Home » News » “Priests have become an endangered species in Nigeria”

“Priests have become an endangered species in Nigeria”

Facing a wave of kidnappings, murders and violence, Nigerian priests shun violence as an answer and call on prayer.

According to data compiled by ACN, at least 18 priests have been kidnapped in Nigeria since the beginning of 2022, five in the first week of July alone. Although most were released unharmed, three were killed.

Faced with this situation, the Nigerian Diocesan Catholic Priests Association (NDCPA) has issued a statement, sent ACN, denouncing that “it is really sad that in the course of their normal pastoral activities, priests have become an endangered species. Attempts have been made at various levels to cry to the government” say the priests, “but as already observed by the Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria, ‘it is clear to the nation that [the Government] has failed in [its] primary duty of protecting the lives of the Nigerian citizens’”.

Protest in Nigeria
Protest in Abuja/Nigeria to request for more security

We carry with us the Holy Books, not weapons

The priests explicitly reject any response which involves force or violence on their part, saying “we are not terrorists or a war troupe” and also question the usefulness of priests taking part in street protests, but call instead on what they say should be the first weapon of a man of God.

“Our ministerial journey consists in the proclamation of the word of God, and the celebration of the Holy Eucharist as a memorial of Christ and His mission on earth. This implies that we carry along with us the Holy Books and not weapons. Christ never encouraged us to raise arms against anybody nor take up any action in vengeance. We do not take arms, and we will not.”

A week of prayer and fasting to improve security

The statement highlights the fundamental work that priests carry out, despite the lack of security: “Our duty is to lay before the altar of God the gratitude, cares, worries and petitions of the faithful and ours. We are advocates of pro-life and peace. We were called and sent to preach the good news to the poor, give liberty to captives, free the oppressed, heal the broken-hearted, bind up wounds, and the likes. We have been fulfilling this call and we shall continue.”

For this reason, and beginning Monday, 11 July, the priests call on all their brothers in the ministry to join in a week of special prayer and fasting, Eucharistic adoration and recitation of the Rosary. According to the NDCPA, these activities are not meant to replace, but to complement other programmes dioceses have in place to curb the problem of insecurity in Nigeria. “We humbly appeal to all priests to take it very seriously without neglecting other regulations and related recommendations in their various dioceses”, says the statement, sent to ACN.

Don't miss the latest updates!

Algeria: The “Son of St Augustine” visits Annaba

The Vatican has officially confirmed that in the coming April,…

Mauritania: The challenges of ministering to a community of migrants

The only diocese in Mauritania has just celebrated its sixtieth…

Ukraine: “You did not only give us food, but a taste of God”

In eastern Ukraine people have grown numb to the danger…

Catholics returning ‘in their thousands, not hundreds’ say bishops

Thousands of Catholics in north-east Nigeria have returned to church…

Bishops of Venezuela ask country to come together for national reconciliation

The bishops’ have asked for the release of political prisoners,…

Catholic Church steps up pressure on Nigerian government over rising violence

Over the past days several Catholic organisations and dioceses have…

Significant drop in arrests of priests in 2025 but deaths increase

The number of kidnappings also dropped slightly compared to 2024…

“Missiles are flying over our heads” – Tens of thousands displaced as violence escalates in Lebanon

ACN has remained in contact with project partners in the areas affected by airstrikes, assessing the need for emergency assistance. Nearly 30,000 people have been displaced following a wave of...

The Christian presence must not die out

As tensions rise once again across the Middle East, the international Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need (ACN) warns that a further escalation of violence could have devastating...

Algeria: The “Son of St Augustine” visits Annaba

The Vatican has officially confirmed that in the coming April, Pope Leo will visit Algeria, making this the first ever visit from a current pope. Leo XIV, who is an...