Peter Obi, the Labour Party’s presidential candidate for the 2023 election, stated on Sunday that his recent idea to convert “church vigils into night shifts” was misinterpreted.
Following his interview on the Honest Bunch podcast, which was released on Saturday, the former Anambra State governor faced widespread criticism.
While underscoring that Nigeria is impoverished and unproductive due to two factors: politics and religion, Obi stated that too much time was spent attending church services from Monday through Friday.
His attitude elicited conflicting reactions from Nigerians, with many denouncing it as an intrusion on religious traditions.
In response to the anger, the former governor made a statement through his media aide, Ibrahim Umar, claiming that his narrative had been misconstrued and blown out of proportion.
The statement partly read, “Our attention has been drawn to a huge twist in his recent media interview, saying erroneously that he called for the dismantling of churches in Nigeria.
“By the headline given to the interview, the import of Obi’s message has been greatly overturned and grossly distorted to serve a mischievous end.
“The Labour Party leader is well known as a man of strong faith who has enormous respect and love for every religion and tried in the referenced interview to bring to Nigerians how religion can be more effective in their lives.
“Obi, in the interview, was merely underscoring what Apostle James said in ‘Faith without Works is unhelpful.’ When Obi said that he would turn night vigil into production night, he was only stressing the importance of worshipping God through work.
“Even Jesus Christ never picked any of his 12 disciples where they were praying but where they were working as fishermen and tax collectors, among others.
“What we are doing in Nigeria, which Obi’s interview is highlighting as wrong and should be discontinued, is exchanging work for prayer when the two should go together.
“There is no evidence in the scripture that Jesus blessed an idle person. The problem in some of Nigeria’s worship communities is that they are not following St. James’s advisory that we should be doers of the words.”