Bad News from China. A Rift Has Opened in Beijing

<http://chiesa.espresso.repubblica.it/articolo/214897?eng=y>http://chiesa.espresso.repubblica.it/articolo/214897?eng=y
 


Between obedience to the pope and to the 
communist party, some bishops are choosing the 
latter. The most stunning about-face has taken 
place in the capital. A secret letter from 
Cardinal Bertone. The alarm of Cardinal Zen

by Sandro Magister

[]



ROMA, February 11, 2009 – At the Vatican as well, 
they had deceived themselves that the Beijing 
Olympics would lead to greater freedom for the 
Catholic Church. But the news coming to Rome from China shows the contrary.

Meanwhile, once again the Chinese authorities 
have not permitted bishops to leave the country, 
to participate in the synod last October.

In the second place, the episcopal see of Beijing 
– occupied in recent decades strictly by bishops 
appointed by the government, and without the 
authorization of the pope, but "reconquered" by 
Rome two summers ago with the installation of a 
new bishop approved both by the government and by 
the Holy See – is in serious danger of being lost again.

In fact, the new bishop, Joseph Li Shan (in the 
photo) whom cardinal secretary of state Tarcisio 
Bertone had hailed as "a very good and suitable 
person," is increasingly stringing together 
actions submissive toward the regime. To such an 
extent that many among the faithful already consider him a "traitor."

In the third place, the communist party has 
intensified its pressure to subjugate the Church 
and separate a significant part of it from Rome. 
This pressure is mainly exercised on the bishops 
installed by the government. Most of these, year 
after year, had returned to communion with the 
pope. But now some of them are wavering.

In July of 2007, Benedict XVI had written an open 
letter to Catholics in China, to help them 
establish unity between themselves and Rome. But 
the process of reconciliation and rebuilding of 
the Chinese Church timidly undertaken after that 
letter now seems to have come to a halt.

Last April, a second letter went out from the 
Vatican to China, this time confidential and 
addressed only to the bishops. But the letter, 
signed by Cardinal Bertone, seemed to some of the 
bishops like a step backward in comparison with 
that of the pope. It was too deferential toward the Chinese authorities.

"Asia News," the online agency with a special 
focus on China, founded and directed by Fr. 
Bernardo Cervellera of the Pontifical Institute 
for Foreign Missions, has carried out a survey 
among the Chinese bishops. The results have been called "disturbing."

To such an extent that Cardinal Zen Zekiun, 
making use of the greater freedom that he enjoys 
as a citizen of Hong Kong, has broken the 
paralysis and raised the alarm. He has urged his 
brother bishops on the mainland not to give in, 
and to be more courageous in opposing the pressure from the regime.

Here is a thorough reconstruction and analysis of 
all of these events, written for "Asia News" by Fr. Cervellera:


The bishop of Beijing, the Vatican, and 
compromising with the Patriotic Association

by Bernardo Cervellera


Just over a year after the ordination of their 
current bishop, the Catholics of Beijing are 
divided in their opinion of him, and more and 
more of them are accusing him of betraying the Church of Rome.

Joseph Li Shan, 44, was ordained on September 21, 
2007, with papal approval. But after more than 
year in office his attitude towards the Vatican 
seems to have changed. Catholics say that the man 
who came to replace Michael Fu Tieshan, the 
patriotic bishop who died a year before, is 
taking long strides toward a return to 
patriotism, and autonomy from the Holy See.

The faithful have been taken aback by his way of 
doing things, by speeches that seem to be 
slipping conctinually toward absolute submission 
to the Patriotic Association, dedicated to 
creating and controlling a Catholic Church independent of Rome.


BISHOP AND SERVANT OF POWER


Some of his speeches are particularly revealing. 
The first was delivered on November 25, during a 
training session for priests and lay people. The 
bishop began by praising the progress enjoyed by 
the Church thanks to the thirty years of reforms 
launched by Deng Xiaoping. The faithful saw the 
use of a religious formation course to pay 
tribute to Deng's modernizations as a "tax paid 
to political power." But what came next was even 
more disconcerting. Bishop Li Shan defended the 
actions of his predecessor, Bishop Fu Tieshan, 
who had begun the "glorious tradition of loving 
the fatherland and loving the Church". "Love the 
fatherland, love the Church" is nothing other 
than the slogan of the Chinese Patriotic Catholic 
Association (CPCA), which wants to force the 
Church to obey the communist party.

