Tag: Catholic Church

  • God can’t determine when people should marry, have kids, make wealth -Catholic priest declares

    God can’t determine when people should marry, have kids, make wealth -Catholic priest declares

    Germany-based Nigerian Catholic priest, Rev. Fr. Angelo Chidi Unegbu, said on Facebook that God does not decide when people graduate, marry, have children, get wealthy, or recover from illness.

    He explained that God has already given humans the resources and freedom to achieve their dreams.

    When I tell you that God is not the one who decides when you graduate, marry, give birth, become rich, get a promotion in a job, win elections, get cured from an ailment, etc., I do not say so to diminish the power of the creator or to destroy your faith in God,” he wrote.

    “Not at all. I do so to introduce you to the love of God, who has given you everything you need to succeed in your endeavours even before you were born. I am talking of a God who created you as a co-creator and who gives you the freedom to make choices and to help in making the world a better place.

    “When we fail to discover the resources and abilities he has given us in making our world a better place and in achieving our good dreams, we should have ourselves to blame, not him.”

    When I tell you that God is not the one who decides when you graduate, marry, give birth, become rich, get a promotion in a job, win elections, get cured from an ailment, etc., I do not say so to diminish the power of the creator or to destroy your faith in God,” he wrote.

    “Not at all. I do so to introduce you to the love of God, who has given you everything you need to succeed in your endeavours even before you were born. I am talking of a God who created you as a co-creator and who gives you the freedom to make choices and to help in making the world a better place.

    “When we fail to discover the resources and abilities he has given us in making our world a better place and in achieving our good dreams, we should have ourselves to blame, not him.”

  • Years later, FG set to arraign Owo Catholic church attack suspects

    Years later, FG set to arraign Owo Catholic church attack suspects

    The federal government is to arraign five suspected terrorists who attacked St. Francis Catholic Church, Owo, in Ondo State on June 5, 2022, where scores of worshippers were killed.

    They will be arraigned before Justice Emeka Nwite of the Federal High Court in Abuja.

    The five suspects, who were escorted into the courtroom by operatives of the Department of State Services (DSS) at approximately 9:05 a.m., include Idris Omeiza, Al Qasim Idris, Jamiu Abdulmalik, Abdulhaleem Idris, and Momoh Otuho Abubakar.

    The office of the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) is prosecuting the case on behalf of the federal government.

    The AGF, in the charge marked: FHC/ABJ/CR/301/2025, preferred nine counts against the defendants.

    In the charge filed and signed by M.B. Abubakar, Director of Public Prosecutions in the Federal Ministry of Justice, the suspects, and others who are at large, were alleged to have, sometime in 2021, joined and became members of the Al-Shabaab Terrorist Group.

    They were alleged to have their “cell in Kogi and thereby committed an offence contrary to and punishable under Section 25(1) of the Terrorism (Prevention and Prohibition) Act, 2022”.

    In count two, they were alleged to have on May 30, 2022; June 3, 2022 and June 4, 2022, at Government Secondary School, Ogamirana, Adavi LGA in Kogi and behind Omialafa Central Mosque, Ose LGA, Ondo State, respectively, attended and held meetings, where they agreed to and planned for the terrorist attack, which they carried out on June 5, 2022, at St. Francis Catholic Church, Owo, Ondo State.

    The offence is said to be contrary to and punishable under Section 12(a) of the Terrorism (Prevention and Prohibition) Act, 2022.

    At the time of this report, the suspects are yet to be arraigned.

  • Kaigama holds requiem Mass for late elder brother

    Kaigama holds requiem Mass for late elder brother

    The Catholic Archbishop of Abuja, Most Rev. Ignatius Kaigama, has urged Nigerians to renew their attitude towards the vulnerable in the country.

    He said this on Wednesday in Abuja during an interview with newsmen after a requiem Mass to celebrate the life of his elder brother, Fidelis Kaigama, who died on June 6, aged 85.

    “We need to renew our attitude towards the poor, the marginalised, the elderly, the sick, and give them the dignity they deserve.

