Luanda, 30 January, 2026 / 12:30 pm (ACI Africa).
The President of the Episcopal Commission for the Clergy and Consecrated Life of the Bishops' Conference of Angola and São Tomé and Príncipe (CEAST) has cautioned against reducing Consecrated Life to a professional trajectory or a position of authority, insisting instead that it must be lived as “a living parable” marked by total self-gift to God and others.
In his homily during the opening Mass of the Second Assembly of the Regional Conference of Major Superiors of Southern Africa (RCMSSA), Bishop Leopoldo Ndakalako framed Consecrated Life as a radical form of Christian witness rather than an institutional role.
“Consecrated life is not a career. It is a sacrament of coherence and fidelity to God. It is a living parable,” the Local Ordinary of Menongue Catholic Diocese said in his Tuesday, January 27 homily at the Mama Muxima Spirituality Center of his Episcopal See.
Bishop Ndakalako further emphasized the depth of commitment required, adding, “Consecrated life is not merely a religious profession; it is an offered existence.”
The President of the Episcopal Commission for the Clergy and Consecrated Life of CEAST challenged members of the Institutes of Consecrated Life and the Societies of Apostolic Life (ICLSAL) to renewed fidelity and authentic service amid the pastoral and social realities that the people of God in the region are confronting.