Further on, Li Shan said that "the work of loving 
the fatherland and loving the Church has suffered 
grave interference from foreign political powers, 
and from the clandestine Church in China." The 
accusation against the Vatican is clear: in the 
speeches of the communist party, it is the Holy 
See that is considered "a foreign state that 
wants to meddle in the internal affairs of China under the guise of religion."

Bishop Li continued: "Some people have focused on 
our diocese and Bishop Fu, undervaluing the 
results we have obtained in these years, which is 
much more than what was done in the previous 700 
years . . . causing trouble and trying to 
convince us to give up the principle of Church 
self-governance [meaning autonomy from Rome), moving us back into the past."

For the future, Bishop Li stated that it is 
necessary to "maintain the idea of loving the 
fatherland and loving the Church, persevering on 
the path towards the Church’s self-governance," 
because these two guidelines are "the fundamental 
guarantee for a healthy development of the Church's work in the capital."

"These principles," he concluded, "are the result 
of what we have learned from the semi-colonial 
history [meaning enslaved to the Vatican] of the 
Chinese Church in the past. They are also the 
valuable experience of the new life and 
development of the Chinese Church in the socialist society of the new China."

Naturally, in saying all of this Li Shan was 
defending the necessity of the CPCA and 
"democracy" in the Church. According to this 
principle, the appointment of bishops, pastoral 
work, and theological issues are entrusted to an 
assembly of bishops, priests, and laity strictly 
dominated by the CPCA, debasing the Church's sacramental nature.

The entire speech from November 25, in Chinese, 
was available on the website of the diocese of 
Beijing until a short time ago. It was also 
possible to read on the site the speech delivered 
by Bishop Li Shan on December 19, at the 
celebrations for the 50th anniversary of the 
first episcopal ordinations in China autonomous 
of the Holy See. Both have disappeared in recent days.


THAT SAD CHRISTMAS EVE


Bishop Li Shan delivered a similar speech on 
Christmas Eve of 2008. At 7 in the evening, he 
was visited by Ye Xiaowen, director of the state 
administration of religious affairs; Zhou Ning, 
director of the second section of the United 
Front; Tong Genzhu, deputy minister of the 
central department of the United Front; and many 
others, including Beijing deputy mayor Niu Youcheng.

The faithful got goosebumps this time, too. 
Bishop Li Shan – who seemed set to put an end at 
last to the era of Bishop Fu Tieshan’s 
subservience to the party and his steadfast 
refusal to seek reconciliation with the Holy See 
– thanked the Chinese government for its help and 
support for every aspect of the Church's life, 
vowing that he would continue to hold high the 
standard of "loving the fatherland and loving the 
Church," and follow the path of the "independence 
and self-governance of the Church" [from Rome], 
seeking to make the Catholic Church a model for building a harmonious society.

In all of these speeches and statements, the tone 
and slogans used are characteristic of the 
language of the party, and of the most radical 
period of communism in China, that of the 
Cultural Revolution. The faithful are astonished, 
and are wondering how in the world their pastor 
could turn so quickly into a Red Guard, showing 
even more servility toward power than his predecessor did.

Bishop Li Shan was known as a good priest, 
simple, not very broad-minded but faithful to the 
pope, capable of arousing passion in the young 
and particularly open to the underground Church, 
the one not recognized by the government. His 
speeches against "foreign states" and the 
underground Church represent a 180-degree turn in his way of thinking.

According to information obtained by "Asia News," 
the author of the Christmas Eve speech was not 
Bishop Li Shan, but the secretary general of the 
Patriotic Association in Beijing, Shi Hongxi, 
known for his extremist views. Other sources say 
the bishop got the speech at the last minute, 
giving him no opportunity to look through it. But 
the repetition of the same slogans in three 
different situations raises the fear that, even 
if he does not agree with what he read, the 
bishop is at the very least a puppet of the Patriotic Association.


