As the Glory Train Ministry crossed into Kenya, the spiritual intensity of their East African tour only escalated. Journeying through the bustling spiritual hubs of Narok and Kisumu, Pastor Temitope Agbana and his team arrived with a surgical and uncompromising mandate. For communities of faith that are often weighed down by the sheer friction of daily ministry, these gatherings proved to be a watershed moment of restoration.
The Narok Protocol: Reclaiming the Lost Ministry
In Narok, Dr. Temitope met with the Association of Bishops and Pastors under the leadership of Bishop Augustine Rugutt. Hosted at Victory Tabernacle Church by Bishop Ayoub, the gathering demanded a specific and penetrating message.
Here, Dr. Temitope unpacked the hidden protocol of the Upper Room. Before the fire of the Holy Ghost could ever fall on the Day of Pentecost, he explained, the Apostle Peter had to execute a vital and often overlooked spiritual task. Standing up among the early believers, Peter addressed a glaring fracture in their foundation:
“Men and brethren, this scripture must needs have been fulfilled… concerning Judas, which was guide to them that took Jesus. For he was numbered with us, and had obtained part of this ministry.”
– Acts 1:16-17.
The early church had to actively reclaim the portion of the spiritual inheritance that Judas Iscariot had obtained.
Dr. Temitope painted a chilling and brilliant portrait of Judas. Here was a man physically close to Christ but entirely spiritually barren. Judas sat under direct teaching, even hearing Jesus explicitly identify him as a devil. Yet, he remained completely unmoved. He possessed no conviction, no contrition, no repentance, and no consecration. He was consumed by greed and placed zero value on spiritual relationships. Despite all this, he had successfully obtained a portion of Jesus’ ministry.

However, Dr. Temitope noted, when the early church successfully reclaimed the ground Judas had squandered, the atmosphere violently shifted. The Holy Spirit descended, and the immediate result was a piercing conviction among the masses who cried out, “What shall we do to be saved?” Repentance and consecration were finally restored.
Then came the piercing question to the leaders of Narok. Dr. Temitope looked out at the gathered clergy and asked them to confront their own spiritual realities. “Which part of your ministry has been obtained by the enemy? Have you lost the foundational conviction your commitment to Jesus was built upon? It is time to reclaim it.”
The room broke. Bishops and pastors wept openly, wailing before the Lord in a raw and vulnerable display of contrition. A tangible wave of restoration swept the sanctuary, breaking years of spiritual dryness and drought.





As repentance was restored, heaven responded with physical validation. Miracles broke out across the room, including the immediate and miraculous healing of a failing kidney. In Narok, Jesus was visibly and mightily glorified.

