iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

What's Behind China's Hard Line Against Catholics?

First Posted: 07/20/2011 5:30 pm Updated: 09/19/2011 5:12 am

By Francis X. Rocca
Religion News Service

VATICAN CITY (RNS) When China's state-run Catholic Church ordained a new bishop for the Diocese of Shantou last Thursday (July 14) without the Vatican's approval, it represented the latest step back from years of progress in a complex relationship.

Yet the main causes for the shift may have little to do with Rome, experts say, and instead lie in momentous geopolitical events in other regions of the globe, and deep social changes within China itself.

For more than half a century, China's 12 million to 15 million Catholics have been divided between the officially approved Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association (CPCA) and an "underground" church of Catholics loyal to the pope. Each side fiercely rejects the other's legitimacy.

But in recent years, the Vatican and Beijing have been in engaged in a slow and gradual process of compromise and mutual accommodation.

In 2007, Pope Benedict XVI wrote an open letter to Chinese Catholics insisting that the church be free of state control but said the Vatican would like diplomatic ties with Beijing. He also added that Rome is not seeking the overthrow of the communist regime.

The following year, in a widely noted gesture, the China Philharmonic Orchestra performed for Benedict at the Vatican in the presence of Beijing's ambassador to Italy.

Most significantly, China and the Vatican tacitly agreed on a policy of ordaining only bishops acceptable to both sides. Some 90 percent of those bishops previously ordained by the state church eventually received approval from Rome.

Over the last eight months, however, the rapprochement has halted, and Beijing has once again taken a hard line on control of the church in China.

Last November, Joseph Guo Jincai was ordained the bishop of Chengde without papal approval. Last month, a CPCA spokesman said the state-run church planned to ordain more than 40 new bishops "without delay," a week before it ordained Rev. Paul Lei Shiyin as bishop of Leshan.

According to the Vatican-affiliated AsiaNews agency, Chinese officials first "kidnapped" three bishops loyal to Rome and forced them to participate in the ceremony that made the Rev. Joseph Huang Bingzhang the bishop of Shantou.

So what changed that would explain Beijing's recent shift in policy?

According to the Rev. Bernardo Cervellera, director of AsiaNews, China's new hard line is a reflection of both strength and weakness. With its status as an economic superpower now indisputable, China no longer has to cultivate the good opinion of Western nations that are literally in its debt.

"There may have been a time before the (2008 Beijing) Olympics when China may have thought it needed the Vatican's approval for international respectability," Cervellera said, "but now it doesn't."

Despite its growing assertiveness abroad, Cervellera said, Beijing is increasingly anxious about unrest among its own people. Along with skyrocketing growth, China has wrestled with inequality, corruption and environmental damage. That makes the regime even more determined to defuse any potential source of organized resistance, including the
Catholic Church.

According to Raquel Vaz-Pinto, a professor of international relations at the Catholic University of Portugal, Chinese leaders have especially keen memories of Poland in the 1980s, when Pope John Paul II inspired the Solidarity labor movement that toppled the communist regime and later decimated the Soviet Union.

Recent international events have acutely aggravated Beijing's fears, Vaz-Pinto says. Last year's Nobel Peace Prize for dissident Chinese writer Liu Xiaobo came as a shock to Beijing, she said, prompting some of the strongest official propaganda since Mao-Tse Tung's Cultural Revolution of the 1960s and `70s.

Within a month, she noted, the state church defied Rome with the ordination in Chengde.

The timing wasn't a coincidence, Vaz-Pinto said, nor were two more ordinations that followed the "Arab Spring" of pro-democracy movements in the Arab world, which brought down the longtime dictators of Tunisia and Egypt.

China's fear that the Arab movements could inspire dissidents on its own soil is evident in what Phelim Kine, senior Asia researcher at Human Rights Watch in New York, called the "worst spike in repression in China since the aftermath" of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests.

Since last February, authorities have arrested an unknown number of activists, intellectuals and bloggers, and heavily censored international news.

"The spillover effect of this is touching all sectors of society," Kine said, including the Catholic Church, where underground clergy already have a long history of being imprisoned and tortured.

