Nigeria is one of the African countries I so much love talking about. This is because, I pent six (6) years of my formative period there, studying in the major regions, North, West and in the East. A recent poll conducted for the BBC finds that Nigerians are the most religious people in the
world. Nigerians receive this news with mixed feelings. “Yes, we are the most religious people in
the world when it comes to church attendance, prayer and identifying ourselves as believers,” they
say, “but why does our religiosity not translate itself into right conduct and fair business practice.”
Nigeria, as you know, is said to be one of the most corrupt countries in the world. Is true religion
only a matter of the heart and of the lips? This is the question that comes to mind as we hear Paul’s
words to the Romans in today’s second reading: “If you confess with your lips that Jesus is Lord
and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved” (Romans 10:9).
Is true Christianity, then, simply a matter of believing in the heart and confessing with the lips? Are
the hands and feet not involved? Does it matter how we lead our lives so long as we believe in our
heart and confess with our lips? What is Paul teaching us here?
To rightly understand what Paul is saying and what this means in our daily lives we need to
see it in the context of the early Christians in Rome. The Roman church was a severely persecuted
church. Christians were persecuted not for what they said and did but for what they refused to say
and do. You see, starting from the time of Julius Caesar, the Roman Emperor had adopted a divine
status. At his death the emperor was deified and proclaimed to be a god, while his living successor
was declared to be the son of a god (divi filius). Sacrifices and incense were offered in public
worship to the emperor gods. They were invoked and addressed as “lord” (dominus).
But the early Christians believed that the only person to have walked this earth who deserved
to be addressed and worshipped as God is none other than Jesus Christ. They, therefore, transferred
to Jesus the title and the homage that emperor worshippers has conferred on the emperor. They called
Jesus the true Son of God and addressed him as Lord while refusing to recognize the divine status
of the emperors, even under threat of death. Of course some of them, out of fear of death, would
deny their Christian faith and confess Caesar to be the Lord. Paul is not happy with that. In today’s
reading he encourages them to remain strong in their faith in the Resurrected One and to confess him
as Lord even if that would cost them their lives, for that is the way to attain salvation.
“For one believes with the heart and so is justified, and one confesses with the mouth
and so is saved” (10:10). By secretly believing in Jesus in the privacy of their hearts, Christians are
justified. This is not enough, however. Ultimate and final salvation comes only when one has the
courage on one’s conviction to openly confess Christ as Lord with one’s lips. Against this
background we can see that Paul is not telling them that believing in Christ in the heart alone is all
that saves the Christian. Far from that, he is encouraging them to translate their faith into concrete
and public action, even if that action is only to declare publicly that Jesus is the Lord. For that was
the challenge of the faith in those days
What is the challenge of the faith in our own day? The tendency to regard the Christian faith
as a private matter is still a concern for us today. In many places it is not politically correct to identify
ourselves as Christians either as individuals or as communities. France has banned the wearing of
conspicuous religious symbols in schools. The United States frowns at the public display of Christian
symbols on government property, like the Ten Commandments monument in a Kentucky courthouse.
In places like Nigeria where public display of religion is allowed, people display it but fail to follow
through with the implication of faith in their day to day lives. Paul urges us today to think the
thought (in out hearts), to talk the talk (with our lips) and to walk the walk ( in our actions).
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