Thursday, 21 May 2020

NIREC CALLS FOR JOINT INTER-FAITH PRAYERS

*NIREC CALLS FOR JOINT PRAYERS  FOR GOD’S INTERVENTION ON COVID 19 PANDEMIC.* 
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THE NIGERIA INTER-RELIGIOUS COUNCIL (NIREC) CALL ON ALL CHRISTIANS AND MUSLIMS TO TAKE PART in the national weekly prayer that is conducted  online with ZOOM MEETING every Thursday in collaboration with the Office of the Secretary to Government of the Federation (OSGF); Nigeria Television Authority (NTA) and UFUK Dialogue Foundation.

While NIREC calls on everybody to choose a convenient time to pray on Thursday for God’s divine intervention to grant success to the efforts of the Presidential Task Force for COVID 19, NIREC calls on all to pray along with those leading this prayers on Thursday 21/5/2020, which include - Mother Mary Claude Oguh IHM.Superior General, Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, Mother of Christ and President, Nigeria Conference of Women Religious (NCWR);  Mrs Raliat Akinbobola Former Amirah, Federation of        Muslim Women Association in Nigeria (FOMWAN), FCT, Abuja; HRH ALH. ALIYU Kevin DANESI, Oba Idanesi 11, Aidonogie of South Ibie Kingdom, Etsako West LGA, Edo State; Rev. Dr. Israel Akanji,  President, FCT Baptist Conference of the Nigerian Baptist Convention and Salisu  Lawal Chief,  Imam, OSGF & Principal  Executive Officer Accounts.

The prayer session was moderated by Rev. Fr. Cornelius Afebu Omonokhua, the Executive Secretary of NIREC while NIREC appreciates Boss Mustafa (SGF) and Yakubu Mohamed DG NTA for supporting this payer project. With God all things are possible! We pray that this pandemic will be over as soon as possible. 

In a related development while speaking at the joint interfaith prayer session organised yesterday, Thursday, the 21st of May, 2020; the Executive Secretary of NIREC, Fr. Prof. Cornelius Omonokhua stated that the prayers have been going on weekly for the past three weeks in collaboration with the office of the Secretary to the Federal Government, OSGF, The Nigerian Television Authority, NTA and UFUK Dialogue Foundation to end COVID-19 pandemic in Nigeria.

The Nigeria Inter Religious Council, NIREC was formed in the 11th of March 1999 and Inaugurated on the 29th day of September, 1999 to forge Inter-Religious harmony and Concord (Cf. Preamble, Constitution of NIREC as amended, 2020). Since then NIREC has promoted peaceful co-existence between Muslims, Christians and other religious bodies. This weekly Inter-faith prayers testifies to this.

NIREC has two co-Chairmen: His Eminence, Alhaji Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar, the Sultan of Sokoto,  President- General, Nigeria Council for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA) and His Eminence, Rev. Dr. Sampson Supo Ayokunle, President of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN)

Speaking further, the Executive Secretary urged all Muslims and Christians to obey government orders during this period and "ensure that they maintain high level of health hygiene, wash their hands regularly, use hand sanitizers, maintain social distance, make use of cover-ups and aprons, where necessary; stay safe and use face mask" Fr. Omonokhua appealed to the Listeners and Viewers.

Sunday, 17 May 2020

CATHOLICISM AND PLAGUES by OJAPAH

  CATHOLISM AND PLAGUES 

THROUGH THE CENTURIES

     

        Stephen Ojapah MSP



You are Peter and, on this rock, I will build my Church.! (Mt 16:18) It is incontestable that the Catholic Church is the oldest and largest continuously functioning international institution in the world. It has played a prominent role in the history and development of western civilization. Experts in church history cannot exhaust any century in terms of indebt analysis, one can only take some aspects and specific areas for analysis. As we all watch the tsunami of COVID 19 ravage through towns and cities across the globe, one cannot but step back to reflect deeper on how humanity has pulled through such moments. And how specific figures have written their names in gold as a result of their heroic leadership. One institution that we can all draw experience; lessons and expertise of dealing with plagues like the COVID 19 is the Catholic Church.