    “We also need to care for the living, when they are alive as well as honour the dead. When they are sick, we should look after them,” he said.Kaigama reflected on his brother’s life, saying “he was a good Nigerian and very patriotic.

    “Fidelis Kaigama’s life was marked by selfless service and dedication.

    “As a teacher, headmaster, general manager of a broadcasting corporation, lecturer in a polytechnic, and permanent secretary in several ministries, he embodied diligence and integrity.

    “He took his work seriously, and I drew a lot of inspiration from him to do my work, even as a priest and a bishop, ” he said.

    The Archbishop expressed gratitude to President Bola Tinubu for his condolences letter, as well as other Nigerians.

    Mr. Damian Dodo (SAN), a close family friend, described the late Kaigama as “a man whose life was a beacon of honesty, service, and devotion”.

    “The loss of Fidelis Kaigama is felt deeply not only within his family but throughout the entire community.

    “His kindness, generosity, and unwavering support have left an indelible mark on those who knew him.

    “We, as members of the community, stand with the Archbishop in solidarity.

    “We ask God to comfort him, strengthen him, and give him the grace to bear the loss of a brother who was very close to him,” Dodo said.

    Rev. Fr. Innocent Jooji, in a homily said, ‘while death brings pain, it is also a passage to eternal life for those who believe in Christ’.

    He described the late Kaigama as a compassionate, honest, and impactful civil servant who served with integrity and love for humanity.

    He urged Nigerians, especially public servants, to emulate Kaigama’s selfless values.

  • Catholic Church condemns sealing of cathedral

    Catholic Church condemns sealing of cathedral

    The Catholic Archdiocese of Ibadan has condemned the sealing of St. Mary’s Catholic Cathedral, Oke Padre, the seat of the Catholic Archbishop of Ibadan, over alleged environmental pollution.

    The Archbishop of the Catholic Archdiocese, Most Rev. Gabriel Abegunrin told NAN on Wednesday in Ibadan that officials of the State Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources sealed the premises of the cathedral on Tuesday.

    He said that the officials also imposed a N500,000 fine on the church over alleged toilet pollution.

    Abegunrin said that the officials had initially locked up the toilet of the school situated inside the Cathedral on Monday, without notice to the church.

    He said that the ministry claimed that its action followed a petition by unidentified persons in the neighbourhood that two persons allegedly died due to the pollution of the environment.

    Abegunrin, who rebutted the allegation, said that the petition was however not provided by the official.

    “We went to them and they told us to work on the toilet area of the school, which we started doing on Tuesday.

    “They said if they see the work going on, they will open the toilet, but rather than opening the place, they came to lock the gate to the entire cathedral.

    “The cathedral being a place of worship, where the Archbishop resides and many people use as parking space, we had to open it to give people access,” he said.

    The Archbishop said that the pupils of the school have been asked to stay home till June 2, while work on the toilet was completed.

    He said that the Church has demanded for the copy of the petition and proof of the deaths of two people, alleged by the petitioner.

    “Otherwise the Church will have no option than taking legal action of defamation of character against the Ministry of Environment,” the Archbishop said.

    Reacting, the Permanent Secretary, Oyo State Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources, Dr Sunday Ojelabi said the church was asked to pay N500, 000 as penalty for polluting the environment.

    “We had complaints from people around the environment about the toilet pollution and that two people died as a result of it.

    “When it’s an emergency situation, the law allows us to take an immediate action.

    “They were supposed to evacuate their toilet and do fumigation, we reached out to them on Monday, they didn’t do anything about it and we went to lock the place on Tuesday. But they went and opened the place illegally,” Ojelabi said.

  • Bandits again target Owo Catholic church where worshippers were killed in 2022

    Bandits again target Owo Catholic church where worshippers were killed in 2022

    Mr Wilfred Afolabi, Commissioner of Police in Ondo State has ordered the deployment of operational assets around worship centres across the State.

    DSP Olushola Ayanlade, the command’s spokesperson, made this known in a statement on Sunday in Akure.

