He added, “Thankfully, the law enforcement agencies have stepped up their efforts to find and arrest those who are selling those dangerous drugs to the youth and other vulnerable persons. In the process, they discovered some of their own agents who were involved in the sale and use of those drugs.”
“We pray that those initiatives ensure our streets and neighborhoods are free of dangerous drugs,” the Sierra Leonean Church leader said.
Archbishop Tamba Charles also raised the concern that some Church organizations in the Archdiocese of Freetown are resisting having their parish priests as the principal signatories to their bank accounts, as stated in the approved and signed Archdiocesan policies.
He said that many Priests in charge of pastoral units in Freetown are not enforcing the policy to be signatories to units’ bank accounts, adding, “Those who have attempted to do so have met stiff resistance from the leadership of some Church organizations, some citing the international origins of their organizations.”
“The answer I have for those resistant organizations is that the Archdiocese of Freetown is recognized in Canon Law as a particular Church and therefore can make laws to enhance the pastoral care of its faithful,” he said, adding that the policy of making Parish Priests principal signatories of the bank accounts of Church organizations is to ensure transparency and accountability in the disbursement of the funds of the Church organizations.
(Story continues below)
“I kindly appeal to all the Church organizations resisting the implementation of the Archdiocesan Policies, to stop this cherry-picking tactic, that is, accepting some Archdiocesan Policies they consider suitable to them and rejecting those not favorable to them,” he said.
Archbishop Tamba Charles also expressed concern that Sunday Masses in the Archdiocese of Freetown are being “overloaded” by thanksgiving celebrations that could be on weekdays.
He said that unlike other countries he had visited, weekday mass attendance in Sierra Leone remains low.
“I have been to countries where Mass attendance on weekdays is so encouraging, because so many people go to Mass before they go to work. Others attend midday Masses,” the Catholic Archbishop said.
He added, “There is a real danger of Catholicism in Sierra Leone becoming a Sunday religion. Everyone wants their important events, especially Thanksgiving Masses and Africana celebrations, on Sunday. Liturgically, Sunday is already a mini-Easter that deserves recognition.”
Archbishop Tamba Charles said that the Archdiocese’s new Pastoral Year would focus on issues of safeguarding, the promotion of lay evangelization, and the move “towards a synodal Church”.
On the need for collective responsibility for the mission of the Church, and the promotion of lay evangelization, the Archbishop of Freetown appealed to all pastoral units in the Archdiocese to engage their faithful to be proactive in spreading their gospel of Christ, “beginning at home, in their families, at their places of work, and in their professional engagements.”
“Without imposing our faith on others, let us endeavor to claim the public sphere by allowing our faith to influence our social and political engagements,” he said, and explained, “If you are a doctor, let others know that you are a Catholic doctor; if you are a nurse, let them know that you are a Catholic nurse.”
“Without being pharisaic, let others know that our thoughts and actions are guided by the principles of our fundamental call to be missionary disciples of Christ,” Archbishop Tamba Charles said.
Agnes Aineah is a Kenyan journalist with a background in digital and newspaper reporting. She holds a Master of Arts in Digital Journalism from the Aga Khan University, Graduate School of Media and Communications and a Bachelor's Degree in Linguistics, Media and Communications from Kenya's Moi University. Agnes currently serves as a journalist for ACI Africa.