Retired Archbishop Nkoyoyo to be buried Tuesday

Retired Archbishop of Uganda Livingstone Mpalanyi Nkoyoyo

What you need to know:

  • In retirement, Nkoyoyo was able to combine his entrepreneurial gifts and ministry passions into such projects as building the Rest Gardens Retreat Centre in Bweyogerere, establishing the Words of Hope Radio Ministry, and leading the fundraising and construction efforts for the Uganda Martyrs Museum in Namugongo.
  • In 2015, Nkoyoyo and Ruth celebrated 50 years of marriage.

The retired Archbishop of Uganda, the Most Reverend Livingstone Mpalanyi Nkoyoyo is dead.

Archbishop Nkoyoyo died at 11:40am on Friday at Kampala hospital after being admitted on Monday this week. A statement from the family says he was admitted after suffering from Pneumonia
Ms Flavia Walakira, a niece to the late archbishop said after being admitted of pneumonia, he developed other complications on Thursday evening and he was on Friday morning put on blood transfusion.

“He developed complications and underwent blood transfusion and was expected to go for another transfusion later, but died before he could be taken for the next round.” Walakira said.
Ms. Walakira said before the late archbishop died, he was complaining of thirst and kept on asking for something to drink.

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Even in retirement he stands tall

Towering trees and flower gardens usually create a serene environment. However, when I visited these gardens on a Tuesday afternoon, screams of excitement from children who were swimming in the pool with in the compound filled the air.


Ms Walakira said the body will be handed over to the Uganda Funeral Services for handling and funeral management.

Church of Uganda hails the late archbishop

The Anglican Church in Uganda, the community the late archbishop served for nine years before his retirement issued a statement, hailing the late Nkoyoyo for a dedicated service to the church.
Archbishop of the Church of Uganda Stanley Ntagali told journalists that: “ On Sunday afternoon, the body will be taken to All Saints Cathedral and it will stay there overnight.
On Monday morning, it will be taken to St. Andrews and St. Philips cathedral in Mukono.

From 10am, there will be a funeral service after which the body will be taken to his home in Nakabogo where it will stay overnight for a vigil. On Tuesday, the body will be taken to St. Paul's Cathedral Namirembe, where the main funeral service will take place starting at 9am. From there, the body will be taken to Namugongo for burial.”

“We are thankful to God for his faithful ministry. He was the sixth archbishop of the Church of Uganda. He mentored many people. It will be a celebration of the faithful man of God who has served God well,” added the Archbishop Ntagali.

According to the Church of Uganda statement, the retired Archbishop Nkoyoyo served as Archbishop of the Church of Uganda from 1995 to 2004. During his leadership, he pioneered many visionary initiatives, including upgrading the Bishop Tucker Theological College in Mukono into Uganda Christian University, the first university in Uganda to be privately chartered.

The university has grown from the original 120 students to more than 12,000 students on the main campus, at two constituent colleges, and a number of study centres around the country.
Archbishop Nkoyoyo was also a tireless advocate of the least, the last, and the lost. When the government of Uganda gazetted the Bwindi Impenetrable Forest as a National Park, the Batwa were displaced with no place to go. In 1995, Archbishop Nkoyoyo took up their cause and helped secure land in the Diocese of Kinkiizi for permanent resettlement of the Batwa, including educational and health facilities and life-skills training in agriculture.

Early on in his ministry, he and his wife, Ruth, began taking care of orphaned and abandoned children. He leaves a legacy of several orphanages and primary school, including ones that care for the blind and other physical disabilities. The CHAIN Foundation orphanage and Martin Nkoyoyo Primary School in Mukono are both “inclusive” because they cater for abled and disabled students, especially the blind. The school is named after his son who pre-deceased him.
In retirement, Nkoyoyo was able to combine his entrepreneurial gifts and ministry passions into such projects as building the Rest Gardens Retreat Centre in Bweyogerere, establishing the Words of Hope Radio Ministry, and leading the fundraising and construction efforts for the Uganda Martyrs Museum in Namugongo.

In addition to all the projects and ministries he initiated, Archbishop Nkoyoyo was, at heart, an evangelist. He was a tireless preacher, taking every opportunity to give his testimony and calling people to repentance and into a personal relationship with Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour.
Archbishop Nkoyoyo was born in 1938 as one of 25 children to Erisa Wamala Nkoyoyo, a sub-county Chief in Busimbi, Mityana. He attended Mpenja Primary School, in Gomba and later moved to Aggrey Memorial School and Mityana Junior Secondary. His father’s work caused the family to move often, so Nkoyoyo dropped out of school after completing Junior Secondary School and became an auto mechanic, something that has been a lifelong interest.

In 1959 Nkoyoyo got saved at a youth camp at Ndoddo Church in Gomba. Not long after that he gave up auto mechanics for full-time ministry, beginning as a Church Teacher. He did an ordination training course and on 3rd June 1969 (Martyrs Day), he was ordained a deacon at Namugongo.
On May 1, 1965, Nkoyoyo married Ruth Nalweyiso at St. Paul’s Cathedral, Namirembe. Originally reluctant to have his daughter wed a Church teacher, Ruth’s father eventually gave his permission. Together, they have five children – Isaac, Naomi, Martin (deceased), Margret and Julius – and, over the years, have supported hundreds of other orphans and disadvantaged children.

In 2015, Nkoyoyo and Ruth celebrated 50 years of marriage. During the Thanksgiving service, Archbishop Stanley Ntagali said, “You have been an example to man. You have shown that you have built up a family and the results are the children that you have brought up and grandchildren. We praise God for that.”

Mama Ruth credited the success of their marriage to love and trust. She said, “He loved me unconditionally, and, because of this, I found it very easy to love back.” She also praised her husband for his willingness to trust her with their home affairs, including the family finances.

After serving as a Suffragan (Assistant) Bishop in Namirembe Diocese, Nkoyoyo was elected and enthroned as the first Bishop of Mukono Diocese in 1983. Then, in 1995 he was elected by the House of Bishops to be the 6th Archbishop of the Church of Uganda.
In 2015 he received the Bible Leadership Excellence Award from the Bible Society of Uganda for outstanding and faithful leadership and for retiring “scandal-free.”