COMSAM aims to foster collaboration, provide formation, and encourage mission engagement among ICLSAL across linguistic and cultural boundaries in Africa.
The ongoing May 23-30 event in the South Africa’s Catholic Archdioceses of Johannesburg and Pretoria has brought together women and men Religious leaders from across Africa to reflect on the theme, “Hope, Synodality and the Empowerment of Consecrated Life in Africa.”
According to the Southern African Catholic Bishops’ Conference (SACBC) May 17 note about COMSAM, “This marks the first time the event will be hosted in South Africa, a milestone that reflects the growing unity and collaboration among religious communities in the region. The gathering also coincides with Africa Month, further highlighting its importance in affirming African identity and solidarity within the Church."
In his May 24 presentation, Cardinal Ambongo cautioned against mediocrity in ICLSAL and called for deeper commitment to the prophetic dimension of Consecrated Life.
“You are the flower of the Church. But this value the Church gives us is also a huge responsibility,” Cardinal Ambongo said.
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Reflecting on the Franciscan and Capuchin traditions of community discernment, the Congolese OFM Cap. member observed, “Religious Life’s structures of shared leadership—local and provincial chapters, communal decisions—model the synodal call to collaborative ministry.”
In a continent of vast linguistic, cultural, and spiritual diversity, he emphasized the need for ICLSAL to serve as a “prophetic sign of unity amid difference.” Cardinal Ambongo added, “Synodality is not looking for uniformity. It seeks to embrace diversity as a gift of the Spirit. Synodality calls us to harmonize the diversity of gifts without suppressing it, to build communion from our differences.”
He went on to acknowledge the challenges of intercultural living in ICLSAL but insisted that the African context, marked by both fragility and vitality, has much to offer the global Church.
“In Africa, this vision takes a very eloquent direction. Many of our communities live at the outskirts of cities, in conflict zones, under-equipped missions – and yet they become the incarnation of walking together,” the President of SECAM said.
For him, Charisms must not only be received; they need to be inculturated. He said, “The way of living the Capuchin charism in Belgium may be different in Congo or South Africa. But that’s not a threat; it’s an enrichment.”
The most urgent call of the Synod on Synodality, according to the Congolese Cardinal, is the renewed understanding of Baptismal dignity and shared mission. “The missionary vocation takes its source in Baptism. Every baptized person is a protagonist of the Church’s mission,” he said.
He went on to challenge ICLSAL to move beyond doing ministry for the Laity and instead work with the Laity, especially women and youth, forming them for co-responsibility in the Church.
“It pains me to hear of missions where, when the Religious Congregation leaves, everything dies. Our mission is not just to serve, but to form others to take over the mission when we move,” Cardinal Ambongo said.
He continued, “The vocation of the Church is to become a community that listens, that walks hand in hand. We, women and men Consecrated, must be the first to show what this means. We are that laboratory.”
Cardinal Ambongo expressed hope that Africa’s dynamic Religious Life, despite material challenges, can help reanimate the universal Church. “Our continent is rich in community values, spiritual resilience, and missionary zeal. We are not marginal players. We are protagonists of the Church’s future,” the Catholic Church leader said.
He called upon women and men Religious participating in the May 23-30 COMSAM to return to their respective communities and apostolates not with mere resolutions, but with a renewed sense of mission.
“Let us listen profoundly. Let us discern together. Let us act with audacity, in service of the Gospel,” Cardinal Ambongo said during his May 24 presentation.
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