The Nigerian Bishop said, “Exercising the ministry in a diocese where priests who are supposed to be my immediate and closest collaborators, brothers, friends and sons are at war with one another, with the laity and with me as their chief shepherd would be disastrous and a threat to salvation of souls - including my own soul.”
He said his decision to resign was “the only option to facilitate re-evangelisation of the faithful of the diocese, especially the priests.”
On 19 February 2018, the Holy Father accepted Bishop Okpaleke’s resignation and “relieved him of the pastoral care of the Diocese of Ahiara.”
A year later, the Pope announced the establishment of the Diocese of Ekwulobia in Southeastern Nigeria and appointed Bishop Okpaleke the pioneer Local Ordinary.
The Nigerian Cardinal-designate was installed Bishop of Ekwulobia Diocese that was curved from his native Diocese of Awka on 29 April 2020.
(Story continues below)
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In the video recording circulated June 8, Bishop Okpaleke says what happened with his appointment as the Bishop of Ahiara “revealed to me the goodness of God, the kindness of God, the favors God has showered on me right from my birth.”
The December 2012 appointment, he says, “also revealed to me the goodness in the hearts of many people, many people from Ahiara and all over, who were with me, stood with me in prayers, in words of encouragement, who supported me all through.”
In the video recording, the Nigerian Cardinal-designate says that his rejection was “a period of long retreat for me, a period of prayer, reflection, and a period to come closer and closer to my God, a period to pray for the special virtue of tolerance, which we so much need today.”
“My experience with my appointment has continued to tell me that God is alive, and that we still need to go a long way towards our conversion, our closeness to God, which is supposed to be manifested in our relationships with one another,” says Bishop Okpaleke.
Magdalene Kahiu is a Kenyan journalist with passion in Church communication. She holds a Degree in Social Communications from the Catholic University of Eastern Africa (CUEA). Currently, she works as a journalist for ACI Africa.