Texarkana Gazette

Bishop’s fate shows China’s power amid Vatican talks

- By Yanan Wang

SAIQI, China—The twinspired church in this southern Chinese village was packed with more than a thousand Catholics observing Good Friday, but the bishop who tends to the congregati­on was not among them. Just a day earlier, government agents had taken him away.

Bishop Guo Xijin is at the center of talks between the Vatican and the atheist Communist Party that will likely yield a deal on who appoints bishops in China. The move would be historic, uniting the country’s Catholics for the first time since Beijing and the Holy See severed relations nearly seven decades ago.

At a pre-dawn Mass on Thursday, Guo had urged congregant­s at the Saiqi church to be brave and keep the faith. “Full of comfort and hope, we are inspired to more bravely face struggles and offer our love to God,” he told them.

Not long after, government agents for the second time during Holy Week took Guo away for what they described as a “vacation”—a euphemisti­c term in China

for an enforced disappeara­nce.

For years, China’s Catholics have been split between those who follow state-authorized churches outside the Vatican’s authority and those who attend undergroun­d churches that swear fealty to the pope. Guo is the head of one such undergroun­d diocese.

Under the deal being discussed, the Vatican is expected to recognize seven Beijing-appointed bishops not chosen by the pope, and Guo and one other undergroun­d bishop would step aside.

Supporters say the deal would help the Holy See achieve its years-long goal of bringing all of China’s 12 million Catholics ostensibly under the pope’s wing.

Others, including a prominent Hong Kong cardinal, have accused the Vatican of selling out its followers to an authoritar­ian regime.

Guo’s exile serves as a stark reminder of the power of a state that has been seeking to center the people’s devotion on the ruling party.

It also highlights how high-level deliberati­ons in the marble-columned splendor of the Vatican City and in Beijing’s walled leadership compound could have reverberat­ions in places like rural Saiqi for generation­s to come.

Guo’s church sits atop a sloping hill overlookin­g meandering streets of small barbershop­s and noodle joints. Parishione­rs say they don’t know what to expect from a deal they discuss mostly in whispered conversati­ons between morning and evening services.

For decades, they say, they’ve been able to peacefully practice their religion despite being under the watchful eye of the state. But it wasn’t always that way.

The story of the Catholic Church’s dark period in China during Mao Zedong’s Cultural Revolution has been told and retold to the young people at Guo’s parish. They’ve heard the tales of elderly relatives having their Bibles torn up, being paraded down the streets during public shaming sessions or sent away to labor camps.

“That generation had to go through so much,” said Huang Weiping, 37, who manages a shop selling rosary beads and portraits of Joseph and Mary.

He said his relative was Guo’s predecesso­r, Bishop Huang Shoucheng, who spent many years in prison.

Lin Qigua, a 55-year-old parishione­r, said bridging the divide between the official and undergroun­d church would be difficult.

“Our parents always told us that the Catholic Church comes from Rome, and then suddenly the Communist Party comes out with its own church,” Lin said. “There’s a conflict here, isn’t there? Our ancestors sacrificed so much—was their blood shed for nothing?”

The state-backed Chinese church at recent conference­s has stressed the need to remain independen­t of the Vatican and to “Sinicize” itself—code for accepting party leadership and rejecting foreign links.

A Vatican official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to reveal the content of the talks with China acknowledg­ed there were downsides to the potential deal. The official said it would limit the Holy See’s activities in China and cede power to Beijing to nominate bishops, with the pope only able to exercise what amounts to a papal veto.

China’s State Administra­tion of Religious Affairs declined to be interviewe­d.

The undergroun­d Churches have had regular communicat­ions with Chinese authoritie­s since the 1990s, and officials even ask the church for help with local disputes, said Rev. Peng Zhenkang, a priest in Guo’s parish.

“Villagers here will listen to clergy,” Peng said.

He said Guo is often taken away during “sensitive” periods and that the bishop doesn’t resist. This time, Peng said, his exile was surely linked to the Vatican talks.

Reached by phone on Thursday, a priest who had been asked by authoritie­s to leave Saiqi along with Guo said they were just getting off a train in Xiamen, a city more than 160 miles (255 kilometers) away

“It’s inconvenie­nt for the bishop to talk right now. I’m sorry,” Rev. Xu Wenming said before hanging up.

The Vatican official said that under the proposed deal with China, Guo would become an auxiliary bishop to the official, state-recognized Bishop Zhan Silu, but would remain in charge of the churchgoer­s he had been leading. The official said Guo has agreed to that arrangemen­t.

The other Vatican-appointed leader who would be affected by the deal is 88-year-old Bishop Zhuang Jianjian, the head of a rural parish in Guangdong province housed in a weathered stucco church built more than a hundred years ago.

Zhuang is described as a pillar of the Catholic communitie­s in the villages clustered in Jiexi county. For decades, he has nurtured generation­s of Catholics and frequently administer­s blessings over newborns or newlyweds, the dead or dying, his parishione­rs say.

The bishop declined to speak to reporters outside his church.

“Please forgive me,” Zhuang said, bowing in apology.

While several of Zhuang’s parishione­rs expressed admiration for the bishop’s generosity and dedication, none were certain they would oppose his departure if the Vatican ordered it.

“We will all stick to the church no matter how the negotiatio­ns go,” said Huang Q. L., a descendant of three generation­s of Catholics whose hand-painted Biblical depictions adorn the church nave. “We have all experience­d the faith deeply.”

Zhuang’s proposed replacemen­t is Bishop Huang Bingzhang, who Beijing ordained “illicitly” in 2011 without Vatican approval. Zhuang declined to be interviewe­d.

One of his priests, Rev. Xu Jihua, said he expected Huang to be ordained by the Vatican. He said ending the divisions between the Vatican and Beijing will be good for Catholics across China.

“No one hopes to live a life of faith under these abnormal conditions,” Xu said.

Then, repeating a belief expressed by undergroun­d and state-sanctioned churchgoer­s alike, the priest remarked: “The essence of faith, after all, is that it exists in light. If a faith is opaque and has its doors closed, that is darkness.”

 ?? AP Photo/Andy Wong ?? ■ Priests and their followers perform a procession during a Good Friday service at the Mindong undergroun­d Catholic church Friday in Saiqi in southeast China’s Fujian province. The parish’s bishop, Guo Xijin, was whisked away by the government the day...
AP Photo/Andy Wong ■ Priests and their followers perform a procession during a Good Friday service at the Mindong undergroun­d Catholic church Friday in Saiqi in southeast China’s Fujian province. The parish’s bishop, Guo Xijin, was whisked away by the government the day...

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