- When Beth Wanja married Amos, the pastor’s son, she expected a marriage full of happiness and loyalty, but things were not as expected
- A few months into their marriage, terrible things began to appear and worsened, forcing the two to separate
- At first, Beth’s husband, Amos, fell into the hands of the bishop, but later when things went wrong, he ended up marrying his best friend in the church
Nairobi, Kenya: Beth Wanja tied the knot hoping to enjoy her marriage, but a year after their beautiful wedding, she regrets the day she met her husband, who betrayed her.
Source: Youtube
Beth was married in April 2024, at the Goshen Land Chapel on the campus of GSU in Utawala, and after the wedding, he began to see some changes in his behavior.
The two had been dating for a year, and after that, all pre-marriage obligations were taken care of.
“The first three weeks I found an old woman’s clothes, and after investigation I found out that the lady is also a pastor. It was a Nigerian suit and bag, and after I asked her parents, they said she would return it,” he said.
“I asked the elder of the church, he said the two were dating in the past, I told him it’s not bad because I also have an ex, one day I used his phone to call and found out he was still in contact with the lady, when I asked him he started shaking,” he added.
In addition to fishing with the bishop, the man also lied to Beth, claiming that he worked in accounting, but it turned out to be a lie.
Therefore, when he went to work, he would spend his time just staying at home.
Why did Beth and Amos move to Mombasa?
The couple moved to Mombasa with Amos claiming that he had found a new job, and one day, when he left, his father tripped and revealed that Amos was unemployed.
“Then I wondered why he made me quit my job, when he didn’t have one, but when I asked him he swore that he had a job, I sat Amos down and warned him against starting a marriage based on lies,” he said.
A month later, Beth became pregnant, but when she tried to get them to move out, Amos’ father refused and insisted they live in his parents’ bedroom.
“My mother-in-law started being cruel and throwing hurtful words at me. Things came to me, and I started to see that everything was not right,” he said.
“One day I was in a lot of pain, they refused to take me to the hospital or even to the clinic, and it was annoying me. When I told my mother-in-law that I was sick, she said that’s how pregnancies are,” he said.
Beth was never taken to the hospital. She said that she was praying a lot for her husband.
The pain increased, and her husband never took her to the hospital, nor did her parents-in-law.
Beth’s feet began to swell, and her mother-in-law was not there, nor was her husband. The two had met at their home in the village.
Beth eventually lost her twins; one fell in the toilet, and the other was buried in the church area, with the father-in-law digging the grave.
His mother Beth called him, saying that she had been praying and had seen a vision of his death; an old woman asked her daughter to return home in prayer.
“I was still recovering when a strange number called and asked if I was Mrs Wambua. It said, ‘I want you to tell your husband to leave my wife. He has been traveling for the past few months and met my wife at a hotel,'” recalled Beth.
“The same day when I arrived, I saw a ghost saying that I will die, after two days I will register to take the test, when I told my mother-in-law she refused,”
Amos and his mother refused to answer Beth’s phone, her health deteriorated while she was bleeding. “A nurse started attending to me from home, and the person who owed me KSh 8000 paid, and that’s how I registered for my exams. My mother said that we should pray for my job back in the school group, and they brought me back,” said Beth.
How did Beth leave her marriage?
“In December, I tried to contact them to get clothes, but they refused, and later, when I tried again through someone else, they packed everything in Mombasa and Makueni; my gifts given to me by my family were also sent to me. My friends bought me a mattress, and I started my life.”
“I felt I should talk to his father and I sent him KSh 500 for petrol. The next morning, it was returned with a negative message saying, ‘We don’t want anything from you until further notice,'” he said. Amos eventually married Beth’s friend, and now the two live together, but he has not yet changed his marriage certificate or divorced her.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iframe%3E
@patiencemasai5533: “Burying your child in the church which was a human sacrifice is why you were sent to the osi, his mother to tzn was enough evidence that he was a superstition.”
@janemwangi6932: “Characters of a cult leader.”
@aftermathkabera6954: “You… better marry a drunkard than ritual people ..those people are not the place to go.”
@hellenkathambi8694: “Thank God, gal, your soul offended the evil spirits. Your parents’ prayers stood in the way and saved you. Go back to that family, please.”
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