In the late 240AD, a serious pandemic struck, in the entire Roman empire, which cuts across the commercial hub of the empire: Alexandria, Carthage, Rome. Christianity was an insignificant minority at this time.  St. Cyprian, who was bishop of Carthage in modern-day Tunisia when the disease hit the city around AD 250. He speaks, for instance, of “the attack of fevers.” Severe gastrointestinal symptoms such as diarrhea and vomiting, which afflict a significant number of coronavirus sufferers, were also a major hallmark: “The bowels, relaxed into a constant flux, discharge the bodily strength. The intestines are shaken with a continual vomiting.(Stephen B; 2020)This am sure can provide some insight for medical experts into the mutation of human sickness. AnotherNorth African bishop, St. Dionysius of Alexandria, noted that “now, indeed, everything is tears and everyone is mourning, and wailings resound daily through the city because of the multitude of the dead and dying.” These harrowing words, written almost eighteen hundred years ago, have a ring about them at once timeless and yet painfully relatable. (Stephen B; 2020) St. Pontius, who served as a deacon of Cyprian’s during the period in question, describes the “numberless” inhabitants in Carthage succumbing to the “dreadful plague”. To many historians, what was important to them was the response of the minority Christians in the time of this plague. A response born out of the compassion instilled in their hearts by the values of the Gospel of Jesus. Early the next century, as a new plague ravaged parts of the Empire, Christians again came to the help of those in need. According to Eusebius of Caesarea:In the midst of such illness, they alone [the Christians] showed their sympathy and humanity through their deeds. Every day some continued caring for and burying the dead, for there were multitudes who had no one to care for them; others collected those who were afflicted by the famine throughout the entire city into one place, and gave bread to them all.

In the fourteenth-century Black Death, large numbers of clergy were reportedly seen to have abandoned “their responsibilities, to have run away in fear or in search of gain, to have put their own skins first and the souls of their parishioners a bad second.” ( (Stephen B; 2020) This bad attitudes plays out in (Jer 23:1, Zech 11:17, Jer 10: 21). This will perfectly ring a bell in Nigeria. For years; many of us have accused other “church” owners and some priests as simply staying in business without recourse for the eternal values of tending for their souls. Perhaps the ministry has not stayed long enough to experience any pandemic, the usual gospel has been a gospel of prosperitynow the best time to preach it. Then you see for yourself if ever, it was a gospel worth preaching in the first place. 

In 1575, plague descended on Milan. The city’s bishop, St. Charles Borromeo, hastened both to action and to prayer. Indeed, he exemplified the maxim, beloved of Dorothy Day and others, to “work as though everything depended on ourselves, and pray as though everything depended on God.” 

Borromeo sold his own possessions to fund the relief effort and persuaded many wealthy citizens to contribute generously. He organized his clergy to care, materially and spiritually, for all in need. Living the gospel of Jesus in (John 10:10) He created and staffed hospitals and quarantine houses. Concerned by the growing ranks of the unemployed (sound familiar?) he created jobs for, or otherwise supported, large numbers of laid-off workers. Though he instilled strict social- distancing policies, he was nevertheless desperate not to forego his own personal contact with the suffering. Accordingly, St. Charles made everyone, including his own household, treat him as though he had the plague; he went so far as carrying a long pole to keep healthy-looking people at bay when going about his business. He also made a special point of ensuring that the most vulnerable—that is, the orphaned infants whom he took “particular pleasure in rescuing”—received adequate love and attention. 

