Transforming Sacred Spaces into Sustainable Businesses: The Rise of Sacred Economy
Corruption Plagues Nagaland, but the Catholic Church Stands as a Beacon of Transparency
In a region where Sunday masses fill churches and prayers accompany every public meeting, it’s poignant to note that corruption runs deep in Nagaland. While the pulpit preaches integrity, state coffers leak like rusty pipes. Amidst this disillusionment, one institution stands tall – the Catholic Church. With its global presence and disciplined financial structure, it has demonstrated how money, when managed with moral responsibility, can transform lives. Every offering, every tithe, and every Mass stipend is accounted for, with receipts issued for every altar built and no donation disappearing into a ghost account. Transparency is not just a policy – it’s a spiritual duty.
Recently, Pope Francis reinforced this philosophy with the approval of a decree on Mass Intentions and Collective Offerings, effective from Easter Sunday 2025. The decree stresses that Mass stipends and offerings should be handled without commercial exchange, encouraging faithful participation while safeguarding the dignity of the Eucharist. This emphasis on transparency contrasts sharply with the governance system that claims to serve the people. Money flows into the state’s coffers from various sources, including central government grants, taxes, and development aid. However, much of this money doesn’t reach its intended purpose, often getting stuck in bureaucratic red tape, misappropriated by contractors, or lost to those who treat public funds as personal property.
Infrastructure development projects, allocated under various schemes, often fall short of expectations. Roads crumble with the first rain, schools remain in disrepair, and hospitals lack essential equipment. Instead of reaching the people, money is redirected through fake billing, overcharging, and corrupt practices. The situation worsens during election season, when crores are wasted on vote-buying schemes. Inflated bills, backdoor contracts, and manipulated tenders follow, leaving the people poorer and the powerful richer.
However, there are stories that shine through the darkness. In a remote village, the government had sanctioned over Rs. 30 lakhs for a community hall, but only a few walls stood, unplastered and roofless, years later. The villagers, frustrated with the government’s inaction, took matters into their own hands. Gathering funds through Sunday collections and community donations, they finished the hall in four months, with every expense transparently displayed on the church bulletin board. Labour was provided freely, with young people hauling sand, women cooking for workers, and elders keeping accounts. When asked about their success, an elder said, “Because this money came from the people, for the people – we dared not misuse it.” This story is more than just a village tale; it’s a quiet testament to the power of community and moral responsibility.
If we were to reimagine governance with the Church’s discipline – transparent accounting, community oversight, and moral responsibility – we wouldn’t just fix roads or build schools. We would restore trust. The Bible speaks of tithes, the sacred ten percent offered with reverence, not compulsion. Imagine if our leaders treated public funds with the same spirit – not as a pool to dip into, but as a sacred trust entrusted to them for righteous use. It’s time for Nagaland to rise, not just in prayers and revivals, but in action and accountability. What we build with clean hands stands longer than what we grab with greedy ones.
Original Source: https://www.morungexpress.com/from-altar-to-atm
Category : Public Space
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Publish Date: 2025-04-15 20:18:00