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Catholic China
Pope Starts a New Day for ‘The Church Which Is in China’
BY FATHER RAYMOND J. DE SOUZA
July 8-14, 2007 Issue |
Posted 7/3/07 at 12:08 PM
Pope Benedict XVI has made it clear that Chinese Catholics
are a unified whole.
They are called to charity and reconciliation between
estranged members, belong to the universal Church, and are governed by the Pope
and their legitimate bishops.
In essence, the Holy Father declared that the Church in
China must be one, holy, catholic and apostolic. Anything to the contrary
cannot be accepted.
The Vatican on June 30 released the 55-page open letter from
Pope Benedict XVI. Addressed to bishops, priests and lay faithful in China, it
was made available in English and Chinese.
The letter to the Catholics of the People’s Republic of
China follows a “summit” on China held last January at the Vatican with senior
curial officials and some Chinese bishops. That meeting took account of recent
developments with respect to the Church in China and was aimed at formulating a
new pastoral response.
After their coming to power in 1949, the Chinese communists
first attempted to suppress the Church altogether, in the manner of communists
elsewhere. Not long after though, they introduced a more clever, and divisive,
maneuver: They created their own Catholic association — the so-called
“patriotic church.”
In the “patriotic church,” Catholics were largely free to
practice as they wished, but the role of the Pope was put in question. The
Chinese communists accepted him as a spiritual leader, but rejected his
authority to govern the Church in China as an unacceptable “foreign”
interference in Chinese sovereignty. The critical point of conflict came over
the appointment of bishops, as the Chinese state appointed bishops for the
patriotic church without a papal mandate — a serious violation of canon law and
grounds for schism.
As a result, a deep division opened in the Chinese Catholic
community, now estimated to be at least 12 million.
Many bishops and priests became members of the patriotic
church, and many bishops were consecrated without a papal mandate, believing
that such state interference could be tolerated in order to preserve the
possibility of preaching the Gospel. Others chose to remain underground, seeing
the necessary accommodation as a betrayal of the Catholic faith.
The underground Church has been persecuted, with many of her
bishops and priests jailed.
In recent years though, the situation in China has changed.
In some areas, religious liberty has been granted in
practice, if not in law, even to underground Catholics. More important, with
the exception of perhaps a dozen or so, the bishops of the patriotic church
have requested “legitimization” from the Holy See, declaring their union with
and loyalty to the Holy Father. In most cases this has been granted, so that
the patriotic church bishops are fully in communion with Rome.
This in turn has produced some confusion and acrimony. There
are places where there are two bishops — one patriotic and one clandestine —
both of whom are in communion with Rome. Members of the patriotic church often
feel that the underground Church makes it more difficult for all Chinese
Catholics to practice openly.
Members of the underground Church often feel that the
patriotic church has betrayed the faith and, in “legitimizing” those bishops
who were ordained without papal permission, the Holy See is turning a blind eye
to that betrayal.
To this situation Benedict proposes various remedies, rooted
in the theological reality that the Church must be one, holy, catholic and
apostolic.
First, the Holy Father indicates clearly that there is one
Church in China; the Holy See rejects the premise that there are two churches
in China. In short, the Church has declared a failure the attempt by the
Chinese government to create two realities.
Noting that the creation of the patriotic church was
“desired by the state and extraneous to the structure of the Church,” Benedict
makes clear that all Catholics in China constitute one reality, even if some
are separated from full communion with him: “The whole of the Church which is
in China is called to live and to manifest this unity in a richer spirituality
of communion, so that, taking account of the complex concrete situations in
which the Catholic community finds itself, she may grow in harmonious hierarchical
communion.”
Second, the Holy Father calls on Catholics to live the
holiness of the truth in charity.
Given the suspicion and recrimination that sometimes exists
between patriotic and clandestine Catholics, Benedict notes that “the history
of the Church teaches us that authentic communion is not expressed without
arduous efforts at reconciliation,” calling for a “purification of memory, the
pardoning of wrong-doers, the forgetting of injustices suffered.”
It is clear that as the Church in China lives in greater
freedom, cooperation and communion, it will be at risk if the divisions of the
communist period are allowed to continue in the Church.
Benedict salutes in particular all those Catholics who have
suffered under communism, particularly the martyrs, whom the Holy Father says
are already the seed of new Christian witness. To be faithful to the martyrs,
Benedict argues, means to live as the Church should live — as one communion of
sinners who seek and receive forgiveness.
Third, the letter insists that the “Church which is in
China” — an unwieldy phrase used throughout the letter to underline the point —
is not a Chinese institution, but a universal body of which Chinese Catholics
form a part.
The Holy Father stresses that each particular Church has the
principle of universality “from within” because by its very nature the bonds of
baptism and the Eucharist unite each Catholic with all others.
While Benedict says he is open to dialogue with the Chinese
state on diplomatic relations, the reorganization of dioceses, and even
consultation on the appointment of bishops, in the end, the Chinese state must
recognize that within the Church in China, “the universal Church is present,”
which means recognizing the “full religious liberty” to which they are entitled,
including the “unrenounceable” role of the Holy See in governing the “Church
which is in China.”
Fourth, the letter attempts to clarify the apostolic
character of the Church in China — the question of the validity and legitimacy
of bishops. In short, Benedict asks for mutual recognition and openness, and
seeks to foster communion among all Chinese bishops, whose ordinations remain
valid even if they were illegitimate.
To the clandestine bishops in union with Rome but not
recognized by the Chinese state, he appeals that they be granted such state
recognition so that they may function publicly, given that the “clandestine
condition is not a normal feature of the Church’s life.”
To the large majority of patriotic bishops who have already
received legitimization from the Holy See and are in communion with the Pope,
Benedict asks that they make this public as soon as possible, so that their
priests and people will have confidence that they are in union with Rome.
And to the small group of patriotic bishops who are not in
communion with Rome, the Holy Father appeals to them to ask for legitimization,
which will generously be considered.
The appeal then is for Catholics in China to live as much as
possible an open and normal ecclesial life, confident that the divisions among
them are much less than in the past. They are being asked to live as if they
were already one, in preparation for the day when Chinese law will fully permit
them to live as one.
To that end, Benedict has revoked all the special permissions
previously granted “in order to address particular pastoral necessities that
emerged in truly difficult times.”
The implication is clear: The situation in China has
improved to the point where it can be governed by regular canon law. Normality,
if not yet achieved, is a real possibility.
To that end, the Holy Father clarified that concelebration
of Mass is possible between patriotic and clandestine bishops and priests, as
long as all are in communion with Rome. The faithful may receive the sacraments
from any bishop or priest in communion with Rome, and in cases of necessity,
even from those who are not.
The Holy Father envisions a liturgical and sacramental life
for Chinese Catholics in which the divisions of the past no longer prevail.
Finally, Benedict has proposed May 24, Feast of Mary, Help
of Christians, as a special day of prayer for the Catholics of China, members
of the “Church of Christ, which in the creed we acknowledge to be one, holy,
catholic and apostolic.”
Father Raymond J. De Souza is
the Register’s formerRome correspondent.
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