Besides having a very large fanbase on earth, a Texas pastor also claims one of Rihanna’s songs is very popular down the pits of hell. According to Entertainment Weekly, Gerald Johnson, who oversees the Gerald A. Johnson Ministries in Texas, took to TikTok to share a video of his experience in Lucifer’s abode after his spirit came out of his body in 2016 and journeyed to the center of the earth.
Johnson, in the video, said the aforementioned location is “where hell is.” After entering the evil and fiery spiritual realm, Johnson said he saw a sinner whose entire body had been burned. The pastor also said he saw a demon holding a chain and dog-walking the man.
“It still baffles me to this day. There’s a section in hell where music was playing. It was the same music that we hear on the Earth, but as opposed to entertainers singing it, the music, demons were singing it. It was some of the same lyrics we hear here,” he said.
Johnson also claimed that when current artists consume drugs for work purposes, it can allow for a portal in hell to open for demons to whisper lyrics that will allow humans to be controlled by the devil, Entertainment Weekly reported.
“Here, music is to get over a breakup. ‘Don’t worry, be happy,’ ‘I bust the windows out your car,’ or, ‘under my umbrella,’ whatever,” the pastor said in reference to songs by Bob Marley, Jazmine Sullivan, and Rihanna.
“Every lyric to every song is to torment you as to the fact that you didn’t worship God through music when you were on the Earth. You had a chance to worship him in church and at home and through music, but you chose to worship Satan by repeating the lyrics that he inspired to come into the earth,” he said.
Rihanna’s lyrics would be further repeated by millions of people as she’s billed to perform at the 2023 Super Bowl on February 12.
@geraldajohnson1 My experience when I saw hell in February 2016. I’ll never be the same after that. #hell #jesus #unforgiveness #forgive #godsaid #encouragement #geraldajohnson #jesuslovesyou #moveforward ♬ original sound – Gerald Johnson