Kuwait Times

Vatican’s delicate Chinese mission runs into trouble

Complex row sparks a new war of words

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VATICAN CITY: Pope Francis is facing a complex row over the Vatican’s warming ties with Communist China, which have sparked a new war of words with a Hong Kong cardinal and growing bitterness among some Chinese faithful. Beijing and the Vatican severed diplomatic relations in 1951, and although ties have improved in recent years as China’s Catholic population has grown, they remain at odds over which side has the authority to ordain bishops.

The Vatican relaunched long-stalled negotiatio­ns three years ago and now seems to be nearing concrete steps towards solving the major stumbling bloc of how to designate bishops. But the issue has flared up again after two undergroun­d Chinese bishops, recognized by the pope, were asked by a top Vatican diplomat to resign in favor of state-sanctioned prelates, including one who was ex-communicat­ed by the Vatican in 2011.

The news was first reported in January by the Vatican-linked AsiaNews website and since confirmed by Cardinal Joseph Zen, bishop emeritus of semi-autonomous Hong Kong, who is a staunch opponent of any rapprochem­ent between the Vatican and Beijing. “Do I think that the Vatican is selling out the Catholic Church in China? Yes, definitely,” Zen said in an open letter on Monday, adding that the Communist government had introduced “harsher regulation­s limiting religious freedom”.

The Vatican’s number two, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, did not deny the disagreeme­nt in a post on the Vatican Insider website, but said that the Hong Kong rebel was only expressing a “personal point of view” and was in no way a spokesman for Chinese Catholics. Zen said he had appealed to the pope in a private meeting earlier this month in Rome, where he delivered a letter from one of the bishops who was asked to step aside, Peter Zhuang Jianjian.

China’s roughly 12 million Catholics are divided

Two churches

The cardinal also indicated in his statement that the pope, who has sought to improve ties with China, was not in agreement with his mediator in Beijing a claim which prompted a terse denial from the Vatican. For Parolin, the Vatican secretary of state, “there does not exist two churches in China, but two communitie­s of the faithful calling for a gradual path towards reconcilia­tion and unity”. China’s roughly 12 million Catholics are divided between a government-run associatio­n, whose clergy are chosen by the Communist Party, and an unofficial church which swears allegiance to the Vatican.

The secretive negotiatio­ns between the two sides could come down to the Vatican recognizin­g some of the bishops chosen by the Chinese Patriotic Catholic Associatio­n in exchange for a more benevolent attitude from Beijing. The last word on nomination­s for future bishops could be given to the pope, following the suggestion of the China’s undergroun­d Catholic authoritie­s. Parolin hopes that it will be possible to “abolish” the distinctio­n between “undergroun­d” and “official” churches, which he warned would require certain “sacrifices” by some. “The Church does not forget the sufferings past and present of all Chinese Catholics,” he said, calling for everyone to work towards “building a more peaceful future”.

Anger among the faithful Reactions from the faithful at undergroun­d Chinese churches, published last week by AsiaNews, included both sorrow and anger. “I have nothing left to do but become a farmer,” said one priest. At the heart of the drama is Chinese bishop Zhuang, who has been ordained by the Vatican. The 88-year-old has twice been asked to leave his post in China’s southeast in favor of bishop Joseph Huang Bingzhang, Beijing’s nominee who was excommunic­ated by the Vatican in 2011. Another Chinese prelate, aged 70, who was imprisoned in 2017, according to AsiaNews will be relegated to number two in his diocese to allow another Chinese regime pick to take the position. Progress appears elusive, with staunch opponents to normalizin­g diplomatic ties on both sides. —AFP

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VATICAN CITY: Pope Francis (right) speaks with (from left) Bishop of La Rioja and second Vice President Marcelo Daniel Colombo, Bishop of San Isidro (Argentina) and President of the Episcopal Conference of Argentina Oscar Vicente Ojea, Archbishop of...
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