In his message for Lent 2024 issued on Ash Wednesday, the Catholic Archbishop of Nigeria’s Abuja Archdiocese said that Christians will do well to engage in Lenten Observances devoid of outward display to win people’s recognition.
Archbishop Ignatius Ayau Kaigama advocates for “true religion”, which he says helps as a deterrent towards evil. “We are required to practice true religion, not the outward show that we display for people to say we are good Christians,” the Archbishop said in his February 14 Lenten message, and added, “True religion makes you fear God and helps you to avoid bad things. Whether in the night or in the daytime you must try to avoid bad things.”
Archbishop Kaigama also faulted those who see lent as simply a time to fast from consumption of food and drink. “Lent is not just about fasting from food, from alcohol and the pleasures of life but also another opportunity to give up evil habits within us,” he said
He also went on to highlight some challenges the people of God in Nigeria are facing, saying, “We see evil happening around us on a daily basis: killings, kidnappings, corruption and injustice.”
“I’m afraid that if these evils persist one day God will do to Nigeria what he did to Sodom and Gomorrah. May God forbid,” the prelate said, adding that Ash Wednesday, the beginning of the Lenten Season, serves as a reminder of “human fallibility and the boundless mercy of God.”
“At the beginning of this Lenten season, we use ashes to remind us of this fact that we are sinners. In the Old Testament, Ashes were a symbol of repentance and a search for conversion. Let us stop like the prodigal son and return to the father”, he explained.
“Lent is a season of interior renewal and purification,” the Archbishop said in his Lenten Season message.
Archbishop Kaigama went on to invoke his blessings upon the faithful “for a transformative Lenten season, and for divine grace for national redemption and renewal.”