As a result, the Vatican seems to have lost faith in engagement and negotiation with Beijing, opting for an increasingly hard line of its own, even though its leverage is mostly verbal.

The Vatican has warned that all bishops who consecrate other bishops without a papal mandate incur automatic excommunication, as do the men they consecrate, unless they were "coerced" to participate in the ceremony.

Even stronger have been recent statements by Cardinal Joseph Zen, the retired archbishop of Hong Kong and Pope Benedict's top adviser on China. Last week, Zen took out an advertisement in a Hong Kong newspaper denouncing those who use "violence to assist scum inside the church to force bishops, priests and followers to do things against their consciences."

Vaz-Pinto assumes such language bears the tacit endorsement of the pope himself.
"If (Zen) didn't think he was supposed say those things," she said, "he wouldn't be saying them."

FOLLOW HUFFPOST RELIGION

Filed by Jahnabi Barooah  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 202
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (5 total)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ZenCrusader
trying to be more zen in a zany world.
07:27 PM on 07/26/2011
China will not tolerate any institution that could become to some an authority more important than the central government. Why are the " leaders " of China so afraid of Falon Gong ?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gregory57
Micro-bio, was one of my favorite classes.
02:22 AM on 07/26/2011
I think it may have something to do with the Chinese government's "policy of birth planning". Look it up.
03:37 PM on 07/25/2011
Ooh goody, a replay of the Schism that had two Popes taking turns at excommunicating each other doesn´t look too far off. Should be fun. Especially given Chinas "One Child Policy."
03:29 PM on 07/25/2011
It seems the Chinese authorities just don´t understand the Vatican. Given the choice the Popes have always sided with the powerful against the weak. In Spain, in Italy, in South America etc. etc. Then again, maybe the Chinese just want to protect their kids.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gregory57
Micro-bio, was one of my favorite classes.
11:51 PM on 07/25/2011
Protect their kids? Abortion is a state sacrament (small S) in China. They want to protect their ideology.
03:10 PM on 07/25/2011
"What's Behind China's Hard Line Against Catholics?"
intelligence, and common sense
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cabrobst
Return the top rate to 91%.
07:48 PM on 07/24/2011
China's issue with the Catholic Church is the same as the United States' issue with the Catholic Church at the time when JFK was a candidate for president, they fear the Church and it's parishioners would be controlled by the Vatican. While the United States overcame that fear through freedom of religion, China's church are state churches, like the Church of England or the German Lutherans, only more so. And the fear is not entirely groundless, as is evident in the modern Priest abuse scandal.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DevonTexas
Eternal Optimism
02:29 PM on 07/24/2011
I figure China's just trying to protect their children from Catholic priests.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pjohns
Let nature be a teacher
12:59 PM on 07/24/2011
If we are to believe that there is a dark side to people, places and things, there is also a need to examine it, perhaps. As a catholic for over twenty years at one time, I read The Dark Side of the Vatican written by a former Jesuit priest. I don't consider myself catholic now, having left the church for a multitude of reasons, one of which is their absolutism. It shows again and again....as in China, as in Mexico where 40% of their people are living below the poverty line and dashing for another country so they can eat. As in a desire to buy the crystal cathedral instead of providing food and education for their Mexican followers.
07:59 AM on 07/24/2011
I am fascinated to hear the anti-Catholic bigotry on this site. Lol...I spent most of my youth defending other religions and those with none in RC circles and it is flat out amazing to me to hear the overt bigotry. Criticisms, fine. We've made many mistakes....though at least can we keep it to the 1900's, people? Would anyone else withstand their religion getting a full moral inventory EVERY TIME it is mentioned? Cause we'd be here a while.

Recent polls show that, in fact, a higher percentage of Catholics in the US over ANY OTHER CHRISTIAN DENOMINATION favored gay rights, their right to marry, serve in our military and against defining their sexual orientation as a "condition."

