Abuja, 10 March, 2021 / 1:10 pm (ACI Africa).
Putting into practice the first of the seven corporal works of mercy that calls upon the people of God to feed the hungry is an “ethical imperative” and a “powerful form of prayer,” a Nigerian Archbishop has said.
In his homily Tuesday, March 9 during a Cathedraticum Mass of Bwari Deanery of Nigeria’s Abuja Archdiocese, Archbishop Ignatius Kaigama highlighted insecurity, unemployment, and COVID-19 among factors that have aggravated lack of food in the West African nation where over 80 million people suffer “the consequences of food insecurity.”
“Feeding the hungry is an ethical imperative,” Archbishop Kaigama said, adding, “Giving food to the poor is a powerful form of prayer.”
Making reference to Pope emeritus Benedict XVI’s 2009 Encyclical ‘Caritas in veritatis,’ the Nigerian Archbishop said, “The right to food, like the right to water, has an important place within the pursuit of other rights.”
The first World Day of the Poor, which Pope Francis instituted and first observed on 19 November 2017 “urges all to love the poor, not with words but with deeds,” Archbishop Kaigama further said.