"IT IS A GRAVE OFFENSE NOT TO WORK FOR THE EXTERMINATION OF HERESY WHEN THIS MONSTROUS INFECTION REQUIRES ACTION"
— Council of Vienne ♰♰♰


Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Prevost promotes the apostate Dominic Kimengich, who participated in a pagan ritual

   In rebellion against God, Prevost promotes the apostate Dominic Kimengich, who defiantly challenges God and the Church with impunity by participating in pagan rituals.

Anathema sit Prevost

Apostasy from the Faith is defined as “the complete and voluntary abandonment of the Christian religion, whether the apostate embraces another religion such as Paganism, Judaism, Mohammedanism, etc., or merely makes profession of Naturalism, Rationalism, etc.” (Catholic Encyclopedias.v. “Apostasy”).

Leo XIV Promotes Archbishop Who Participated in Pagan Rite – Gloria.tv

Gloria TV News




 Today, Pope Leo XIV appointed Monsignor Dominic Kimengich, 64, as Coadjutor Archbishop of Mombasa. He has the canonical right of succession to Archbishop Martin Kivuva Musonde, who will turn 74 on February 10.


Monsignor Kimengich, born on April 23, 1961, was ordained a priest of Nakuru, Kenya, in 1986. He earned a licentiate and doctorate in canon law from the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross in Rome (Opus Dei). Over the course of his clerical career, he served as parish priest, seminary rector, and vicar general.

He was appointed auxiliary bishop of Lodwar in 2010, became Bishop of Lodwar in 2011, and was transferred to Eldoret in 2019.
Installed as a kind of shaman

Kimengich has attracted attention for his public participation in a pagan ceremony during his tenure as Bishop of Eldoret. Photographs circulated 2020 show him being crowned/installed as a Talai elder.

Talai elderhood has traditionally entailed religio-ritual functions, including mediation through rites believed to have spiritual effect (witchcraft).

During the rite, the bishop was surrounded by men in Kalenjin regalia. He wore a fur or animal-hide cloak and a feathered headpiece, while holding a staff and a fly whisk. In this context, such items function as ritual regalia and carry specific symbolic meaning.

The Talai are not merely a social or cultural group. They are a hereditary ritual clan, historically known as ritual specialists, blessers and cursers, and custodians of ancestral authority.




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