If someone can really say that the Chinese government, considering it's horrible track record on human rights, should NOT be influenced by groups that value the dignity of life, I'd love to hear the reasons.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cabrobst
Return the top rate to 91%.
07:51 PM on 07/24/2011
When did the Catholic Church pay reparations to the survivors of their many depredations down through the centuries, or even admitted fault? One thing is forever certain about the Catholic Church: they never confess or repent their sins.
08:31 PM on 07/24/2011
"Down through the centuries"....Jesus. Really?

I think I made it clear that the Church has made mistakes. If you think we're the only ones you're sadly mistaken. The question is whether or not the Chinese government, who has persecuted people in THIS CENTURY is a better deal for people than the Catholic Church.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
mrkurtzhedead
I'll be back, when it's dark!
08:13 AM on 07/25/2011
Ask the Irish. They are ready to send this decrepit and perverted institution packing. The Irish!
08:41 AM on 07/25/2011
I agree that the horrible abuse by deviants who became priests and the heirarchy that protected them in their ignorance, which still continues today, is unforgivable. And no one knows better, besides the victims, than Catholics themselves, who havr to take the humiliation every day for this.

But tell me, would you competely ignore all the priests and nuns who are, at this moment, ministering to people in need, and operating in missions all over the world at their own risk? Would you also discount the many lay persons who are out there doing good on their own time?

And, as sad as this makes me to say, if you think sexual abuse by clergy is limited to us, you're mistaken. We're definitely the focus of every paper in every corner of the globe, but we're not alone.
03:31 PM on 07/25/2011
About time considering it was that lot that sold us to the English in the first place!
10:26 PM on 07/22/2011
Missionaries in the 1800's come to China and have the saying "One more Christian, one less Chinese." It is sad that the Vatican politicizes religion and how to influence China thru religion. Of course China reject the Vatican.
09:38 PM on 07/23/2011
They are also afraid of freedom of conscience, of people making their own choices according to their conscience. Napoleon used to say my dominion ends where that of conscience begins. However, the Chinese Communists want to extend their dominion over everything and everyone, including a citizen's conscience.
photo
wcgfairfield
reaching out to genuine Christians
07:24 PM on 07/22/2011
Prophetically significant -- setup for "Kings of the East" (Revelation 16:12-13).
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cabrobst
Return the top rate to 91%.
07:54 PM on 07/24/2011
Revelation 16:12-13 more likely refers to those immediately to the East of Israel: Syria and Iran.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Roue
I have a growing lack of disgust for you.
03:03 AM on 07/22/2011
I'm not a huge fan of Catholicism, but I know exactly what the Chinese are thinking (even if I don't agree with it). They're a bit more extreme than the Singaporeans who have banned the Jehovah's Witnesses from their country, but it's the same principle. Both the Catholics and the JW's preach that subservience to a holy throne is more important to subservience to the secular one, and neither Singapore or China is even remotely ok with that notion. Well, Singapore is more open, they allow the Catholics, but it's the same principle.
07:13 AM on 07/22/2011
Ah yes, the State shall have no gods before itself.
09:59 AM on 07/22/2011
Makes sense. China's problem is how to govern a large-scale population with small-scale minds. Freedom of worship and a representative government is just not part of their plan. It's hard for the Communist government to imagine governing free people.
01:05 AM on 07/22/2011
something the dems share with china. Hatred of religion.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Roue
I have a growing lack of disgust for you.
03:15 AM on 07/22/2011
please try not to infect others with your stvpidity, it's dangerous.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cabrobst
Return the top rate to 91%.
07:56 PM on 07/24/2011
Many Democrats are Christians or other religions, and if we hate anything it is Hate itself.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Greg Sureck
12:34 AM on 07/22/2011
of course it's all about Rome. the pope wants to be in charge. The Chinese Catholic Church should begin missionary work by ordaining bishops in the Chinese communities in the US and around the world
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
tcnsrq
excuse me
09:11 PM on 07/21/2011
The Chinese understand that Catholicism is a cult.
07:15 AM on 07/22/2011
The world understands that China's authoritarian state government is a cult with access to nuclear weapons.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
tcnsrq
excuse me
08:44 AM on 07/22/2011
that would explain why Protestant (R) Anglo Saxons sold the country to them....not
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
04:47 AM on 07/23/2011
Of course....they don't want competition.