Philippine Daily Inquirer

CHINESE CATHOLICS URGED TO ACT ON THEIR OWN

- —AP

BEIJING— One of China’s top leaders told Chinese Catholics that they needed to operate “independen­tly” of outside forces and promote socialism and patriotism through religion.

Yu Zhengsheng’s Thursday speech came at the end of a meeting of China’s official Catholic Church that was being closely watched by the Holy See.

Yu is one of seven members of the Politburo Standing Committee, China’s top decisionma­king body. His speech could be a measure of how much Beijing is willing to yield in potential dialogue with the Holy See.

State media reported that Yu called on the Catholic Churches to adhere to “socialism with Chinese characteri­stics”—a term that describes China’s model of developmen­t, which for decades has favored economic liberaliza­tion but not political reform. China’s ruling Communist Party is officially atheistic.

Yu also said Chinese Catholics should adhere “to the correct direction of developmen­t.”

China and the Vatican have long clashed over whether the party-controlled Chinese Church could operate outside the Pope’s authority.

Beijing severed relations with the Holy See in 1951, shortly after the Communist Party took power, and officially allows worship only in state-sanctioned churches. Many of China’s estimated 12 million Catholics are thought to worship in undergroun­d congregati­ons.

Starting under Pope Benedict XVI, the Vatican has sought to unite Chinese Catholics under the Holy See. Pope Francis has said that both sides had resumed meetings of working groups over the naming of bishops, an issue central to the dispute between both sides.

 ?? AP ?? Aman prays during Christmas Eve Mass at a Catholic church in Beijing.—
AP Aman prays during Christmas Eve Mass at a Catholic church in Beijing.—

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