THE POPE: THE CPCA IS "INCOMPATIBLE WITH CATHOLIC TEACHING"


The CPCA, founded in 1958, has for half a century 
tried every means possible for dividing the 
Church, ordaining bishops without the 
authorization of the pope. In recent years, many 
bishops of the patriotic Church have asked 
forgiveness for this separation, and thanks to 
the generosity of John Paul II and Benedict XVI, 
they have been reconciled with the Holy See. In 
January of 2007, the Vatican itself announced 
that "almost all" of the official bishops 
recognized by the government are now in full 
communion with the Holy See as well.

The public letter from Benedict XVI to Chinese 
Catholics, dated June 30, 2007, reaffirmed this 
strong communion. But it also highlighted the 
fact that the CPCA is a structure contrary to the 
Catholic faith, warning that "the principles of 
independence and autonomy, self-management and 
democratic administration of the Church are 
incompatible with Catholic doctrine."

That the bishop of Beijing, ordained with the 
approval of the pope, should come to the defense 
of something that is "incompatible" with the 
Catholic Church is therefore a serious did feed 
for the Vatican. A blog run by a few Catholics 
calls Bishop Li Shan a "time bomb" that will go 
off against the Church of Rome.

According to information obtained by "Asian 
News," Bishop Li Shan has repented of his actions 
and has justified his behavior on the basis of 
the pressure that he had to undergo. In effect, 
precisely because of the pope's letter and the 
restoration of unity among almost all the Chinese 
bishops, the United Front and the Patriotic 
Association have, for over a year, launched a 
series of initiatives to bring the official 
Chinese bishops back into obedience – to them. 
The United Front and the CPCA summon them 
constantly, require them to participate in 
conferences, meetings, study sessions, political 
sessions, making their pastoral work very 
difficult. The bishops are not even able to meet 
among themselves alone, and go from a life in 
solitude – at the mercy of the CPCA secretaries – 
to collective gatherings under the control and 
indoctrination of the United Front and the state 
administration for religious affairs.


THE TIMID LETTER OF CARDINAL BERTONE


To keep the bishops united and halt the influence 
of the CPCA, on April 22, 2008, the Vatican sent 
a letter to all the Chinese bishops in communion 
with Rome. Signed by Vatican secretary of state 
Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the letter took months 
to reach the 90 or so bishops in the official and 
underground Church. Some of them didn't get it until December of 2008.

In it, Cardinal Bertone stressed the "fundamental 
principles of Catholic teaching" and recalled the 
value of communion between the bishops and the 
pope, and among themselves. For this reason he 
asked all of the prelates, in the pontiff's name, 
to "discharge courageously your office as 
pastors," promoting the catholicity of the Church 
and seeking greater freedom of activity through 
direct and respectful dialogue with civic 
authorities. The cardinal also urged on the 
bishops "to act together," to demand the right to 
meet as a group and to discuss their problems 
freely, without any outside interference. 
Finally, he suggested that the bishops find a 
"correct attitude to adopt with regard to those 
entities to which reference is made in section 7 
of the papal document." The reference is to CPCA 
and to its idea of an independent and self-governing Church.

Cardinal Bertone's letter is important because 
for the first time it asks the official and 
underground bishops to meet. But it avoids giving 
them a joint approach to take toward the CPCA.The 
previous letter from the pope had noted that this 
is contrary to Catholic doctrine, but did not ask 
official bishops to resign from them.

Some underground bishops have said that a more 
decisive stance on the part of the Holy See would be more effective.

So far, official bishops have tried to resist 
CPCA pressure, but with few results. At the same 
time, some underground bishops have tried to get 
government recognition without joining the CPCA, 
but no local government has accepted this 
solution, reaffirming instead the central role 
played by the CPCA in the government’s religious policies.

This problem is even more urgent because national 
meetings are being prepared to pick the new 
chairman of the CPCA and the head of the Bishops’ 
Conference of the Catholic Church in China, a 
sort of episcopal conference not recognized by 
the Holy See. The election to these two posts is 
expected to take place at an upcoming national 
congress of Catholic representatives. It should 
be held soon, since both posts have been vacant 
for some time: patriotic bishop Michael Fu 
Tieshan, elected president of the CPCA in 1998, 
died in 2007. Joseph Liu Yuanren, the patriotic 
bishop of Nanjing, elected president of the 
bishops' council in 2004, died in 2005.

