4 Okpara Lane Block Rosary Crusade C.K.C Aba

4 Okpara Lane Block Rosary Crusade C.K.C Aba Religious Organization ( # 4 Okpara Lane B.R.C. C.K.C Aba, Abia State, Nigeria

HERE ARE THE FOUR NIGERIAN CATHOLIC CARDINALS!Nigeria currently has four (4) living Catholic cardinals, three (3) of who...
23/05/2026

HERE ARE THE FOUR NIGERIAN CATHOLIC CARDINALS!

Nigeria currently has four (4) living Catholic cardinals, three (3) of whom are retired and one (1) remains an active age.

The Retired Nigerian cardinals are:

i. His Eminence, Cardinal Francis Arinze: Born in 1932, he is the most senior Nigerian cardinal. Pope John Paul II elevated him to the College of Cardinals in 1985. He had a distinguished career at the Vatican, notably serving as the Prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments. He served as the Prefect of the Secretariat for Non-Christians from 1984 to 2002 and Prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments from 2002 to 2008. He previously served as the Archbishop of Onitsha from 1967 to 1985 and as the president of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of Nigeria from 1979 to 1984.

ii. His Eminence, Cardinal Anthony Olubunmi Okogie: Born in 1936, he is the Archbishop Emeritus of Lagos. He was elevated to the cardinalate by Pope John Paul II in 2003. He was the president of the Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria, CBCN.

iii. His Eminence, Cardinal John Olorunfemi Onaiyekan: Born in 1944, he is the Archbishop Emeritus of Abuja. He was made a cardinal in 2012 by Pope Benedict XVI. He was archbishop of the Latin Church archdiocese of Abuja from 1994 to 2019. He has served as president of the Christian Association of Nigeria, president of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of Nigeria, President of The Symposium of Episcopal Conferences of Africa and Madagascar (SECAM), and bishop of Ilorin.

The Active Nigerian cardinal:

iv. His Eminence, Cardinal Peter Ebere Okpaleke: Born in 1963, he is the Bishop of Ekwulobia. He was appointed Bishop of Ahiara in 2012 and consecrated in 2013, but after the local clergy and laity insisted on an Mbaise bishop instead, he was installed as bishop of Ekwulobia. He was elevated to cardinal by Pope Francis on 27 August, 2022.

20/05/2026

Big shout out to my newest top fans! Michael Oseme

18/05/2026

THE SUFFERING OF CHRIST 🥺🥺
Let’s talk about the suffering of Jesus Christ and what the cross, the scourge, the thorns, the nails, and the crucifixion mean to us.

1. I will start with the scourge. Below is an attached image of what the scourge looked like.

The scourge was a Roman whip made of leather straps with sharp pieces of bone and metal attached to it, designed to tear the skin during flogging.

Purpose: Jesus took our punishment, our pain, our infirmities, our sicknesses, and everything that could destroy us. The scourge represents the suffering we deserved but He carried for us.

The pictures we often see online do not fully capture what happened to Jesus. The Bible says in Isaiah 52:14 that after the beating, He no longer looked human. His face was marred and disfigured beyond recognition. That is how severe the scourging was. He endured all of this for us.

The next time you are tempted to sin, remember that Jesus willingly endured the lashes of the scourge for your sake.

2. The Crown of Thorns

The crown of thorns was made from thorny branches woven together from long, flexible stems covered with sharp thorns. The Roman soldiers twisted it into a crown and placed it on the head of Jesus Christ to mock Him as “King of the Jews.” As they pressed it into His head, He bled terribly.

This wound would have been extremely painful because the scalp and forehead contain many blood vessels. Even small injuries in that area can bleed heavily and cause intense pain.

The soldiers did not place the crown gently. They struck Him on the head repeatedly, driving the thorns deeper into His flesh.

Jesus endured this to break the curse that came upon mankind in Genesis 3:18:

> “Both thorns and thistles it shall bring forth for you…”

After Adam sinned, the ground was cursed, and thorns became a symbol of:
• The curse of sin
• Suffering
• Toil
• Brokenness
• Death entering creation

So when Jesus wore the crown of thorns, it symbolized Christ taking the curse upon Himself. The very sign of the curse was placed upon His head.

