeated attempts by Tema, Lukau eventually said he had no ability, "except if God used me as an instrument."
"I can safely say and clarify that I did not pray to resurrect the person, I do not want to take that credit." God will ask me to resurrect somebody and give me grace and power, Lukau said.
I have added it to the church.
Earlier, the Commission for the Promotion and Protection of the Rights of Cultural, Religious and Linguistic Communities (CRL Commission) said it would summon the church to explain Sunday's incident.
WATCH: 'Maybe it is real' – CRL Rights Commission to investigate Pastor Lukau
However, Lukau says there is nothing for the church to explain.
In a statement released on Wednesday evening, shortly before Lukau's interview, Alleluia Ministries vehemently denied that his lead pastor had resurrected the man.
It claimed that the mortuary vehicle, which was from Kings and Queens Funeral services, was brought to the church by the family.
It echoed Lukau, saying that by the time the vehicle entered its premises, there was already movement inside the coffin.
"Prior to even praying over Elliot (the man who was in the coffin), pastor Alph states that Elliot was in fact breathing," the church said in a statement.
The church further said it had no interactions with Elliot or his supposed family prior to their arrival at the church.
"In addition, and in order to dispose of the incorrect reports that cameraman depicted in certain photos with pastor Alph on social media is, in fact, Elliot, this is not the case and the cameraman is still employed by the church," it said
The church also said it had no engagements with any funeral parlors, as has been widely reported.
This is despite the parlors saying that they had approached to transport the body to the church.
READ: Funeral parance distances itself from 'resurrection' pastor, seeks legal action
In a video doing the rounds on social media, Kings and Queens Real Funeral Services can be seen transporting the coffin into the church where Lukau and congregants prayed for the man who rose out of the coffin.
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