Mindful above all of his flock’s spiritual needs, Borromeo went to great lengths to ensure people, despite everything, received proper religious care: “While he did not neglect their bodies, his principal solicitude was for the salvation of souls.” Most strikingly, at the peak of the epidemic, with churches closed and people confined to their homes, he had outdoor altars erected all around the town, “where Mass was said daily, so that all could assist from their homes.” He also instituted door-to-door confessions—“the confessor sitting on the doorstep outside, and the penitent kneeling within”—and home-delivery of the Eucharist on Sundays, administering the sacrament at the doorstep “as if they had been cloistered religious.”

All through the ages, the Catholic Church has distinguished herself by the quality of the health care services, she offers. In Nigeria the Catholic church has distinguished herself via the services of our Religious Women in health care. For example,Sacred Heart Hospital Lantoro Abeokuta, one of the best and the oldest established in 1895, by the Society of African Missions poised to provide an array of qualitative health services that enhances the dignity of the human person has been made history in its early days by taking care of leprosy casesIn making her COVID 19 contributions I personally,never knew the Church possessed over 425 Hospitals and Clinics across the country. Times have changed and the factors are certainly different, I feel proud and happy that the leadership of the CBCN has opened all of our Hospital facilities to the Federal government of Nigeria for use in this period of COVID 19. This is what we do, and this is who we are. 

There are several Catholic Bishops in Nigeria, that have shown great leadership in this time of pandemic, they will be remembered like St Cyprian of Carthage, St Dionysius of Alexandria, St Charles Borromeo. Permit me to single out theleadership provided by the Catholic Bishop of Sokoto Most Rev Dr Mathew Hassan Kukah who opened up the 30 room Pastoral Center in Sokoto to be used as an Isolation center for COVID 19 patience. Sokoto Diocesan Christians are a tiny minority in an overwhelmingly Muslim population. We are happy and proud to share our Christian values with all. 

The most visible image that will remain clear in the hearts and the minds of the people when all this is over, God willing, is the image of Pope Francis, delivering his Urbi et Orbiblessing to the City of Rome and the world at large in an empty St Peter’s Square: This gives a perfect image of the good shepherd (John 10: 11). Plagues for the church has always served as true test of our faith and the values we always preach when there is no plague. For more insights please read the recent book published by Stephen Bullivant. Titled: CATHOLICISM IN THE TIME OF CORONAVIRUS.


Fr Stephen Ojapah is a Missionary of St Paul. He is equally the director for Interreligious Dialogue and Ecumenism for the Catholic Diocese of Sokoto. He is also a KAICIID Fellow. (omeizaojapah85@gmail.com)

THE VOICE OF GOD TO A NUCLEAR WORLD by OJAPA

THE VOICE OF GOD TO A NUCLER WORLD AMIDST COVID 19 PANDEMIC

                     Stephen Ojapah MSP

 

Peace, is a priceless value, one of the parting gifts of Jesus (John 14:27); on the 25th of April 2020, a gathering of international organizations like the Veterans for Peace; United for Peace and Justice; Peace and Planet; People’s Solidarity for Participatory Democracy; Pax Christy International; US Labor Against the War; Lawyers Committee on Nuclear Policy; Peace Action New York; Nuclear Age Peace Foundation held an Online World Conference on the futility of possessing a Nuclear bomb. As the world is so absorbed with the COVID-19 scourge, and every resource is channeled towards the curbing of the pandemic, I find this conference very instructive. The organizers were still in touch with some of the grave problems in the world prior to COVID 19. The degree of relevance of nuclear armament varies depending on which part of the world one is. For an average African, it is a nonexistent issue. There is no single African country that possesses a Nuclear bomb, and certainly may not have the capability in the nearest future. Most African countries are still trying to provide the basic necessities of life for their people. For the Israelis, it’s a weapon that they feel “changes the perception” of their neighbors towards them as a weak and defenseless people that were massacred in millions 70 years ago. For an American or a Russian, the concern is about who has the latest nuclear technology that has the most far reaching range and most lethal power. 