Imposing controls on bishops, forcing them to 
attend conferences and political sessions, 
celebrating the 50th anniversary of the 
ordination of Chinese bishops separate from Rome, 
are part of the United Front and the CPCA's 
attempts to break the will of official bishops 
and get them to submit to the traditional structures of control.

Many Catholics, both official and underground, 
are afraid that without clear and specific 
guidelines from the Holy See, official bishops 
will be forced by events and individual 
interpretations of the papal letter into making compromises.


A SURVEY AMONG THE CHINESE BISHOPS


In recent months, more than a year after the 
release of the pope's letter to Chinese 
Catholics, "Asia News" conducted a survey among 
Chinese bishops as to their attitudes towards 
Benedict XVI’s guidelines. Some answers are 
startling. On the one hand, some bishops praise 
the letter and the pontiff's teachings, which 
urge unity with him and among themselves. On the 
other hand, they do not seem at all disturbed by 
the fact that the document describes the CPCA’s 
programs and policies as "incompatible" with Catholic doctrine.

So in their replies, a number of the official 
bishops lavishly praised the Association for its 
"help to the Church" and the "needy," as well as 
for "taking care of religion." Some bishops in 
central China went so far as to say that the CPCA 
and the Church "are one and the same."

A Catholic from northern China told "Asia News": 
"Official bishops lack guts. When Beijing tells 
them to get together, they get going right away. 
This way they fail to follow the directions set 
out in the papal letter and run the risk of going 
back to a past of slavery. Sadly, underground 
bishops, who have always maintained unity with 
the pope even if it cost them their life and 
liberty, are almost all under house arrest. A few 
have disappeared; others are behind bars."

Other Catholics, especially in Beijing, accuse 
the bishops of being greedy for power and money; 
this said to be why they accept compromises. 
"Perhaps Bishop Li Shan is not personally 
ambitious," said one worshipper in Beijing’s 
Nantang Cathedral, the Cathedral of the 
Immaculate Conception, "but he is certainly 
surrounded by people whose ambition knows no 
bounds, who are willing to accept any compromise 
to get what they want, and are prepared to sell 
the little freedom the Church still has in order to please the government."

A priest from the underground Church is somewhat 
more lenient. "These new bishops in the official 
Church are young, 40 something,: he said. "They 
have never lived in a free society. For it is 
self-evident that Christians must be under the 
control of the state even in strictly religious 
matters. Besides, the great figures of the 
Chinese Church are long gone so that they find 
themselves without role models."

Many bishops and believers are afraid that given 
this situation of weakness, 2009 might see a new 
series of unlawful ordinations, without the 
permission of the Holy See, designed to build up 
a core of "patriotic" prelates, all obedient to 
the Party. This would stop conversions to 
Catholicism, especially among intellectuals who 
are rediscovering Church teaching as the 
foundation for their demands for freedom and respect for the individual.


CARDINAL ZEN: NO MORE COMPROMISES


Out of this ambiguous and confused situation, the 
clear voice of Cardinal Joseph Zen of Hong Kong 
has emerged, asking bishops and priests in the 
official Church to be more courageous and resist 
making compromises with the regime.

In an article published last 4 January in the 
diocesan weekly "Gong Jiaobao"" (later reprinted 
in English by the Sunday Examiner), the cardinal 
urged Chinese bishops and priests to follow the 
example of Saint Stephen, the first Christian 
martyr, and always resist the government when it 
says or does something that is contrary to the 
faith. In his article "Inspiration from St. 
Stephen’s Martyrdom," Cardinal Zen analyzes 
developments in China’s Catholic Church over the 
last two years, noting the number of illicit 
ordinations in 2006, attended by a dozen bishops 
approved by the Vatican, who went out of fear or deception.

He said that "a ray of hope" shone through in 
2007 with a meeting at the Vatican to discuss the 
situation of the Church in China, and above all 
with the publication of the pope's letter to 
Chinese Catholics. The bishop of Hong Kong 
emphasizes that in the letter, the pope affirms 
that the goals of the Chinese Patriotic 
Association are contrary to the Catholic faith, 
and adds that the CCCPCA itself was a "major 
cause of the Church’s problems in China."

