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Catholic Bishop in Kenya Calls for Strengthening Families as Foundation of Church, “social fibre of society

Bishop Cleophas Oseso Tuka of Kenya’s Catholic Diocese of Nakuru. Credit: ACI Africa

Bishop Cleophas Oseso Tuka of Kenya’s Catholic Diocese of Nakuru has emphasized the importance of strengthening the family as the foundation of the society and the Church.

In a May 10 interview with ACI Africa after presiding over the Priestly Ordination of three Kenyan members of the Congregation of the Holy Spirit (Spiritans/Holy Ghost Fathers/CSSp.) in his Episcopal See, Bishop Oseso highlighted the urgent need for a renewed focus on the family institution.

“We say the family is the social fibre of society. If we strengthen our families, then that is where the Church is,” he said.

Bishop Oseso explained that “the Church is really these small families,” underscoring that the growth of both the family and the people of God ultimately depends on how well the family unit is nurtured.

He noted that strong families foster stronger vocations and communities, saying, “If the families are strong, then suddenly we are going to have good Priests. If the families are strong, then society is going to be a good society.”

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The Kenyan Catholic Bishop, who has been at the helm of Nakuru Diocese since his Episcopal Consecration in May 2023 called for a collective re-examination of the state of family institution. 

“Let us give the family the prominence that it deserves. Let the parents understand their roles and duties. It's not about who is who, it's about the father taking his responsibility, the mother taking hers,” he said, alluding to the message of the members of the Kenya Conference of Catholic Bishops (KCCB) on the family in their 2025 Lenten Campaign, which stressed the need for parents to embrace their God given parenting roles.

In the May 10 interview, the 57-year-old Catholic Church leader explained that raising children goes beyond being a social responsibility to a spiritual mission. He said, “It’s about the father taking his responsibility, the mother taking hers and working in unity to raise the children God blesses them with, and to educate them, not just socially, but also spiritually.”

He stressed that parents should teach their children “what it means to be human, to love, to care for your neighbour”, cautioning that if these essential religious values “aren’t nurtured in the family, we won’t find them in society.

“If parents instil these values in their children, we believe they will grow up understanding what the Church is, and what their role and responsibility are,” Bishop Oseso told ACI Africa after the Priestly Ordination Mass at St. Francis of Assisi Kiti Catholic Parish of Nakuru Diocese. 

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“We want to keep emphasizing the nurturing and training of families, we need to go back and see where we are failing, where we are not fulfilling our duties in the right way,” he stated, highlighting that a greater investment in family life and pastoral support will help to keep families strong.

Bishop Oseso reiterated, “If the family is strong, then everything will be good in the Church and even in society.”

Meanwhile, at the Second Pan-African Conference on Family Values (PACFV), which opened on Monday, May 12 in Kenya’s capital city, Nairobi, with a call to unapologetically defend the institution of the family as willed and made by God “in the Garden of Eden,” members of the Kenya Christian Professionals Forum (KCPF) echoed Bishop Oseso’s emphasis on the importance of strengthening the family.

Speaking to ACI Africa on the sidelines of the five-day continental conference on family, KCPF chairman, Charles Kanjama, said, “When you have strong families you have good intergenerational relationships.”

Mr. Kanjama, an advocate of the High Court of Kenya, observed that issues impacting families have also taken a toll on the youth, many of whom are now less firmly rooted in family values.

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He highlighted the need for a seamless transition of responsibility to the younger generation through strengthened families, acknowledging that “Africa is a very young continent.”

“They will be the ones to champion the independence of Africa and even to spread these good ideas and values to the West where some of them have been lost,” the Kenyan Senior Counsel told ACI Africa. 

“The youth who tend to nurture ideals want to pursue ideals with a lot of strength and commitment,” he further said, emphasizing why Africa should leverage on this opportunity “to share the ideals of strong family and moral values” with youths. 

Nicholas Waigwa is a Kenyan multimedia journalist and broadcast technician with a professional background in creating engaging news stories and broadcasting content across multiple media platforms. He is passionate about the media apostolate and Catholic Church communication.