With China Leo Wants “Peace and Harmony.” But He Knows It Will Be “Very Difficult”

In his fir­st inter­view as pope, given in July to Elise Ann Allen of the American new­spa­per Crux and made public on September 18, Robert Francis Prevost was also asked about China.

And he respon­ded that “in the short term” he will con­ti­nue on the path under­ta­ken by the Holy See for some years, but in the mean­ti­me he is alrea­dy “try­ing to gain a clea­rer under­stan­ding of how the church can con­ti­nue the church’s mis­sion,” taking into account the cul­tu­re and poli­ti­cal issues “that have obviou­sly great impor­tan­ce,” but also liste­ning to “a signi­fi­cant group of Chinese Catholics who for many years have expe­rien­ced some kind of oppres­sion or dif­fi­cul­ty in living their faith free­ly, and without choo­sing sides.”

“It’s a very dif­fi­cult situa­tion,” Pope Leo said. “In the long term, I don’t pre­tend to say this is what I will and will not do,” but “I’ve alrea­dy begun having discus­sions at seve­ral levels on that topic.”

China is not a ter­ra inco­gni­ta for Leo. “He has visi­ted China more than once and has lear­ned about Chinese cul­tu­re and rea­li­ty,” Hong Kong bishop Cardinal Stephen Chow Sau-yan said of him shor­tly after his elec­tion as pope.

And back on May 25, at one of his fir­st “Regina Caeli” in St. Peter’s Square, the new pope had asked for inter­ces­sion that Chinese Catholics may have “the gra­ce to be strong and joy­ful wit­nes­ses of the Gospel even in the mid­st of trials, to pro­mo­te pea­ce and har­mo­ny.”

What has hap­pe­ned from then until now con­firms Leo’s pru­dent but far from resi­gned approach to the mine­field that is the rela­tion­ship bet­ween the Holy See and China.

A rela­tion­ship in which Beijing unque­stio­na­bly calls the sho­ts, as also pro­ved by the news given out in the inter­re­gnum bet­ween the death of Francis and the elec­tion of Leo.

It was April 28, and relia­ble sour­ces told “AsiaNews,” the agen­cy of the Pontifical Institute for Foreign Missions, that an assem­bly of priests, nuns, and lai­ty obe­dient to the govern­ment had been con­ve­ned in Shanghai to rati­fy the choi­ce of a new auxi­lia­ry bishop in the per­son of Wu Jianlin, for­mer vicar gene­ral of the dio­ce­se, as well as a mem­ber of the arch-official Chinese People’s Consultative Conference.

And the same thing hap­pe­ned in the dio­ce­se of Xinxiang, whe­re the new bishop-designate was the prie­st Li Jianlin, he too a govern­ment pawn, to the point of having signed the ordi­nan­ce in 2018 ban­ning minors under 18 from ente­ring chur­ches for Mass in the who­le pro­vin­ce of Henan.

These two appoint­men­ts lea­ked by the Chinese autho­ri­ties had a serious ano­ma­ly in com­mon. In Shanghai – whe­re the head of the dio­ce­se, Bishop Joseph Shen Bin, who is also pre­si­dent of the Chinese pseu­do epi­sco­pal con­fe­ren­ce never reco­gni­zed by Rome, was instal­led in 2023 by a uni­la­te­ral deci­sion of the regi­me only after­ward com­mu­ni­ca­ted to Pope Francis – the­re are alrea­dy two auxi­lia­ry bishops, but both are bar­red from ser­ving : Joseph Xing Wenzi, 62, ordai­ned in 2005 but later fal­len from gra­ce and for­ced to reti­re to pri­va­te life in 2011, and abo­ve all Thaddeus Ma Daqin, 57, who on July 7, 2012, during his epi­sco­pal ordi­na­tion, revo­ked his mem­ber­ship in the government-run Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association, with the imme­dia­te effect of being held under arre­st sin­ce then in the Sheshan semi­na­ry.

Also in the dio­ce­se of Xinxiang the­re is alrea­dy a bishop, he too under threat. He is Joseph Zhang Weizhu, 67, ordai­ned clan­de­sti­ne­ly in 1991 and repea­ted­ly arre­sted for the sim­ple cri­me of car­ry­ing out his mini­stry, devoid as he is of offi­cial reco­gni­tion.

Under the 2018 agree­ment bet­ween Beijing and the Holy See on the appoint­ment of bishops, which is still secret but now clear­ly in ope­ra­tion, it is China that desi­gna­tes each new bishop, with the pope having the option of say­ing yes or no in the second round but who so far has in fact always appro­ved each appoint­ment.

A few mon­ths usual­ly pass bet­ween the Chinese desi­gna­tion and the papal appoint­ment. With the relea­se, final­ly, on the day of the new bishop’s instal­la­tion, of two dif­fe­rent sta­te­men­ts : one from the Holy See, citing the date of papal appro­val, and the other from the offi­cial Chinese Church agen­cy, citing instead the date of the new bishop’s prior “elec­tion,” without the slighte­st men­tion of the pope.

In this case five mon­ths have gone by sin­ce the dou­ble news lea­ked on April 28, but nothing is yet kno­wn about the out­co­me of tho­se two epi­sco­pal desi­gna­tions, in Shanghai and Xinxiang.

While in the mean­ti­me three more appoint­men­ts have been fina­li­zed, in accor­dan­ce with the agree­ment.

