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The study explores the incidence of poverty in Nigeria which harbors some devastating manifestations in the search for national cohesion and sustainable development. The manifestations include: lack of adequate food and nutrition, high rates of unemployment, high infant and maternal mortality. This poses the danger of compromising the harmony of the future that would reinforce the elements of disintegrative tendencies such as conflict shocks, coup d’état, brain drain, and child labor. The failure of government to alleviate poverty in Nigeria calls for every sector of society especially Faith Based Organizations (FBOs) in creating innovative new programs and partnerships in communities around the country. Hence, poverty reduction in Nigeria has become a religious imperative of humankind. Accordingly, is action for poverty reduction an integral part of living the faith? Therefore, this study intends to demonstrate how FBOs have evolved informed interventions in basic health, education, and agricultural inputs to reduce poverty pervading the nation’s development agenda. This study will achieve this objective by focusing on the structural functional theory of religion using descriptive phenomenological method. The finding reveals that reducing poverty is achievable through socio-economic and institutional reforms, reduction of corruption, conflict shocks, and by making poor people to directly participate in, contributes to and benefit from growth processes. The study recommends that the war against poverty should be intensified through national ethical values and good governance. This will ultimately bring about social stability, sustainable development, and equitable distribution of resources.
Alozie Iroanya (Sat,) studied this question.