Tamera Mowry-Housely Has a Word for a 'Preachers' Daughters' Cast Member
Tamera Mowry-Housley had some words for a cast member on Preachers' Daughters recently that left her co-host on the talk show "The Real" calling her a prophetess.
Mowry-Housley, the 36-year-old actress who co-hosts "The Real" alongside fellow entertainers Tamar Braxton, Loni Love, Jeannie Mai and Adrienne Bailon, had a prophetic word to share when Lolly White and Kayla Wilde, two cast members of Lifetime's docu-series Preachers' Daughters appeared on the daytime talk show recently.
While Kayla said she and her cast members worked hard doing missionary work on the docu-series featuring preachers' daughters on a missions trip in Cabo, Mexico, Lolly said she did not work hard and was "turned up" instead. Some of the women on stage laughed, but Mowry-Housley insisted she had a message to share with Lolly.
"Ms. Lolly, I have a word for you. I've been sitting here looking at you. You might not like what I have to say, but, you can run, but you can't hide from your calling," she told Lolly. "You are going to have a huge testimony. I can already tell."
Lolly White, 24, grew up in a tough South Central Los Angeles neighborhood and decided to leave her preacher father's church to worship elsewhere. Now that she is on "Preachers' Daughters" it seems she is more focused on finding herself while having a good time.
Lolly reacted by admitting that God has told her the message before, but she keeps running from it because of her age. Braxton, the 37-year-old singer who grew up as a preacher's daughter, reacted to Mowry-Housley's comments by saying, "this is Prophetess Tamera honey!"
Last year, Bailon spoke to The Christian Post about all five hosts of The Real being believers and how their faith has impacted their chemistry.
"I love that all five of us as believers, before we walked out on that set every single day, we prayed. I don't know what anybody else's rituals are on other shows but I said there's something so special and so crazy about that," Bailon told CP. "..We pray that God use us individually to touch somebody, to make somebody laugh, to make somebody say 'Oh my God, I'm not alone!'"