The document entitled “EO INTENDENTES” (3 May 1960) by John XXIII reorganizes the so‑called Apostolic Delegation of “Eastern and Western British Africa,” renaming it “Apostolic Delegation of Eastern Africa” and redefining its territories (Sudan, Kenya and Zanzibar, Uganda, Tanganyika, Northern Rhodesia, Nyasaland, French Somaliland, Seychelles), under the competence of the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith, declaring the act firm, valid, and binding for all. In one page of bureaucratic Latin, the conciliar revolution reveals, with chilling clarity, how ecclesiastical structures can be instrumentalized as a colonial administration for a future neo-church, while remaining almost entirely silent on the supernatural end of the Church and the rights of Christ the King.