Friday, Dec 05 2025 Donate
A service of EWTN News

Let’s Make God’s Kingdom “felt here and now,” Angolan Catholic Archbishop Urges Pastoral Agents at Annual Assembly

Archbishop José Manuel Imbamba of the Catholic Archdiocese of Saurimo in Angola. Credit: Jornal Borges

Archbishop José Manuel Imbamba of the Catholic Archdiocese of Saurimo in Angola has urged pastoral agents to help make the Kingdom of God “felt here and now” by renewing their sense of belonging to the Church and deepening their commitment to communion, service, and shared responsibility.

In his homily during the opening Mass of the 102nd Annual Diocesan Pastoral Assembly, Archbishop Imbamba invited participants to reflect on the kind of Church they are and the one they hope to build.

“This is the moment when we must express our sense of Church—our sense of belonging,” he said during the Thursday, November 13 celebration at St. Joseph Parish of his Metropolitan See.

The Angolan Catholic Archbishop emphasized, “We must place at everyone’s disposal all our knowledge, all our spirituality, all our actions, our entire selves, so that the Kingdom of God may be felt here and now.”

He described the annual assembly, held under the theme “Hearts Raised, Feet in Motion,” as a time of “dedication and commitment, a moment to set aside ordinary concerns in order to walk together and project the Church desired by Christ.”

“This is why we leave aside our usual tasks—to walk together, to evaluate ourselves, to plan together the Church that Jesus Christ wanted,” the Local Ordinary of Saurimo Archdiocese, who doubles as the President of the Bishops' Conference of Angola and São Tomé and Príncipe (CEAST) said. 

He advocated for “a Church in which each of us must feel like an irreplaceable and necessary part so that, with wisdom, we may accomplish all that God asks of us.”

Every member of the Church must feel indispensable to the community and act with joy and generosity, Archbishop Imbamba said, adding, “This is the joy that must shine through in everything we are, everything we do, and everything we offer. Within this framework, we are called to look within ourselves and ask whether what we are truly serving is the good, communion, fraternity, mission, and the building of Christ’s Church in this portion of God’s people.”

He went on to invite pastoral agents in his Metropolitan See to reflect on their personal commitment to the Church, posing, “Do we intensify personal and community prayer? Do we strengthen catechetical ministry? Do we encourage ongoing formation for ourselves as consecrated ministers, religious men and women? Do we truly cultivate a sense of belonging to God and the Church? Do we create structures of self-sustainability?”

The Catholic Church leader insisted that every effort must aim at fostering communion, sharing, solidarity, and action for the Kingdom of God. 

“This is indeed the time to intensify every effort we make to promote communion, goodness, sharing, and solidarity—to foster that richness which comes from God, the richness that helps us seek wisdom, the splendor of the inner light, the purest reflection of God’s activity,” he said.

The Catholic Church leader, who started his Episcopal Ministry in December 2008 as Bishop of Angola’s Dundo Diocese warned against temptations that weaken communion and harm the Church’s mission. 

“It is this wisdom that must illuminate all our life and action. It is this wisdom that must keep us away from any group mentality that does not serve the Church, from selfishness that undermines solidarity, and from gossip, slander, and intrigue that discourage love, communion, dedication, motivation, and the joy of serving,” he said.

Archbishop Imbamba continued, “It is now that we are called to serve—and to serve well. It is now that we are called to build the Church—and build it well. It is now that we are called to be good witnesses and to do good. It is now that we must all say ‘yes’ together.”

He reminded pastoral agents that the hope guiding the Church should not lead them to “make calculations like the Pharisees of yesterday, concerned about the end of the world and what is to come,” but rather to focus on the present – on service and dedication to the mission.

Archbishop Imbamba urged them to build “this Church of Christ—charismatic, synodal, missionary—a Church that lifts its heart to God while putting its feet in motion to bring joy and the Gospel to others,” thereby strengthening the mission of service, sharing, and community building.

The Best Catholic News - straight to your inbox

Sign up for our free ACI Africa newsletter.

Click here

Our mission is the truth. Join us!

Your monthly donation will help our team continue reporting the truth, with fairness, integrity, and fidelity to Jesus Christ and his Church.

Donate to CNA