“As a pastor, how do you care for your people? Do they see you caring after them? Do you make time to visit them in their houses? Do you care to know for how many days now this man has not been coming to church? What is the problem? These are small things that they want to see in you, and that is the perfect evangelization,” the Nigerian Catholic Priest said.
He continued, “Systematically, people call it liberation theology; when somebody is hungry and you come, you are preaching to him.”
The Vicar General lauded the initiative of his Local Ordinary, who he said observed a gap in people’s faith and “took it upon himself to go on Catechesis everywhere.”
“It's quite unfortunate he started it, and along the way, he fell sick,” Fr. Longs recalled, and adding that the catechetical ministry Bishop Nanman inaugurated is being continued by his collaborators “and they are doing it very well.”
Personally, he went on to share, “time to time, especially during May Devotion, October Devotion, I avail myself, prepare some topics, some challenging things in the society, prepare and then catechize them on them.”
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The Nigerian Catholic Priest went on to encourage young people in Bauchi Diocese to take advantage of social media forums to promote their faith to the outside world.
“In social media, people are selling their opinions everywhere; some are preaching; they do everything on social media. And I always encourage my youths that anytime you buy data for your mobile phone or your computer, make sure you say something about your faith before the data gets exhausted,” Fr. Longs told ACI Africa.
“Use social media as a tool for evangelization; use it to promote the Catholic faith; let those who don’t know about our faith begin to learn and get converted,” the 52-year-old Parish Priest of St. Theresa Tunfure Parish of Bauchi Diocese further said, recalling his advice to youths.
In the May 20 interview with ACI Africa, Fr. Longs identified the economic challenges in Nigeria and insecurity as some of the factors affecting the work of evangelization in the country.
“Life is very expensive in Nigeria today; things are not easy. And then what is actually quite challenging to the faith of the people is, today the Church cannot grow without money. When the people have no money and there is a demand on them to bring money for church development, it discourages them,” the Catholic Priest said.
He also highlighted insecurity as “another major challenge confronting us as a Diocese.
“We had some of our parishioners killed recently and even the state Governor came for a condolence visit to us and the advice they gave us was to try and set up our own vigilante group,” the Vicar General of Bauchi Diocese told ACI Africa.
Abah Anthony John contributed to the writing of this story
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