    Afolabi explained that the deployment was based on reports of a possible attack by bandits on St. Francis Catholic Church, Owo, where worshippers were killed in 2022.

    He said that the surveillance and patrol activities had also been significantly intensified to forestall any potential attack, reassured the public of their safety.

    “The command wishes to state unequivocally that while the source and authenticity of the said letter remain unverified, the report has necessitated a prompt and strategic response in the interest of public safety.

    “The command use this medium to urge media houses and members of the public to desist from spreading unverified information or fake news that could heighten tension and cause unnecessary panic.

    “Such actions are counterproductive and capable of undermining the security progress we have collectively achieved.

    “Residents of Ondo State are therefore advised to go about their lawful activities without fear or panic,” Afolabi said.

    He said that Police, in collaboration with other security agencies, were fully committed to ensuring the safety and security of all lives and property in the state.

    “For any suspicious activity or information, members of the public are encouraged to contact the nearest police station or use the emergency lines made available by the Command,” he said.

  • Controversies surrounding emergence of new Pope Leo XIV

    Controversies surrounding emergence of new Pope Leo XIV

    Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost emerged as the 267th Pope of the Roman Catholic Church on Thursday. He took the name Pope Leo XIV.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the new Pope was announced in Rome to the waiting crowds at Saint Peter’s Basilica by Cardinal Protodeacon Dominique Mamberti.

    Cardinal Prevost, the first American to become Pope in the 2000 history of the Church, emerged not without one or two controversies.

    One of the controversies is an AI-generated photo of President Donald Trump, which surfaced on the Truth Social account of the U.S. president, showing him dressed as a pope.

    After Cardinal Prevost emerged Pope, many started putting the pieces together and connecting the dots, raising concerns on the church and state controversy once again.

    The church and state controversy refers to the debate about the relationship between religious institutions and the government, particularly the extent to which they should be separate or intertwined.

    Meanwhile, immediately Pope Leo XIV emerged, President Trump has this to say on Truth Social: “Congratulations to Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost, who was just named Pope.

    “It is such an honour to realise that he is the first American Pope. What excitement, and what a Great honour for our Country. I look forward to meeting Pope Leo XIV. It will be a very meaningful moment!”

    According to a Daily Mail report, Prevost’s election as Pope shocked the world, as there has long been a taboo against an American pope, given the geopolitical power already wielded by the United States in the secular sphere.

    The question many are asking: “Did the U.S. influence the emergence of Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost as Pope or the AI photo of President Trump dressed as a pope is sheer coincidence?”

    But Prevost is also a Peruvian citizen and lived for years in Peru, first as a missionary and then as an archbishop. He was a popular choice with the Latin American and North American cardinals.

    Another controversy heralding the emergence of Cardinal Prevost as Pope Leo XIV is the age-long tradition of using white smoke to signal the successful election of a new Pope.

    Nigerian actor and lawyer, Anayo Modestus Onyekwere, popularly known as Kanayo O. Kanayo, is one of those who have questioned this age-long tradition.

    In electing a Pope, all the ballots used are burned in a cast-iron stove first used in the 1939 conclave. Chemicals are added to colour the smoke: black if no Pope has been elected, white if one has been elected.

    TNG reports Pope Leo XIV emerged at the third ballot, meaning black smoke billowed twice from the chimney above the Sistine Chapel in the process of electing the new Pope.

    At the third ballot, white smoke billowed from the chimney above the Sistine Chapel in Rome to announce that the 133 Cardinal electors have elected the new Pope.

    Around 45,000 people had gathered in St Peter’s Square to await the announcement.

    Reacting, the Nigerian actor argued that the Catholic Church should stop the practice of using black smoke to signify failure in the election process.

    “This has been engrained in the mind of the world that black is failure. I think this is bad,” Kanayo said.

    Speaking further, he said: “So, yesterday, what happened was that the news broke that Cardinals fail to elect a new Pope.

    “What that meant was that black smoke came from the chimney. So, when they fail, it is black smoke. When they succeed, it is white smoke.

    “This has been engrained in the mind of the world that black is failure. I think this is bad.

