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词条 Roman Catholic Diocese of Awgu
释义

  1. References

  2. External links

{{Infobox diocese
| jurisdiction = Diocese
| name = Awgu
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| patron = St Michael the Archangel
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| patriarch =
| major_archbishop =
| bishop = + John Ifeanyichukwu Okoye
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| vicar_general = Very Rev Fr Cyprian Orji
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The (Roman Catholic) Diocese of Awgu (Dioecesis Auguensis) in Nigeria was created on July 5, 2005, when it was split off from the Diocese of Enugu. It is a suffragan diocese of the Archdiocese of Onitsha. Its first bishop is John Ifeanyichukwu Okoye. The St. Michael Archangel Parish Church in Awgu is the largest church in the diocese and will therefore become its cathedral.

The Diocese covers an area of 1,310 km² of the Enugu State, covering the local government areas: Awgu, Agbogugu, Inyi, Ndeabor, Nnenwe, Owelli and Oji Rivers (except the parish of Ukwuoba). Neighboring dioceses are Enugu to the north, Abakaliki to the east, Umuahia to the south and Awka to the west.

The total population in the diocese is 600,000, of which 360,000 are Roman Catholic. The diocese is subdivided into 42 parishes.

Further Information

The people of Awgu geographical circumscription were a deeply religious people; who before the advent of

Christianity in Igboland had a common religious heritage of

a belief in One, Unseen, Omnipotent God. This Almighty

God was referred to as Ali Awgu (the Awgu earth goddess).

No wonder such popular expressions as “Ali Awgu Chewe

Nwawu” (Ali Awgu protect your child) is common among

Awgu people. This belief and sense of Sacred in this Ali

Awgu is peculiar to Awgu people. This belief and sense of

sacred in this Ali Awgu is peculiar to Awgu religious

tradition permeated and prevailed over the social, moral,

spiritual, mutual and stereological background of the

people before the beginning of the Christian religion.

The remotest beginning of the Catholic presence in the

Awgu division dates back to the acts of the French catholic

Missionaries that came to Eastern Nigeria under Fr. J. E.

Lutz in 1885 pitching their first tent at Holy trinity in

Onitsha. The evangelical activities of these French Holy

Ghost missionaries spread to Enugu Section and

consequently to Awgu sub-section by the early years of 20th

century. The missionary development in Awgu came

mainly from Eke town in Udi division, and partly from

Uturu in Okigwe. What we call Awgu Diocese today is

therefore a historical effect of synthetic, missionary roles

and contributes from Eke and Uturu Catholic Missions.

As early as 1912, Chief Onyeama (the warrant paramount

Chief of Eke town) in his bid to attract Western Education

for his children and people, had gathered a handful of

people (Catechumen) amidst the already existing Anglican

adherents that were found around Eke and Abor towns.

Diocesan Directory 7.

His invitation to the Catholic Missionaries brought Fr.

Joseph Shanahan to Eke in 1914; who laid the first

foundation of the old Eke Parish/School out of which

sprang the spread of other Catholic Missions in the current

Enugu part of Eastern Nigeria. As the incumbent and first

Bishop of Awgu, Rt. Rev. Dr. J. I. Okoye wrote in his B.D.

Thesis, Christianity in Mbanabo, its Advent growth, and

Future, “It was indeed at Eke that the religious tree which

spread its branches to other parts of Enugu Diocese was

planted, watered and nurtured”. Eke Parish was the cradle

of the faith that has today become the Diocese of Nsukka,

Abakaliki, Makurdi, Oturkpo, Ogoja, and Enugu. It was in

1921 that the Roman Catholic Mission set up a School/Church at Oke-Oli Ali-Awgu (St. Michael’s Awgu)

which attracted over 100 converts in less than one year.

They were received and harbored by Late Chief Chukwunta

Nwachumolie. The first teacher to St. Michael’s

School/Church, Awgu, one Mr. Ofodiamah from Ogwashi

uku of the present Delta State of Nigeria. And the first Holy

Mass at St. Michael’s Awgu was at Oke-Ali-Ohaja Awgu by

Rev. Fr. Grandin.

On the other hand, the missionary movement into Awgu

from Uturu, Okigwe was orchestrated by the

existence/construction of railway line from Enugu to Port

Harcourt in 1915. This made that Ndeabor Railway

Stations a whirlpool of so many itineraries, mercantile and

even evangelical interactions. This created and provided a pastoral relationship between St. Michael’s Awgu and the

Roman Catholic Mission at Uturu, Okigwe (which was

nearer to Awgu than Eke) which was already established in

1912. In 1926, Rev. Fr. Treich, the first priest to minister to

the faithful at St. Michael’s Church, Awgu from Uturu

prepared Catechumen who received their First Holy

Diocesan Directory 8.

Communion on 21 October 1926. However, given the

foundation of another Church in Awgu region at Mmaku,

which was raised to a parish status in 1922, St. Michael’s

Awgu was under Mmaku Parish until 1948 when she was

made a parish too. Out of these two sources (Eke and

Uturu), the church continued to spread in Awgu areas with

joyful yet uneasy circumstances, on both sides of the

missionaries and mission converts. There were days of

thug-of-war between native ancestral religion and

Christianity and of oscillation of people from old traditional

civilization and the emerging one that is Christian and

exotic. Given limited pastors and prevalent pressures from

conflicting old and new faiths, it was really martyrdom like

and heroic to be a Christian then. But it was out of these

rocky roots that today we rejoice to the harvest of a young,

buoyant and vibrant Awgu ecclesiastical circumscription.

Awgu was created a diocese by Pope Benedict

XVI on the 8th of July, 2005. On the 29th day of September,

it was canonically erected and Most Rev. John

Ifeanyichukwu Okoye ordained and enthroned as its first

bishop.

[1]

References

1. ^Catholic Diocese of Awgu 'Diocesan Directory & Liturgical Calendar 2014', (Enugu: Snaap Press) 8-10

External links

  • Catholic-hierarchy.org
  • Vatican press release on the creation
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2 : Catholic Church in Nigeria|Roman Catholic dioceses in Nigeria

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