That is why Galatians 3:13 says:

> “Christ redeemed us from the curse…”

Whenever you are tempted to sin, remember this moment. Remember the pain Jesus endured for your sake and the price He paid to bring us redemption.

3. The soldiers cast lots for His clothing.

This means they stripped Jesus Christ of everything He had on in order to shame and humiliate Him publicly. Even His beard was pulled out and torn. In Jewish culture, a man’s beard was a symbol of dignity and honor, so removing or disfiguring it was deeply shameful and humiliating.

Isaiah 50:6 says:

“I gave my back to those who struck Me, and My cheeks to those who plucked out the beard…”

Jesus was not only wounded physically; He also carried our shame, rejection, humiliation, and disgrace.

That is why the Bible says in Hebrews 12:2 that He “endured the cross, despising the shame.”

The cross was designed to publicly disgrace a person. Jesus allowed Himself to be mocked, stripped, beaten, and dishonored so that we could receive acceptance, mercy, and reconciliation with God.

The images we often see of Jesus Christ do not fully capture the depth of His suffering. He was stripped, wounded, bruised, and bleeding for our sake.

Every lash, every wound, every humiliation He endured was because of our sins.

This alone should make us hate sin even more. As children of God, we should remember the price that was paid for our redemption.

Hebrews 6:6 warns about crucifying the Son of God again through persistent rebellion and rejection. Sin is never something small, it cost Jesus pain, blood, and suffering on the cross.

Whenever you are tempted, remember what Christ endured to save us, and let it draw your heart back to holiness, repentance, and love for God.

4. The Nails

The nails used in the crucifixion of Jesus Christ were not small household nails. They were large iron spikes, long and thick enough to pierce through flesh and fasten a person to a wooden cross.

The pain would have been unbearable.

The nails were driven through His hands and feet, piercing nerves, tearing flesh, and causing intense bleeding and trauma. Crucifixion was designed by the Romans to be one of the most painful and humiliating forms of ex*****on ever created.

Every movement on the cross would reopen the wounds. To breathe, Jesus had to push Himself up against the nails in His feet, increasing the agony again and again.

But the nails carried a deeper spiritual meaning.

Colossians 2:14 says:

“Having canceled the record of debt that stood against us… He took it away, nailing it to the cross.”

The nails represent the judgment, debt, and punishment of sin being placed upon Christ.

Our sins nailed Him there.
Our guilt nailed Him there.
The punishment meant for us was placed on Him.

But through His sacrifice, the debt of sin was canceled. The cross became the place where mercy met justice.

The same nails that pierced His body became a symbol of our redemption and freedom in Christ.

Whenever you are tempted to return to sin, remember the nails. Remember the suffering Jesus endured to save us and the price He paid to bring us back to God.

5. The Piercing of His Feet

The feet of Jesus Christ were pierced with large Roman nails during the crucifixion. These were not small injuries. The nails would have gone through the flesh and bone structure of the feet, causing extreme pain, nerve damage, and constant bleeding.

On the cross, every attempt to breathe required Him to push Himself upward against those wounds in His feet. This made the suffering continuous and unbearable, every breath becoming a moment of pain.

Genesis 3:15 says:

> “He will crush your head, and you will strike his heel.”

From the beginning, Scripture points to a struggle between sin and salvation. The “striking of the heel” is a prophetic picture of the suffering the Messiah would endure. The piercing of Jesus feet on the cross is the fulfillment of this promise, He would be wounded in the process of defeating the power of sin and Satan.

Even though His heel was struck, it was not a defeat. It was part of victory.

Through the piercing of His feet:
• Jesus walked the path of suffering for humanity
• He fulfilled the prophecy of Genesis
• He crushed the authority of sin and the serpent through obedience unto death

So when you think about the pierced feet of Christ, remember this: the strike of the serpent was real, but the final victory belonged to God.

6. The Piercing of His Side

After the death of Jesus Christ on the cross, a soldier pierced His side with a spear, and blood and water flowed out.

This was not a random act. It confirmed His death, but it also carries deep spiritual meaning for believers.

