Cardinal Onaiyekan to IEC: Do not "spiritualize
poverty"
(Vatican Radio) The
Archbishop of Abuja, Cardinal John Onaiyekan, said it is wrong “to spiritualize
poverty” during an address on Friday to the 51st International Eucharistic
Congress (IEC), currently taking place in Cebu, Philippines.
The Nigerian Cardinal was
speaking on “The Eucharist and the Dialogue with the Poor and Suffering.”
“Poverty can mean many
things,” Cardinal Onaiyekan said.
“Actually, in the Church
poverty can be a virtue. We speak of the evangelical counsels of chastity,
poverty, and obedience. The word poverty itself could be positive,” he told
Vatican Radio.
However, he said there is a
different kind of poverty – “misery” – which cannot be welcomed.
“A material poverty that ends
up in misery, in deprivation of the main essentials of life, and there are many
people in the world of our days that are suffering that kind of poverty,” he
said.
“We cannot spiritualize
poverty as if it is a good thing,” said Cardinal Onaiyekan. “It can never be a
good thing.”
In his address to the IEC,
the Cardinal spoke about the meaning of the Cross for Christians.
“Since [Jesus] died on the
cross, what had been until then a symbol of a shameful death has become a great
symbol of the glory of Christ in His glorious crucifixion,” Cardinal Onaiyekan
told the Congress.
He then spoke about the
ongoing campaign of terror against Christians and other religious minorities of
the so-called Islamic State in different countries of the Middle East and North
Africa.
“Today, we hear Muslim
terrorists crucifying Christians as a way of inflicting the greatest pain and
degradation on their victims,” he said. “But the cross still remains the symbol
of the victory of the Lord Jesus.”
At the end of his speech,
Cardinal Onaiyekan was surprised with a birthday cake by the Archbishop of
Cebu, Jose S. Palma. The Cardinal turned 72 on Friday.
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