    “The Catholic Church must rise up to this, immediately. We have been denigrated, we have been vilified, doing anything as black people. So, this means Africa is the black sheep of the world.

    “Catholic community, let blue smoke mean that a new Pope has not been elected and let white means he has been elected. Remove the black”.

    Cardinal Prevost’s first word after becoming Pope Leo XIV

    Shortly after Cardinal Prevost was elected as Pope Leo XIV, his first appearance was at the central window of St. Peter’s Basilica and his first words were: “Peace be with all of you”, referecning the first greeting of Jesus Christ, when he rose from the dead.

    “God loves us, all of us, evil will not prevail. We are all in the hands of God. Without fear, united, hand in hand with God and among ourselves, we will go forward,” Pope Leo XIV said.

    What to know about the new Pope

    Meanwhile, prior to his election as Pope Leo XIV, Cardinal Prevost was Prefect of the Dicastery for the Bishops.

    TNG reports the new Roman Pontiff was created Cardinal in 2024 by the late Pope Francis.

    Pope Leo XIV, just like the late Pope Francis, is from the Americas. However, unlike Jorge Mario Bergoglio, the 69-year-old new Pope is from the northern part of the continent.

    He was born on September 14, 1955, in Chicago, Illinois, to Louis Marius Prevost, of French and Italian descent, and Mildred Martínez, of Spanish descent. He has two brothers, Louis Martín and John Joseph.

    He spent his childhood and adolescence with his family and studied first at the Minor Seminary of the Augustinian Fathers and then at Villanova University in Pennsylvania, where in 1977 he earned a Degree in Mathematics and also studied Philosophy.

    On September 1 of the same year, Prevost entered the novitiate of the Order of Saint Augustine (O.S.A.) in Saint Louis, in the Province of Our Lady of Good Counsel of Chicago, and made his first profession on September 2, 1978. On August 29, 1981, he made his solemn vows.

    The Pontiff received his theological education at the Catholic Theological Union in Chicago. At the age of 27, he was sent by his superiors to Rome to study Canon Law at the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas (Angelicum).

    In Rome, he was ordained a priest on June 19, 1982, at the Augustinian College of Saint Monica by Archbishop Jean Jadot, then pro-president of the Secretariat for Non-Christians, which later became the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue and then the Dicastery for Interreligious Dialogue.

    Prevost obtained his licentiate in 1984 and the following year, while preparing his doctoral thesis, was sent to the Augustinian mission in Chulucanas, Piura, Peru (1985–1986).

    In 1987, he defended his doctoral thesis on “The Role of the Local Prior in the Order of Saint Augustine” and was appointed vocation director and missions director of the Augustinian Province of “Mother of Good Counsel” in Olympia Fields, Illinois (USA).

  • Just In: America gets first Pope as identity of new Pope emerges

    Just In: America gets first Pope as identity of new Pope emerges

    American-born, Cardinal Robert Prevost has been unveiled as the leader of the Catholic church.

    TheNewsGuru reports that the new Pope would replace the late Pope Francis, who died at the age of 88 in the early morning of 21 April 2025.

    Earlier this evening, white smoke billowed above the Sistine Chapel, signalling that the cardinals have selected the 267th leader of the Catholic Church on the second day of the conclave.

    During the papal conclave, the cardinals were not allowed to leave or have any contact with the outside world while they elected the next leader of the world’s 1.4 billion Catholics.

    Cardinal Dominique Mamberti, a 73-year-old Frenchman born in Morocco, made the announcement of a new Pope.

    Cardinal Mamberti was expected to announce this unless he himself was elected Pope.

    Announcing the new Pope, Dominique said: “I announce to you a great joy, We have a Pope. The most eminent and the reverend Robert Francis.”

     

  • BREAKING: New Pope elected as white smoke billows above Sistine Chapel

    BREAKING: New Pope elected as white smoke billows above Sistine Chapel

    White smoke billowed from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel on Thursday evening, signaling  a successor to Pope Francis has been elected after three rounds of voting.

