The church has joined the heating Building Bridges Initiative (BBI) debate, at a time when politicians are taking positions either to fight or support the expected BBI taskforce report.
The 14-member team was out up by President Uhuru Kenyatta and ODM leader Raila Odinga to come up with soltins to the nation's leadership and political challenges.
But though yet to hand over its report, politicians are already bashing each other over the possible suggestions contained in the report, which the church has warned against.
Mombasa Catholic Archbishop Martin Kivuva on Saturday urged politicians to concentrate on service delivery and stop dwelling on debating a report which is not yet out.
He accused the group of dividing the nation through the BBI talk, urging them to focus on development.
"Politicians have started to divide the country. Let’s concentrate on development ... there is so much that we can do right now,” he said during a fundraiser at St Joseph Tudor Catholic Church.
Father Kivuva pointed out that the talk is likely to undo the peace being enjoyed after the Uhuru-Raila handshake of 2018.
On matters corruption, the preacher said that the church is fully involved in the fight against graft, adding that cheating during national exams is as well a form of corruption.
“We call on the country to continue the war against corruption. Corruption is not just about money. It is also about those crazy behaviours of not wanting to follow the law under some circumstances,” he added.
This comes a month after the church resolved not to take huge donations, as a way of preventing corruption money from findings its way into its churches.