A credible link on that please?
His name is: Bishop Thomas Muthee
Why don't you go do a little research yourself? You would believe what your found on your own more than believing what I tell you. Come back tell me I'm wrong if you can.
Why don't you supply critical information from the get go if your claim has credibility? I feel it is my responsiblity to expose irresponsiblilty when I see it by asking for supporting credible back-up; that rather than exert myself to search out nonsense and then come back later to expose it for what it is. You ask that I prove a negative, I ask that you prove a positive.
Bishop Muthee visited the Wasilla Assembly of God in 2005, delivering several guest sermons
Um. Ok. A visiting minister from Kenya. Sheeez.
Yeah, thats the same thing as your very own personal preacher, front row, center seats reserved for you, your wife and (eventually) children every Sunday for 20 years kinda thing.
Isn't it?
All anyone needs to know about this claim can be found in these three links from the text below:
Under the heading “Mama Jane” in his Wiki bio you can read the full account of his self styled bout with witchcraft while in Kenya, W. Africa.
Thomas Muthee - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Muthee claims to have have driven a witch he called Mama Jane out of his town saying it wasn’t “big enough for both of us”
Muthee publicly declared, “Mama Jane either gets saved and serves the Lord, or she leaves town! There is no longer room in Kiambu for both of us!"
Workgroup "Back to the Bible," headed by Pastor Rien van de Kraats of Kamperland, Netherlands, found no police reports or any other sources that backed up Muthee’s claims Investigators have asserted that "Mama Jane" is Jane Njenga, a local pastor who never left Kiambu.
“Bishop Muthee visited the Wasilla Assembly of God in 2005, delivering several guest sermons. During one sermon, Muthee covered seven areas of society that he said Christians should control, including the economic area:
"The Bible says that the wealth of the wicked is stored up for the righteous. It is high time that we have top Christian businessmen, businesswomen, bankers, you know, who are men and women of integrity, running the economics of our nations. That’s what we are waiting for. That’s part and parcel of transformation. If you look at the Israelites, you know, that’s how they won. And that’s how they are, even today. When we will see that, you know, the talk transport us in the lands. We see, you know, the bankers. We see the people holding the paths. They are believers. We will not have the kind of corruption that we are hearing in our societies”
And:
“During the same sermon, Muthee prayed over Sarah Palin, who was then campaigning for Alaska governor, asking God to "bring finances her way even for the campaign in the name of Jesus... Use her to turn this nation the other way around and to keep her safe from every form of witchcraft."
Here’s is how the connection you allege is debunked in the Boston Herald
Sarah Palin ‘witchcraft’ flap all smoke and no fire – Boston Herald
On Sept. 25, 2008, during the United States presidential election of 2008, an Associated Press article on the blessing was published in international news Some sources compared the story to the Jeremiah Wright controversy, but The Boston Herald described it as "all smoke and no fire," pointing out that some religious experts believed that, in light of Muthee's cultural background, there was nothing strange about the prayer.
Sarah Palin ‘witchcraft’ flap all smoke and no fire - BostonHerald.com
and in the Politico:
Experts: Palin's religion misunderstood - Andy Barr - Politico.com
An unusual video showing Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, the Republican vice presidential nominee, being blessed by a Kenyan bishop against witchcraft has rattled liberal bloggers and fueled scorn among her detractors, but religious experts say the matter has been blown out of proportion by ignorance and intolerance.
The 2004 video, which began airing on the Internet last week, shows Kenyan Bishop Thomas Muthee calling Palin to the front of a church to lay hands on her and pray to keep her safe from “every form of witchcraft.”
(and)
‘The “witchcraft” line in particular caught the attention of liberal pundits and bloggers. Keith Olbermann, host of MSNBC’s “Countdown,” called the video “terrifying” and said it made the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, the much-criticized ex-pastor of Barack Obama, look “pretty mainstream” in comparison.
But religious experts said there was nothing untoward in the video, which they said shows a fairly routine religious ceremony. Misunderstanding over it has grown because of the McCain campaign’s refusal to comment on the video, suggesting that the campaign was on uncomfortable footing with Palin’s religion, the experts said.”