The fir­st was on June 11, with the instal­la­tion of Joseph Lin Yuntuan, 73, ordai­ned bishop back in 2017 without publi­ci­ty from the Vatican but now out of the under­ground and offi­cial­ly reco­gni­zed as auxi­lia­ry bishop of the dio­ce­se of Fuzhou, whe­re Joseph Cai Bingrui, he too relea­sed from under­ground sta­tus on that occa­sion, has been bishop sin­ce January of this year, the last epi­sco­pal appoint­ment in China made by Pope Francis.

The other two bet­ween September 10 and 12, along with the erec­tion of the new dio­ce­se of Zhangjiakou, its bor­ders mat­ching tho­se of the rela­ti­ve pro­vin­ce, and with the mer­ging into it of the two pre­vious dio­ce­ses of Xuanhua and Xiwanzi, now extinct.

This is not the fir­st boun­da­ry adjust­ment for Chinese dio­ce­ses, to make them coin­ci­de with the pro­vin­cial boun­da­ries as desi­red by the Beijing autho­ri­ties. Rome’s only firm reser­va­tion regar­ding the Chinese map­ping, which con­si­ders all dio­ce­ses equal, is the distinc­tion bet­ween dio­ce­se and arch­dio­ce­se. In this case the Vatican sta­te­ment defi­nes the new dio­ce­se of Zhangjiakou as a “suf­fra­gan of Beijing,” impli­ci­tly attri­bu­ting to this lat­ter the sta­tus of an arch­dio­ce­se at the head of an eccle­sia­sti­cal pro­vin­ce, and to its bishop the role of metro­po­li­tan.

The new bishop of Zhangjiakou, con­se­cra­ted on September 10 at a cere­mo­ny pre­si­ded over by his metro­po­li­tan of Beijing, Joseph Li Shan, is Joseph Wang Zhengui. The appoint­ment by Pope Leo, accor­ding to the Vatican sta­te­ment, took pla­ce on July 8, whi­le his “elec­tion” by China, accor­ding to the sta­te­ment from the offi­cial agen­cy “Catholic Church in China,” dates back to March 28, when Francis was still pope.

Wang comes from the sup­pres­sed dio­ce­se of Xuanhua, who­se under­ground bishop Augustine Cui Tai was repea­ted­ly arre­sted but now, coin­ci­ding with the reor­ga­ni­za­tion, has been reti­red and at the same time par­do­ned with offi­cial reco­gni­tion.

And the same bene­fit of offi­cial reco­gni­tion was gran­ted by the Chinese autho­ri­ties to the other bishop instal­led on September 12 as auxi­lia­ry in the new dio­ce­se of Zhangjiakou, Joseph Ma Yanen, until recen­tly the under­ground bishop of the other sup­pres­sed dio­ce­se, that of Xiwanzi.

According to the sta­te­men­ts from the Chinese, both the new auxi­lia­ry bishop of Zhangjiakou upon his instal­la­tion and the bishop eme­ri­tus of Xuanhua on the day of his reti­re­ment had to solemn­ly swear to “respect the Constitution and the laws of the Country, safe­guard natio­nal uni­ty and social har­mo­ny, love home­land and Church, uphold the prin­ci­ple of the inde­pen­den­ce and self-government of the Church, adhe­re to the sini­ci­za­tion of Catholicism in China, and con­tri­bu­te to the com­ple­te con­struc­tion of a modern socia­li­st coun­try and the com­pre­hen­si­ve pro­mo­tion of the great renewal of the Chinese nation.”

As for the dio­ce­se of Shanghai, whe­re the­re remains pen­ding the appoint­ment of an auxi­lia­ry bishop alrea­dy desi­gna­ted by the Chinese side – as lea­ked at the end of April – but not yet appro­ved by Rome, the offi­cial news agen­cy of the dio­ce­se, com­ple­te­ly sub­ju­ga­ted to the regi­me, gave wide publi­ci­ty to the ima­ges of the cler­gy and fai­th­ful gathe­red in various pla­ces on September 3 to fol­low live on giant screens, with reli­gious recol­lec­tion as if they were in church, the gigan­tic mili­ta­ry para­de with which Xi Jinping wan­ted to cele­bra­te the 80th anni­ver­sa­ry of China’s “vic­to­ry” in World War II.

*

Regarding the oath of sub­mis­sion to the govern­ment attri­bu­ted to the two bishops Ma Yanen and Cui Tai, “sour­ces from ‘Asia News’ have repor­ted the news as implau­si­ble,” agen­cy direc­tor Fr. Gianni Criveller wro­te on September 22 in a lucid com­men­ta­ry on what Pope Leo said about the futu­re of rela­tions bet­ween the Holy See and China. “The Catholic com­mu­ni­ties that loo­ked up to them were taken by sur­pri­se and feel sad­de­ned. The two bishops, alrea­dy under­ground, obeyed the will of the Holy See, but the sto­ry of their fide­li­ty, toge­ther with that of their com­mu­ni­ties, emer­ges without reco­gni­tion, if not mor­ti­fied.”

(Translated by Matthew Sherry : traduttore@​hotmail.​com)

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Sandro Magister is past “vati­ca­ni­sta” of the Italian wee­kly L’Espresso.
The late­st arti­cles in English of his blog Settimo Cielo are on this page.
But the full archi­ve of Settimo Cielo in English, from 2017 to today, is acces­si­ble.
As is the com­ple­te index of the blog www.chiesa, which pre­ce­ded it.

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