The wound in His side is a powerful picture from Genesis. When Adam was put into a deep sleep, God took a rib from his side and formed Eve, the first woman. From his side came the beginning of a bride.

In the same way, the piercing of Jesus represents the birth of something new, the Church, the people of God, the bride of Christ.

Just as Eve came from Adam’s side, life and new creation are seen as coming from Christ’s pierced side. The blood and water that flowed are symbols of cleansing, life, and spiritual birth.

This is why through His sacrifice:
• A new covenant was formed
• A new people were brought forth
• The Church was born through His suffering and love

7. The Cross

The cross that Jesus Christ carried was not a light symbol like we often see today. It was made from rough, heavy wooden beams. It was thick, solid timber, heavy and unrefined.

The cross is the central moment in the suffering of Jesus Christ. It was a Roman instrument of ex*****on designed for maximum pain, shame, and slow death.

Like i said it was made of rough wood, heavy enough to carry, and strong enough to hold a dying body. Victims were nailed and lifted up, exposed to public humiliation, weakness, and unbearable suffering. Every breath on the cross required effort, making death a slow and agonizing process.

But the cross is not only a symbol of pain.

Isaiah 53 says:

> “He was pierced for our transgressions… and by His wounds we are healed.”

The cross represents the place where Jesus carried the full weight of human sin, shame, and judgment. It is where justice and mercy met.

Colossians 2:14 also says:

> “He canceled the record of debt that stood against us, nailing it to the cross.”

This means the cross became the place where our sins were judged and removed. What we could not pay, He carried. What we could not fix, He finished.

The cross also fulfills the picture of redemption from the beginning. What started in the fall of man finds its answer in Christ’s sacrifice.

So the cross is not just an object of suffering. It is the symbol of victory:
• Victory over sin
• Victory over death
• Victory over shame
• Victory over separation from God

When you see the cross, remember this: it was love that held Him there, and it was love that finished the work for us.

©️ Jesus Saves TV

17/05/2026
REV. FR. DR. ANTHONY DIMKPA APPOINTED RECTOR OF SEAT OF WISDOM SEMINARY, ARIAM, UMUAHIA 16 May, 2026 Rev. Fr. Dr. Dimkpa...
16/05/2026

REV. FR. DR. ANTHONY DIMKPA APPOINTED RECTOR OF SEAT OF WISDOM SEMINARY, ARIAM, UMUAHIA

16 May, 2026

Rev. Fr. Dr. Dimkpa Anthony Chidozie is a priest of the Catholic Diocese of Aba. He was born on 7th August 1972, and hails from Ndiakata, Obingwa L. G. A, Abia State, Nigeria.

He had his Primary Education at Ndiakata Community School from 1978-1984 which ended with the acquisition of First School Leaving Certificate. He attended Annunciation Seminary, Amaudara (1984-1986) and Immaculate Conception Seminary, Ahiaeke-Umuahia (1986-1990).

He attended Seat of Wisdom Seminary, Owerri (Affiliate: Pontifical Urban University Rome, 1993-2001) where he bagged the following degrees;
• Philosophical Studies 1993-1997:
B. Phil (Urban University, Rome)
• Theological Studies 1997-2001:
B. D (Urban University, Rome)
• Religious Education 1997-2001:
B. A (Imo State University, Owerri, Nig.)

He was ordained a Deacon on 15th August, 2000 (Aba, Nigéria), and had his Priestly ordination on 29th June, 2001 (Aba, Nigéria).

Fr. Dimkpa's post Ordination assignments and activities are;
• Pastor: St. Judes’s Parish, Ohuru, Aba, Abia State 2001- 2003
• Studies at Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum, where he had his Licentiate in Dogmatic Theology (STL): 2004 – 2006, Doctorate in Dogmatic Theology (STD): 2006 – 2008

• Studies in Nigeria: Masters in Philosophy (2016) IMS University, Owerri; Doctorate (PhD) in Philosophy (2016) IMS University, Owerri

• Pastoral Engagements During the post graduate/specialization Studies in Italy and deepening of French Language at the Catholic University of Toulouse (July, 2008)

• November, 2009 till September 2013: Parrocchia S. Pancrazio, Parma as a Parochial Vicar; volunteer (priest) cultural mediator to the Maximum Security Prisons in Parma Italy; Chaplain of the Parma chapter of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal of Nigeria, Italy.

