All perfect praise be to Allah, The Lord of the worlds. I testify that there is none worthy of worship except Allah and that Muhammad, sallallahu ‘alayhi wa sallam, is His slave and Messenger.
The hadeeth that you mentioned, dear Brother, was cited by At-Tabaraani as you said, in Al-Mu‘jam Al-Awsat and Al-Mu‘jam Al-Kabeer, both reported on the authority of Ibn Mas‘ood, may Allah be pleased with him.
At-Tabaraani commented on this hadeeth and another one preceding it, saying, "No one reported these two ahaadeeth from Mubaarak ibn Fadhaalah except Sayf ibn Miskeen."
Sayf ibn Miskeen was declared a weak reporter by scholars of Hadeeth. Al-Haythami cited this hadeeth and commented on it, saying, "It was cited by At-Tabaraani in Al-Awsat and Al-Kabeer, and its chain of narration includes Sayf ibn Miskeen, who is a weak reporter." [Majma‘ Az-Zawaa'id]
Al-Haafith Ibn Hajar wrote about Sayf ibn Miskeen, "An old man from Basrah who narrates Maqloobaat (inverted ahaadeeth; in whose text or chain of narration a change has taken place by substituting one letter for another or by reversing the order of a word or sentence in the text) and fabricated reports." [Lisaan Al-Mizaan]
Ad-Daaraqutni said, "He is not a strong reporter." [Al-‘Ilal]
Ibn Hibbaan wrote, "He narrates Maqloobaat and fabricated reports, and his narrations, though few, cannot be used as evidence because they contradict the reports of trustworthy reporters." [Al-Majrooheen]
Hence, this report is weak.
Allah knows best.