    TheNewsGuru reports that the smoke is the only public sign of what is happening during the Papal Conclave, after the cardinals handed in their phones and took oaths of secrecy while the Vatican shut down mobile phone towers to protect the deliberations.

    Although the name of the new Pope is yet to be disclosed, however, it will become clear when the cardinals emerge on the balcony of the Sistine Chapel in a moment.

    Details Later…

  • What Pope Francis did last before death on Easter Monday

    What Pope Francis did last before death on Easter Monday

    Pope Francis, spiritual leader of the world’s 1.4 billion Catholics, died on Easter Monday 2025 aged 88, the Vatican announced.

    Cardinal Kevin Farrell, camerlengo of the Apostolic Chamber, announced the death in a statement: “At 7:35 this morning (0535 GMT), the Bishop of Rome, Francis, returned to the house of the Father.”

    Francis had recently suffered from pneumonia in both lungs and spent more than a month in the Gemelli Hospital in Rome.

    It was his fourth longer stay in the hospital in the past four years.

    He was initially there in 2021 for intestinal surgery; in 2023 for severe pneumonia and later that year for another open abdominal procedure.

    Francis had been participating in public events from a wheelchair due to a severe knee condition and had to cancel many regular prayers, audiences and services in recent months.

    In what turned out to be his last public appearance, Francis appeared briefly on the balcony in front of thousands gathered in St Peter’s Square on Sunday to deliver an Easter blessing.

    In spite of his ill health, the pope completed a 12-day trip to Asia and the Pacific in the first half of September and a visit to Luxembourg and Belgium later the same month.

  • Pope Francis simplified funeral rites before death – Report

    Pope Francis simplified funeral rites before death – Report

    Reports emanating from the Holy See’s Dicastery for Communication indicate that Pope Francis, the head of the Catholic Church and sovereign of the Vatican City State is dead.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Pope Francis died on Easter Monday, April 21, 2025, at the age of 88 at his residence in the Vatican’s Casa Santa Marta.

    Cardinal Kevin Farrell, Camerlengo of the Apostolic Chamber, confirmed the death of Pope Francis at the Casa Santa Marta.

    “Dearest brothers and sisters, with deep sorrow I must announce the death of our Holy Father Francis. At 7:35 this morning, the Bishop of Rome, Francis, returned to the house of the Father.

    “His entire life was dedicated to the service of the Lord and of His Church. He taught us to live the values of the Gospel with fidelity, courage, and universal love, especially in favor of the poorest and most marginalized.

    “With immense gratitude for his example as a true disciple of the Lord Jesus, we commend the soul of Pope Francis to the infinite merciful love of the One and Triune God,” Cardinal Farrell stated.

    How Pope Francis simplified funeral rites before death

    Meanwhile, according to a Vatican News report, the late Pope Francis in April 2024 approved an updated edition of the liturgical book for papal funeral rites.

    Although the funeral Mass for Pope Francis is yet to be announced, the updated edition of the liturgical book for papal funeral rites will guide the funeral of the late Pope.

    “The second edition of the Ordo Exsequiarum Romani Pontificis introduces several new elements, including how the Pope’s mortal remains are to be handled after death.

    “The ascertainment of death takes place in the chapel, rather than in the room where he died, and his body is immediately placed inside the coffin,” the report reads.

    According to Archbishop Diego Ravelli, Master of Apostolic Ceremonies, the late Pope Francis had requested that the funeral rites be simplified and focused on expressing the faith of the Church in the Risen Body of Christ.

    “The renewed rite,” said Archbishop Ravelli, “seeks to emphasise even more that the funeral of the Roman Pontiff is that of a pastor and disciple of Christ and not of a powerful person of this world.”

    Recall that Pope Francis was admitted to the Agostino Gemelli Polyclinic Hospital on Friday, February 14, 2025, after suffering from a bout of bronchitis for several days.

    Pope Francis’ clinical situation gradually worsened, and his doctors diagnosed bilateral pneumonia on Tuesday, February 18.

    After 38 days in hospital, the late Pope returned to his Vatican residence at the Casa Santa Marta to continue his recovery.