• 2013 - 2023: Lecturer, Seat of Wisdom Seminary, Owerri – Imo State Nigeria.

A Catholic Nun Killed in a Hospital Attack in the Democratic Republic of the Congo 💔✝️ A Catholic nun serving faithfully...
14/05/2026

A Catholic Nun Killed in a Hospital Attack in the Democratic Republic of the Congo 💔✝️ A Catholic nun serving faithfully in the Democratic Republic of the Congo was among seven people tragically killed during a brutal attack on a Catholic mission hospital. Sister Marie-Sylvie Kavuke Vakatsuraki lost her life on October 19 after armed militants linked to the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF), a rebel group associated with the Islamic State, stormed Maboya village in North Kivu Province. Six patients at the hospital were also killed during the assault. The attackers reportedly looted medicines and medical equipment before setting the hospital ablaze. Several people connected to the hospital, including two religious sisters, were reported missing after the attack and are feared to have been abducted. Sister Marie-Sylvie was not only a religious sister but also a dedicated medical doctor and a member of the Congregation of the Little Sisters of the Presentation of Our Lady at the Temple. She devoted her life to serving the sick, the poor, and the suffering. Bishop Melchisédec Sikuli Paluku of Butembo-Beni expressed deep sorrow and condemned the violence in strong terms. “May the soul of our dear Sister Doctor Marie-Sylvie, who died while serving her brothers and sisters, rest in peace through the mercy of God,” the bishop said. He also lamented the destruction of the Catholic medical facility and offered prayers and condolences to the victims’ families, the local community, and the congregation of sisters mourning this painful loss. The region has continued to suffer repeated violent attacks from the Allied Democratic Forces, with many Christians losing their lives in recent months. Despite persecution and suffering, the faith of the Church in the region remains steadfast. May Sister Marie-Sylvie Kavuke Vakatsuraki and all the victims rest in the eternal peace of Christ. 🙏🕊️✝️

A SHEPHERD RETURNS HOME, BUT HIS LEGACY LIVES ON.Moments from the Requiem Mass of our beloved father and shepherd, Bisho...
14/05/2026

A SHEPHERD RETURNS HOME, BUT HIS LEGACY LIVES ON.

Moments from the Requiem Mass of our beloved father and shepherd, Bishop Peter Nworie Chukwu, held in his hometown, Umuezeokoha, and at his home parish, St. Jude.

In tears, prayers, and thanksgiving, the people of God gathered to honour a life poured out completely in service to Christ and His Church. Though his earthly journey is finished, his light continues to shine in the Diocese he loved so dearly.

“Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord.” — Revelation 14:13

One year already as a Pope.  Congratulations!Say a prayer for Pope Leo XIV🙏
08/05/2026

One year already as a Pope. Congratulations!
Say a prayer for Pope Leo XIV🙏


08/05/2026

Big shout out to my new rising fans! Helen Uche

Ahiara Diocese hosts Owerri Provincial Recollection for all priests and bishops in Owerri Ecclesiastical Province.Thursd...
08/05/2026

Ahiara Diocese hosts Owerri Provincial Recollection for all priests and bishops in Owerri Ecclesiastical Province.

Thursday, 7 May 2026.
@ Mater Ecclesiae Cathedral, Ahiara Mbaise, Imo State Nigeria.

As our priests have gathered in Mbaise to pray for us, may we also keep them in our prayers.

God bless our priests and bishops, and all Christ's faithful!

We've heard that the Bishop-Elect for the Catholic Diocese of Tagbilaran has DECLINED to continue with his Episcopal Ord...
05/05/2026

We've heard that the Bishop-Elect for the Catholic Diocese of Tagbilaran has DECLINED to continue with his Episcopal Ordination scheduled to take place on May 26, 2026.

Personally, I am shocked! It's my first time to hear this type of thing but I am fascinated by the courage of this Priest. He's truly an Honest person like Nathaniel whom Jesus praised in John 1:47.

He has given very important reason for his refusal to be ordained as a Bishop. Please read it on this picture. Let us pray for him and for the Diocese of Tagbilaran.

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