Ghanaian prophet Ajagurajah says God is human, not spirit

In a bold theological claim, Prophet Kwabena Boakye Asiamah, founder of the Ajagurajah Movement, said God is not a spirit but a human being.
Speaking on the Asaase Breakfast Show, Prophet Ajagurajah argued that God cannot be a spirit because, according to Genesis, He walked in the Garden of Eden and rested on the seventh day.
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He said, “Spirits don’t walk or get tired.” Adding that, “You only rest when you’re tired. That proves God is not just spirit—He is human.”
This isn’t Ajagurajah’s first theological curveball. He is known for his unorthodox blend of Christianity, mysticism, and ancestral spirituality, and he has long challenged mainstream doctrine.
However, this latest claim strikes at the heart of Christian metaphysics.
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For centuries, the idea of God as a spirit—omnipresent, invisible, and eternal—has been foundational. From Augustine to Aquinas, theologians have insisted that God transcends human form. But Ajagurajah is flipping the script.
Ajagurajah’s theology may be outrageous, but it also reflects a society where spiritual authority is increasingly performative, where prophets are part preacher and part influencer, and where doctrine bends to the demands of virality.