Okeke said the institution is a platform to train young women, especially Church workers’ wives.

In her words, “This institute has been designed to inculcate tenets of managerial principles with appropriate spiritual standards to enable them to succeed in their calling as clergy wives. Church work is a platform that requires some knowledge of rubrics and liturgical expertise.”

She said her over 20 years’ experience as clergy’s wife had accorded her a vast experience in the women and church ministry, which together with the input of other experienced senior clergy’s wives, will be brought to bear on the younger clergy and laity’s wives.

“The world is evolving daily and without dynamism combined with relevant experience in a time like this, failure in ministerial work would be inevitable,” she said.

She advised all the already admitted Church Ministers’ Wives to be serious in learning and practising all that they will be taught in the six months training course, failure of which will be quite appalling. Going extra mile in the service of the Church of God will be determined by the level of seriousness and commitment to learning.

The Bishop’s wife recommended the institute to the Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion), stating that Church work requires virtues of integrity and valuable dynamism, which ought to be deliberately inculcated, and without which, one would fail in her services to God.

According to her, “When you are not properly informed, you might become properly deformed,” and it is a signal to the whole Church to embrace the idea of this institute to ensure that all clergy/laity’s wives become acquainted with the required knowledge to help their husbands in the smooth running of their ministries.

Nneobioma thanked the Bishop of Orlu Diocese for his doggedness in ensuring that the institute was inaugurated.

Rev. McCollins Nwaigbo, OSP

Information Unit Officer of the Diocese of Orlu

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