Nigerian preacher Pastor Jerry Eze drew a near-capacity crowd to the Accra Sports Stadium on Saturday as the NSPPD Ghana Conference turned the arena into a city-sized prayer meeting marked by hours of worship, testimonies, and prophetic declarations.

The gathering hosted by Streams of Joy International began at noon and swelled through the afternoon, with congregants chanting the NSPPD refrain “What God cannot do does not exist” between ministry segments. Ushers and protocol teams managed overflowing aisles as worshippers responded to calls for salvation, healing, and personal breakthroughs.
Organisers framed the event as a “life-changing encounter” focused on prayer, worship, and declarations of faith. Local clergy and worship collectives joined proceedings, underscoring the pan-African flavour of the convocation and Ghana’s warm reception for the visiting minister.

Saturday’s turnout highlights the rapid expansion of Pastor Eze’s ministry. In just 11 years, Streams of Joy has grown to 26 expressions across Nigeria, Canada, the United States, and the United Kingdom, becoming known for vibrant worship, Scripture-centered prayers, and a strong emphasis on the miraculous.
Beyond its spectacle, the Accra stop signals how Africa’s revival circuit is moving cross-border at scale. For many attendees, the conference functioned as both sanctuary and statement—an arena-sized demonstration that faith communities remain a potent organising force amid economic strain.

The conference closed with corporate prayers over Ghana and the sub-region and a pledge to return. If Saturday is any guide, the NSPPD train shows little sign of slowing—Accra’s stadium night read less like a one-off and more like a milestone in a movement still gathering speed.
































