He was metropolitan bishop of Berat and was a member of the Holy Synod of the Albanian Orthodox Church.
While in America, in the same year he laid the foundations of Saint Mary’s Orthodox Church in Natick, Massachusetts, one of the centers of the Albanian diaspora and its patriotic movement.
[3] In 1921, Agathangjel Çamçe returned to Albania and a year later participated in the Congress of Berat (September 10–17, 1922), where Autocephaly was proclaimed.
[4] In October 1940, Agathangjel Çamçe took part in the special synod organized by the Italian-Albanian eparchies at the Abbey of Grottaferrata, where under discussion was the possibility of Grottaferrata welcoming the newly converted Orthodox clergy and assisting their theological training.
After the Italian invaders’ evacuation, Fan Noli together with A. Çamçe from Jamestown, New York, and father Vasil Marku from Saint Luis, Missouri, came to Albania to offer their services to the Albanian government.