 

There are basically two reasons why everyone on the planet should pay attention to this nuclear disarmament campaign right now. The first reason is inspired by the current global pandemic. Now we understand forcefully our interconnectedness as citizens of the same planet. Children of the same Father (John 1:12, Gen 1:12). If a novel virus can spread this fast and far round the world within few months, we can no longer tolerate the threat of a weapon that can poison the atmosphere and the oxygen anytime. Those who are very innocent will certainly be affected beyond our imagination if the world ever gets to that tipping point. There is no guarantee that leaders committed to global denuclearisation will not emerge tomorrow. The second reason why this campaign should be taken seriously concerns the amount of resources used to develop a nuclear bomb. There is no justice in our system if we continue to use such resources on nuclear bomb. (Proverbs 11:1, Psalm 12:5, Isaiah 10:1-3)

 

This conference seemed to draw a lot of inspirations from the encyclical of Pope Francis on the Environment, Laudato siissued in 2015. This document touched on many issues concerning the environment; human’s behavior towards the Environment; our recklessness and the impact of relativism. Pope Francis states in Laudato si (no. 48), “The human environment and the natural environment deteriorate together; we cannot adequately combat environmental degradation unless we attend to causes related to human and social degradation. In fact, the deterioration of the environment and of society affects the most vulnerable people on the planet”.The most important appeal by the Pope that was echoed during the conference can be found in chapter five of the encyclical. There the Pope talks about Dialogue on the Environment in the International Community

 

The following quotation sums up the Pope’s appeal: “There has been a growing conviction that our planet is a homeland and that humanity is one people living in a common home. An interdependent world not only makes us more conscious of the negative effects of certain lifestyles and models of production and consumption which affect us all; more importantly, it motivates us to ensure that solutions are proposed from a global perspective, and not simply to defend the interests of a few countries. Interdependence obliges us to think of one world with a common plan. Yet, the same ingenuity, which has brought about enormous technological progress, has so far proved incapable of finding effective ways of dealing with grave environmental and social problems worldwide. A global consensus is essential for confronting the deeper problems, which cannot be resolved by unilateral actions on the part of individual countries” (no 164).

 

The one-hour long conference had ten experts from around the globe: Japan, Germany, Iran, USA, Costa Rica, and Australia. Two speakers particularly caught my attention. The first speaker was Wada Masako from Japan. She is a survivor of the 1946 Hiroshima Bombing. She represented Nihon Hidankyo, or the Japan Confederation of A and H-bomb Sufferers Organizations. Wada, who survived the bombing of Nagasaki when she was 22 months old, told a story about the plight of survivors that her late mother had told her many times. She said: “bodies were piled up and burned in a field, filling the area with a stench, and survivors left numb, losing the sense that they were human beings. She noted that the average age of survivors is now 83 and their profound suffering continues.” 

 

The second speaker that caught my attention was Dr Carlos Umana from Costa Rica. He is a medical doctor and a regional vice-president for Latin America of the international physicians for prevention of Nuclear war. He is equally a member of the International steering group, International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear- Weapon (ICAN). Dr Umana spoke extensively on the tripartite effect of the bomb: short term, medium and long terms. Each stage has a monumental effect on the human person; socially, emotionally and psychologically. For those who may have nothing to do with a Nuclear Bomb, this is why he said WE ALL must take the campaign seriously: “The other thing they produce well that is now more relevant than it was 75 years ago is an electromagnetic wave. Nuclear bombs emit electromagnetic wave that would interrupt electronic communication that would affect international travel. It would affect a lot of devices on which we currently depend on (sic) especially in the Hospitals.”  As COVID 19 has brought a lot of solidarity amongst peoples of every race, tribe and culture, let us use this same energy to raise our voices now that we have the chance. 

 

Jonathan Simrin Published history of Costa Rica, and twenty-two other countries like Liechtenstein; Andorra; Dominica; Iceland, Haiti; Grenada Kiribati that have something uniquely spectacular the rest of the world can learn from as far as Nuclear and armed conflicts are concerned. These countries do not have standing armies. Liechtenstein as a country abolished its army since 1868, because the country could not bear the cost of maintaining an army. This country has a provision for the creation of an army in the case of war but thankfully this situation has never occurred. On December 1, 1948, President Jose Figueres Ferrer of Costa Rica abolished the military of Costa Rica. After achieving victory in the civil war that year, Costa Rica maintains small forces capable of law enforcement without a standing army. 

