Saturday, May 30, 2009

Ordination of Paul Nyawir

Folks,
It is over now we have Fr. Francis Nyawir. I don't know if what I saw can change my thinking but I appreciated going there in fact He "Blessed" me. To be sincere everything was hollow......... I was happy because i met so many Fish group members all the members of all times. The ones who have their experiences with priests and the curious ones. They were all there and we enjoyed our same union. we took photos with all the big Guns who were present.

There was one thing that did not go well with all the people who attended and this was that fr. Pesa of coptic concelebrated the Eucharist. this and that everybody was allowed to recieve "holy communion" Jothurwa Komnio Mtakatifu onge ikruok ne. I do not attach any true value to this but I think we need to give these people some time as there could be more that we have not seen.

after the service the Fr. Shihundu told us to join the Change otherwise we will find ourselves on the wrong side when the change is inevitable. Good quote though maturity state that watch before you leap.

All the people who said they will be there were missing in action. these include but not limited to Ann, Vincent wuod Guardian, Hellen Gamba, i wish to ask you to be serious with your messages when you are to be there please be there and give feed back.

Oritiuru Jorech wetena Sammy will upload the photos.

Martin Opondo

Friday, May 29, 2009

Another priest for renegade church - Jacob Okal

All of you must have met Francis Nyawir in one forum of the other. I don’t blame him for crossing over to the reformed catholic, I think he got the worst frustration one can get when he was aspiring to be a catholic priest. This must have been his true calling. I congratulate him and wish him well.
For those who will be in Kisumu, please give Francis your support by attending the event.


Mr Francis Nyawir of the Reformed Catholic Church who will be ordained priest this weekend at the Social Centre in Kisumu.

A rebel wing of the Catholic church is set to ruffle feathers again by ordaining a priest, to be followed by the ordination of the group’s local leader as a full-fledged bishop.
Mr Francis Nyawir will on Saturday be ordained as priest of the Reformed Catholic Church at the Kisumu Social Centre.
It has been a long walk to the pulpit for Mr Nyawir, who studied long and hard to be a Catholic priest, but dropped out along the way, was ex-communicated, and now finds his calling in the controversial splinter group.
From a strict Roman Catholic upbringing — his four brothers all went through seminary — he became an altar boy at his local church.
In 1982 the strapping 20-year-old joined the Apostles of Jesus Seminary in Nairobi for a one-year course, and then returned to the Kisumu Diocese for pastoral work.
About two years later, he went to St Augustine’s Senior Seminary in Bungoma for a diploma in philosophy.
On graduation, he joined St Thomas Aquinas Major Seminary in Nairobi for a degree in theological studies.
It is here that he encountered an obstacle. Towards the end of his studies, he got into trouble with the college administration. He says simply that he returned late from a break.
Expelled and with no hope of becoming a priest, he decided to get married as he did not need to be celibate any more.
Several years later, he enrolled at the Apostles of Jesus Scholasticate in Nairobi to complete his education and was awarded a Bachelor of Sacred Theology degree by the institution that is affiliated to the Rome-based Pontifical Urbanian University.
Then he set upon picking the pieces of his life, going to South Africa for pastoral work for a year as he soul-searched. When he returned, he had nothing else to do, so he turned to the classroom.
He was employed at Mbeji Academy in Siaya as a Humanities teacher before he moved to Kibos Secondary School.
Religious studies
While at it, Mr Nyawir studied for a Masters of Arts in Religious Studies from Catholic University of East Africa.
In 2005, he moved to Uganda where he landed a teaching job. It is around this time that he heard of the Reformed Catholic Church when he read a newspaper report about Father Gabriel Shiundu, the leader of the Kenyan chapter, who was getting married.
“I wrote to him, called him and eventually visited him,” he recalls.
He was put on probation by the church leadership and asked to form a small Christian community. If successful, he was told, he would be ordained as a priest in the church.
This he did and presently, the community has a membership of 30. This is despite the fact they did not have a priest to dispense Eucharistic celebrations and celebrate Mass.