Evangelist Patricia Asiamah, widely known as Nana Agradaa, is pushing back against critics who question her spiritual turnaround, arguing that many of those casting doubt should first take a closer look at their own lives.
In an interview on Atinka TV with Roman Fada, the outspoken preacher said the wave of scepticism surrounding her repentance leaves her puzzled.
“When people say I have not changed, I ask if they themselves have changed. I don’t understand Ghanaians sometimes,” she said.
Drawing on scripture to defend her position, she continued; “Christ himself said that there is no one who is without sin aside from Him and His Father. You that you are sitting in your home and talking about somebody’s life, those stealing and committing fornication, have they changed?”
Agradaa made a distinction between transformation and repentance, explaining that she identifies more with the latter.
“I don’t like when people say the word ‘changed.’ I rather prefer ‘repented,’ because they mean two different things. Someone may have changed but has not repented of her sins,” she added.
While admitting that her personality has not shifted entirely, she said her focus and actions have taken a different direction.
“You can’t say I have changed. I still use a lot of zeal and charisma to talk. But the days of me fighting other people are over,” she said.
She linked this shift to what she described as a deeper grasp of Christian teachings, particularly around spiritual battles.
“I have come to understand that the fights Christians fight are not against one another in the physical but against the spirit. So, for me, I will not fight anyone again. I have repented from that,” she stated.
Once known for running a controversial shrine and for her confrontational public style, Agradaa later announced her conversion to Christianity and reintroduced herself as Evangelist Patricia Asiamah. Despite that rebranding, public doubt has lingered over the genuineness of her change.
Her recent release from a jail term at Nsawam Prison has only intensified the scrutiny, keeping her transformation under public debate.
Watch her statement below.
“When someone says I’ve not changed, I ask them, if they themselves have changed”
— SIKAOFFICIAL🦍 (@SIKAOFFICIAL1) April 25, 2026
—Repentant Nana Agradaa, aka, Evangelist Patricia Asiamah claps back at critics, stressing that she has changed from her old ways.
[🎥:atinkatv] pic.twitter.com/o3DVdUJ1mE