 

St Francis of Assisi once said: “Start by doing what is necessary, then what’s possible, and suddenly you are doing the impossible.” With God all things are possible (Mt 19:26)When president Jose Figueres abolished the army 72 years ago, it started as an impossible venture, I guess. Decades down the line, we now know it is possible for a country to exist without a standing army. Certainly, it is possible for any nation to exist without a nuclear weapon. A skeptic may ask, “Can these countries remain models if they are surrounded by hostile neighbors? This can be an argument for another day. But one thing is sure; if all countries of the world rid themselves of Nuclear weapons, the hostility will not be tied to any atomic or biological weapon. 

 

Fr Stephen Ojapah is a Missionary of St Paul; Director for Interreligious Dialogue and Ecumenism for the Catholic Diocese of Sokoto. He is also a KAICIID Fellow(omeizaojapah85@gmail.com).

 

Saturday, 9 May 2020

GENERAL JUDGEMENT COVID 19

GENERAL JUDGMENT AND COVID 19

Cornelius Afebu Omonokhua

 

In the interactive session on the Nigeria Television Authority (NTA) with the public in the program anchored by the Nigeria Inter-Religious Council (NIREC); Abrahamic Mission and NTA on Wednesday 8th of April 2020, we could not answer all the numerous questions that were coming from the public. This shows the level of fear and fury COVID 19 has planted in the hearts of numerous human beings. So many people are wondering if COVID 19 is a punishment from God or judgement of the world by God to end human existence on earth. In theological discourse, there are two types of eschatological judgements. These are particular judgement and general judgement. The particular judgment is a situation where eachhuman being is judged as an individual person. In the Old Testament, the sinner gets punishment before death and if he does not repent, he is eternally punished in hell. The righteous gets his or her reward on earth and eternal happiness in heaven. Conditions of life later proved that sometimes, even the just can suffer on earth as presented in the book of Job. The New Testament presented Jesus as the innocent victim who sacrificed his life to redeem the world. Jesus is “the lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world that was prophesied in the Old Testament. The implication of these is that death no matter the way and manner it comes shows that this world is not permanent home for human beings. Every human being is destined to die and give account of his or her life to God. The day of death is the last day of each person on earth. The date of the universal end of the world is God’s divine secret. 

 

The particular judgement according to Thomas Aquinas is how each soul is judged the moment it leaves the body. In other words, each person is judged immediately after death. The multitude of people who have died in the global pandemic of COVID 19 could not be facing a general judgement. Each of them in a particular judgement may tell God how the greed of a few people have led to different types of genocide of which they are victims. The heedlessness of some people to conquer the world have led to climate change, environmental pollution, water pollution, nuclear and biological weapons. The effect of these is the risk the earth planet has been subjected to. Animal life, Human life and vegetative life are being eliminated by death from the earth. All these do not indicate a total collapse of life and extinction of the world at a particular time where all will face the judgement of God in a general fashion. A particular natural disaster may not affect every part of the world at a particular given time except God wills it. The general judgment of the last day will not reverse or change any sentence passed in the particular judgment; the purpose of the general judgment is to manifest to all rational creatures the justice of God, his goodness and mercy. 

