Johannesburg, 07 August, 2025 / 11:05 pm (ACI Africa).
Bishop Sithembele Anton Sipuka of South Africa’s Catholic Diocese of Mthatha has likened the country’s current situation to a boat caught in a storm at a time when faith practice is on the decline and the people of God moving towards “practical atheism.”
In his Tuesday, August 5 homily at the opening of the Plenary Assembly of the Southern African Catholic Bishops' Conference (SACBC) members, Bishop Sipuka reflected on the Readings of the day: Matthew’s Gospel, where the disciples are caught in a storm, and the Book of Numbers on family jealousy episode, with Miriam and Aaron questioning Moses’ authority.
The situation of Moses in the face of jealous siblings and the apostles of Jesus in a storm, Bishop Sipuka said, “is very familiar to our times. We live in times of practical atheism, where while people profess to believe in God, their practical life proclaims the opposite.”
In towns of the Eastern Cape, the Local Ordinary of Mthatha Diocese, who doubles as the president of the South African Council of Churches (SACC), said that “Sunday is like Monday, and there are fewer people in Church.”
He further lamented, “Without consultation, the department of education holds classes on Saturday and Sunday, preventing the children who still care about the faith from attending Mass on Sunday and Catechism on Saturday.”






