Johannesburg, 16 August, 2025 / 10:19 pm (ACI Africa).
The Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Umtata in South Africa has cautioned faith leaders against excessive alignment with political power, calling on them instead to devote themselves to pastoral engagement.
In his closing remarks for the 2025 Group of 20 (G20) Interfaith Forum (IF20) that was held in Cape Town, South Africa, Bishop Sithembele Anton Sipuka who also serves as the President of the South African Council of Churches (SACC) emphasized the importance of “pastoral proximity” describing it as not a “Christian calling” but “the essence of all authentic spirituality.”
“Let us commit to spending more time in informal settlements than in government offices, more time with the unemployed than with the employed elite, more time listening to the cries of the poor than to the promises of politicians,” Bishop Sipuka said in his remarks on Thursday, August 14, making reference to the late Pope Francis’ call to Priests to stay close to the marginalized and to have “the smell of the sheep."
The South African Bishop cautioned faith leaders against the dangers of becoming closely aligned with political power, saying, “We who claim to serve the God of the poor are viewed with suspicion by those very poor.”
In his address that was titled, “From Words to Witness: Our Covenant of Action”, the Catholic Church leader explained that mistrust stems from the “proximity to power has sometimes” led some religious leaders to end up being “complicit in systems that perpetuate injustice.”