 

It is likely that the general judgment will take place without words. For all may be judged at once; each may know his own sins and the sins of all others. This implies the possibility of a general judgment that is possible without word-of-mouth discussions. In the words of Aquinas, it is most probable that the whole judgment will be enacted and received mentally, not audibly (P.J. Glenn, A Tour of the Summa, (Rockford, Illinois: Tan Books and Publishers, 1978), Page 44)The prophet Joel says: “I will gather together all nations into the valley of Jehoshaphat, and I will plead with them there” (Joel 3:2). The valley of Jehoshaphat is near Jerusalem, and is overlooked by Mount Olivet from where our Lord ascended into heaven. In the general judgment, the individual person will be judged as a member of the human society, before the whole of humanity. The punishment or reward will be completed by its extension to the re-awakened bodies. The Church teaches that Christ, on His second coming, will judge all men and women. In the Apostles’ Creeds, Christ will come again at the end of the world “to judge the living and the dead,” 

 

The teaching of the Old Testament concerning the coming judgment shows a gradual development. The general judgment of the just and the unjust at the end of the world was not found in the Old Testament with any precision until the composition of the Book of Wisdom (cf. Wisdom 4:20 –5: 24).  Jesus frequently refers to the “Day of judgment” or to the “Judgment” (Matthew 11:22). All nations shall be gathered together before the Son of Man, sitting on the judgment Seat. The good shall be finally separated from the bad, and immediately after the Judgment retribution shall follow. The wicked shall go into everlasting punishment; but the just into life everlasting (Matthew 25:31-33). The General Judgment serves the glorification of God (2 Thessalonians 1:5-12)The wisdom of God attests to his justice in the government of the world hence God gives time to the sinner to repent. As Christ in His human capacity exercises the office of judge in the order and by the authority and power of God, it is God who judges the world through Christ (Romans2:16). Jesus said, “I can do nothing on my own. As I hear, I judge; and my judgment is just, because I seek to do not my own will but the will of him who sent me” (John 5:30). Paul told the Athenians that “while God has overlooked the times of human ignorance, now he commands all people everywhere to repent, because he has fixed a day on which he will have the world judged in righteousness by a man whom he has appointed, and of this he has given assurance to all by raising him from the dead” (Acts 17:30- 31).

 

In the general judgment, the angels also co-operate with God as his servants and ambassadors of Christ: “The Son of Man will send his angels, and they will collect out of his kingdom all causes of sin and all evil doers, and they will throw them into the furnace of fire, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth. Then the righteous will shine like the sun in the kingdom of their Father. Let anyone with ears listen (Matthew 13:41- 43:49)! Jesus said: “Then the sign of the Son of Man will appear in heaven, and then all the tribes of the earth will mourn, and they will see the Son of Man coming on the clouds of heaven with power and great glory. And he will send out his angels with a loud trumpet call, and they will gather his elect from the four winds, from one end of heaven to the other (Matthew 24:30-31). 

 

Concerning the instrumentality of COVID 19 either as punishment or judgment on the world, I do not have a dogmatic answer. I can only think that the world has deviated from the divine mission and vision for the divine creation. Perhaps, some human beings are trying to overthrow God with technology and scientific research to produce only weapons of mass destruction instead of enhancing human life and common wellbeing of humanity. The invention of Chemical, atomic, nuclear, drones and biological weapons negates human life. COVID 19 could be a repercussion or judgement brought upon humanity by anti-human science. COVID 19 may not be a general judgement by God to close down the world. Each human being who dies isfacing particular judgement because every person will give account of his or her life to God. The different conspiracy theories, stories, conflicting reports about COVID 19 could be compared to the Tower of Babel (Genesis 11) where God confused the human language. What if COVID 19 is one of the ways God what to remind humanity that He alone is Omnipotent and Omniscience. The Scientists, Prophets and Political leaders appear to be confused. They seem to lack the capacity to prophesy or predict scientifically when this pandemic will end. We could answer the question under review by postulating that COVID 19 could be a particular and general judgement some people have brought upon the world before the end of individual and universal dusk of life on earth. 

 

Rev. Fr. Cornelius Omonokhua is the Executive Secretary of Nigeria Inter-Religious Council (NIREC -nirec.ng@gmail.com) & The Secretary General of the West Africa Inter-Religious Council (WA-IRC – wairc.rfp@gmail.com).