THIKA, Kiambu County, Kenya – In a scene straight out of a Nollywood movie, a seemingly ordinary wedding at Thika Town Church took a dramatic turn last Sunday, leaving congregation members bewildered and tongues wagging across the county. Just as the bride and groom, identified as Janet Njeri and Samuel Mwangi, were about to exchange vows, Pastor Peter Mwaura noticed something peculiar about their rings. They shone with an unnatural, almost iridescent glow, and seemed uncomfortably warm to the touch.
Pastor Mwaura, a seasoned man of the cloth with a keen eye for the unusual, called for a halt to the ceremony. His suspicions aroused, he gently confronted the couple about the strange rings. What followed was a revelation that sent shockwaves through the church and quickly became the talk of the town.
With hesitant and nervous glances, Janet and Samuel confessed that their rings were no ordinary jewelry. They were, they claimed, “magic rings” obtained from the renowned Doctors, a traditional healing and spiritual practice that has gained both fervent followers and fierce critics in Kenya.Continue Reading.

