Church leaders in the Central African Republic have decried the Good Friday murder of a priest by a group of armed men.

Father Christ Forman Wilibona, a priest for the Diocese of Bossangoa, was driving to his parish, Saint Kisito Church in Paoua, when he was shot six times, according to a statement issued by Caritas, the Church’s federation of relief and development agencies.

“We denounce and condemn these barbaric acts from another age,” said Archbishop Dieudonné Nzapalainga, head of Caritas. “We invite the people of the Central African Republic as well as all men and women of good will to pray for the return of peace and security to our country and to open their hearts to dialogue and reconciliation.”

His murder came two days after the kidnapping of Archbishop Nestor-Désiré Nongo Aziagbya, bishop of Bossangoa and three other priests of the diocese in Batangafo by former Seleka fighters.

Archbishop Nzapalainga noted the rise in religious-oriented violence, especially in the northwest of the country. 

“We denounce and condemn these barbaric acts from another age,” he said. “They could compromise the move towards national reconciliation we have so longed for.”

He called on the government to restore the rule of law, and for African Union and international forces to disarm militias so people are free to move around the country.

“We invite the people of the Central African Republic as well as all men and women of good will to pray for the return of peace and security to our country and to open their hearts to dialogue and reconciliation,” he said.

Priestly Formation and the Renewal of Catholic Life

In every age the Church has the task of learning from and respecting the past without being captured by it.  As the world changes, so do the pastoral needs of the Catholic community.  In a city as rich in Catholic history as Philadelphia, we need to treasure the saints and achievements of previous generations.  But real faith is more than nostalgia.  We need to look ahead.  We need to carry the legacy of the Church in Philadelphia forward by thinking and building creatively for the future today.