The Sunday Telegraph

Beijing to give Pope final say on ordaining bishops in China

- By Josie Ensor

POPE FRANCIS yesterday recognised seven bishops ordained in China without the Vatican’s approval, as the Holy See and Beijing reached a breakthrou­gh deal on an issue that had fuelled tensions for decades.

China’s insistence that it must approve appointmen­ts in the world’s most populous country had clashed with absolute papal authority to pick bishops.

The accord reached yesterday gives the Holy See a decisive role in the appointmen­t of all bishops in the country.

The Pope, who was in Lithuania on his latest stop on his four-day tour of the Baltics, said he hoped the deal, “will allow the wounds of the past to be overcome” and lead to full Catholic unity in China.

There are an estimated 12million Catholics in China – a tiny minority – who are divided between a government-run associatio­n, whose clergy are chosen by the Communist Party, and an unofficial church that swears allegiance to the Vatican.

The Vatican has not had diplomatic relations with Beijing since 1951, two years after the founding of the communist People’s Republic.

Taiwan, which claims independen­ce from China and views the Holy See as its only diplomatic ally in Europe, watched the decision with unease.

Previous attempts to restore relations between China and the Vatican had floundered over Beijing’s demand that it give up recognitio­n of Taiwan and promise not to interfere in religious issues in China.

The rapprochem­ent was criticised by some Catholics and rights activists, who pointed out that the Chinese government was tightening its grip on all religious groups. Experts and activists contended that, as President Xi Jinping consolidat­es power, he is waging the most systematic suppressio­n of Christiani­ty since the Chinese constituti­on allowed religious freedom in 1982.

On Friday Mike Pompeo, the US secretary of state, said that the government had been “closing churches, burning Bibles and ordering followers to sign papers renouncing their faith”.

Crosses had been removed from churches, printed religious materials and holy items confiscate­d, and church-run kindergart­ens closed.

In Beijing, the foreign ministry put out a statement yesterday saying only: “China and the Vatican will continue to maintain communicat­ions and push forward the process of improving relations between the two sides.”

‘This is not political but pastoral, allowing the faithful to have bishops in communion with Rome’

Greg Burke, a Vatican spokesman, told reporters the aim of the accord “is not political but pastoral, allowing the faithful to have bishops who are in communion with Rome but at the same time recognised by Chinese authoritie­s”.

It is thought that a few bishops appointed by Rome will cede their places to bishops who were appointed by Beijing. In future, new bishops will first be proposed by members of local Catholic communitie­s together with Chinese authoritie­s. The names of candidates will be sent to the Vatican and the Pope will make a final decision, the sources said.

The Communist government created the Chinese Patriotic Catholic Associatio­n to administer the church in July 1957. This led the country’s Catholic flock to split between worshipper­s who follow government-appointed bishops and those who attend unofficial churches loyal to the Vatican.

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