Simon Kimbangu

Simon Kimbangu (September 12, 1887, Nkamba, near Thysville, Congo Free State - October 12, 1951, Élisabethville, Belgian Congo) was a Congolese religious leader noted as the founder of Kimbanguism. His followers consider him to be the special envoy of Jesus Christ as quoted in the fourteenth chapter of the biblical Gospel of John.

The son of a traditional religious leader, he became a Baptist in 1915, and worked as a catechist for several years before beginning his own ministry in early 1921. According to his disciples, Kimbangu cured the sick, raised the dead back to life and his ministry developed a large following, causing suspicion amongst the Belgian authorities. His ministry of preaching and miraculous healing lasted from April to September 1921.

On 12 September 1921 he was arrested and charged with sedition. Convicted, he was sentenced to death. However, his sentence was commuted to life imprisonment with 120 lashes. He died in prison on 12 October 1951 after being baptised by a Catholic nun who served him as nurse.

During his thirty years of imprisonment, he continued to be regarded as a spiritual leader, despite being denied contact with his followers, and also became a symbol of Congolese nationalism.

In 1959, the Kimbanguist Church was recognized by the then Belgium government and could then conduct prayer freely. Today, the Kimbanguist Church is well established in many countries. However, when Kimbangu passed on, his son Joseph Diangienda took over the Church ministry. Joseph Diangienda (chief spiritual) organized the contemporary Church. Diangienda (born 22. March 1918) died on 8th July 1992 in Switzerland and his son, Simon Kimbangu Kiangani, is the spiritual leader based in the Church's headquarters in Nkamba.

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