With the regard to this last point the cardinal 
strongly criticized certain interpretations of 
the papal letter, especially one by CICM 
missionary Jerome Heyndrickx, who said that all 
of the bishops should join the official Church. 
In reality, the cardinal says, the pope "admires 
their uncompromising faithfulness and encourages 
them to "persevere," as Benedict XVI stated in 
his Angelus address on the feast of Saint Stephen in 2006.

Zen says that given the danger of serious 
compromises, the experience of the underground 
Church is even more valuable. For this reason, 
the cardinal was blasted the celebrations that on 
19 December of last year marked the 50th 
anniversary of illicit episcopal ordinations in China.

For the bishop of Hong Kong, there is nothing to 
celebrate, because the system of 
"self-ordination" is the work of 1950's extreme 
left-wing radicals who saw the pope as an agent 
of imperialism. But this view is outdated, at a 
time when China is celebrating 30 years of 
economic reforms implemented to oppose this radical mentality.

"Forcing Catholics to go against their conscience 
is a great insult to the dignity of every Chinese 
citizen," the cardinal writes. "This is why there 
is nothing to be proud of or to celebrate. Such 
celebrations are a sign that the establishment 
won’t let go, that it wants our great nation to 
bear the mark of backwardness."

For the cardinal, it is clear that all of the 
hoopla over the CPCA’s 50th anniversary, its 
"self-ordinations," is a preparation for meetings 
to elect the new presidents of the Patriotic 
Association and the Chinese bishops' council. He 
suggests the bishops should boycott the next 
meeting to which they are summoned. "Isn’t taking 
part in such an ‘assembly’ a show of total 
contempt for the papal letter? Isn’t it a slap in 
the face? Can your conscience let you do this? 
Will God’s people accept it? Will it bring any 
honour to our nation? Will there be hope for a 
return to normalcy and the enjoyment of freedom of religion?"

In the article, Cardinal Zen says that some 
members of the Chinese Church are praising 
compromises and ambiguity. "Some people, talking 
to the brothers in the underground community, 
seem to be saying: ‘We are very smart to accept a 
compromise! We are in communion with the Holy 
Father and at the same time are recognised by the 
government. They give us money and we take care 
of our faithful. You instead prefer to go to 
prison; you would rather die. And then what of 
your faithful; abandoned, with no one taking care of them’. "

The cardinal continues: "So, martyrdom has become 
a stupid thing? That’s absurd; a short-sighted 
view! Reaching compromises might make sense as a 
short-term strategy but it cannot last forever. 
Being secretly united with the Holy Father and at 
the same time affiliated with a Church that 
declares itself autonomous from Rome is a contradiction."

Finally, Cardinal Zen ends with a fraternal 
appeal: "Dear brother bishops and priests, look 
at the example of Saint Stephen and all the 
martyrs of our history! Remember that suffering 
for the sake of the faith is the basis of victory 
even if right now it might appear as defeat."

__________


The agency of the Pontifical Institute for 
Foreign Missions that on February 3, 2009, 
published the analysis by Fr. Cervellera:

<http://www.asianews.it/main.php?l=en>> Asia News

__________


Another online news agency with extensive information on China:

<http://www.ucanews.com/>> UCA News

This agency was the first to break the story and 
provide an extract from the secret letter sent in 
2008 by cardinal secretary of state Tarcisio Bertone to the bishops of China:

Vatican analyst Gianni Cardinale also published 
an extensive, detailed account of the letter, in 
the newspaper of the Italian bishops' conference, 
"Avvenire," on December 24, 2008.

The pope’s letter to the Catholics of China:

<http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/benedict_xvi/letters/2007/documents/hf_ben-xvi_let_20070527_china_en.html>>
 
Letter of the Holy Father Pope Benedict XVI...

__________


All of the articles about this topic on www.chiesa:

<http://chiesa.espresso.repubblica.it/cina?eng=y>> Focus on CHINA

__________


English translation by 
<mailto:[email protected]>Matthew Sherry, Saint Louis, Missouri, U.S.A.

__________
11.2.2009


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