Silver Spring, Maryland, United States …. [Wendi Rogers/ANN]
Increasing worldwide hunger rates — some 852 million people across the globe are going hungry, including nearly 6 million children who die each year from hunger-related causes — are of great concern to religious leaders from various faith communities. Representatives from religious backgrounds that included Christian, Muslim, Jewish, Hindu and Buddhist, came together with 1,000 participants for the first Interfaith Convocation on Hunger at the Washington National Cathedral in Washington, D.C. June 6.
The Seventh-day Adventist Church joined the voices of concern, who petitioned to the U.S. Congress and administration for the goal of decreasing hunger. “It was a privilege for us Adventists to be invited with all other Christians and believers in a great action,” says Dr.
John Graz, Public Affairs and Religious Liberty director for the Seventh-day Adventist world church. “And we share the wish of doing our best in encouraging the government to do their best to help poor people around the world.
“For us as Adventists, giving bread to the poor is the most practical message we can share about our faith. … It’s the core of the gospel.
It’s the center of our faith. If we don’t share with those who are dying, we are not really faithful to God and to the message of Jesus,” Graz added.
Organized by Bread for the World, a 54,000-member Christian citizens movement that lobbies the U.S. Congress and administration for prevention of hunger, the meeting marked the first for such a large representation of faith leaders.
Participants of the convocation, held on the eve of National Hunger Awareness Day, June 7, joined in song and reading from the sacred texts of many faiths.
According to Bread for the World, hunger is on the rise. The number has risen by 10 million people in the last year, Graz says.
“Every time we do something practical to feed the hungry, we are practicing our faith,” he says.
The convocation was part of a four-day event, “One Table, Many Voices: A Mobilization to End Poverty and Hunger,” hosted by Bread for the World with partners Call to Renewal and America’s Second Harvest.
Copyright © 2005 by Adventist News Network.