China and the bishops: Why is
this issue so important?
Pope Francis and bishops gathered in the Synod Hall. |
To continue along the path toward full communion and to give
credibility to the life of the Chinese faithful, one needs to consider what
unifies, and from there find the strength to overcome what divides, inviting
all parties to collaborate in order to strengthen what is still weak in some.
By Sergio Centofanti and Fr Bernd Hagenkord, SJ
There are many problems that arise regarding the life of the
Church in China; but in the negotiations between the Holy See and the Chinese
Authorities, one in particular stands out: namely, the nomination of Bishops,
and specifically the procedure for selecting candidates to the Episcopate, and
the manner of nominating them on the part of the Supreme Pontiff.
It is obvious that many other questions are related to this
topic. Among others: the civil recognition of the so-called “clandestine”
Bishops; the canonical legitimization of Bishops consecrated without papal
mandate; the constitution of the Chinese Episcopal Conference; the revision of
the borders of ecclesiastical circumscriptions; etc. These questions ought to
be the subject of further study and dialogue.
Pope Benedict XVI, in his Letter to the Church of China in
2007, explained why the theme of the Episcopate is so important:
As you know, the profound unity which binds together the
particular Churches found in China, and which likewise places them in intimate
communion with all the other particular Churches throughout the world, has its
roots not only in the same faith and in a common Baptism, but above all in the
Eucharist and in the episcopate. Likewise, the unity of the episcopate, of
which “the Roman Pontiff, as the Successor of Peter, is the perpetual and
visible source and foundation,” continues down the centuries through the
apostolic succession and is the foundation of the identity of the Church in
every age with the Church built by Christ on Peter and on the other Apostles.
Today, no one doubts that Catholics in China have the same
Faith, the same Baptism, a valid Eucharist, and an Episcopate that maintains
the apostolic succession. Nonetheless, the Catholic Church in China has gone
through difficulties, trials, and worries; she has undergone fractures, and
suffered wounds and divisions. But this has not occurred on the level of the
Sacraments, which have always been valid in their roots; but rather on the
existential level, and on the level of fraternal relations and of communal
pathways. These levels, though, are tremendously important for the lived
experience of the faith and of charity, as well as the effectiveness of the
common mission and her witness in the world.
Everyone is aware that, at a certain point, in China, in the
heart of the one Catholic Church this has triggered a crisis which has led to
the establishment of two communities in a large number of Dioceses: the
so-called “clandestine” or “underground” community, on the one hand; and on the
other, the so-called “official” or “patriotic” community – each with its own
Pastors (Bishops and priests). This crisis did not originate in choices
internal to the Church but was conditioned by circumstances of a structurally
political nature.
In the course of its bimillennial history, the Catholic
Church has often given in to the temptation of dividing itself; and the reasons
for the divisions have been diverse. The distinguishing circumstance that has
led to the formation of two communities in China was not of a strictly dogmatic
and moral character, as was the case in the first ages of the Church, and later
especially in Christian Europe in the 16th century. Nor was it
even of a liturgical and juridical character, as occurred between the first and
the second millennium.
The distinguishing circumstance in China was of a political
stripe, and so external. Without falling into an easy revisionism with regard
to past responsibility, one might ask if the Church in China is called today to
consider its particular presence and mission in the world in a new way. This
will also happen by integrating different sensibilities which are present in
the Church of every time and place: the more “incarnationalist” tendencies
which, if isolated, tend toward worldliness; and a more spiritualist tendency
which, taken by itself, tends toward abstraction. These two tendencies must
remain in contact with one another, conversing, understanding, walking together
for the good of the Church and of evangelization.
Beyond differing spiritual sensibilities, however, there are
certainly also concrete choices, which are made on the basis of a different
practical means of living out important values, such as fidelity to the Pope,
evangelical witness, and a disinterested pursuit of the good of the Church and
of souls. And so, it is probably on these multiple planes that appropriate
means must be sought to overcome differing positions and come to an experience
of greater ecclesial normality.
What is certain is that, in the face of the situation of
disunity in which the Church in China finds itself, everyone suffers, or at
least finds themselves uncomfortable: the ecclesiastical authorities, the
communities of the faithful, perhaps even the Government itself. Ongoing
incomprehension and misunderstanding do no one any good. Going forward, as
Catholics, with the anomaly of being not only few, but also divided into two
communities that do not value, and perhaps do not love enough, the pursuit of
reconciliation, simply adds to the suffering. It is from the love within the
community that others understand that the Lord is present in the midst of them.
In this context, it is understood that the nomination of
Bishops, and especially their affective and effective unity, are crucial
questions, precisely because they are at the heart of the Church’s life in
China. In order to arrive at this unity a series of obstacles must be overcome;
the first of which is the “peculiarly Chinese situation” that has seen the
political Authorities restricting in many ways the life and pastoral mission of
the Bishops.
This has led, on the one hand, to Bishops supported by the
Government but consecrated without pontifical mandate (that is, without the
approval of the Pope); and on the other, to Bishops nominated by the Holy See
but which the State does not recognize as such. This difficult situation cannot
be remedied except by initiating two formally distinct paths, which would lead,
respectively, to ecclesial legitimization and civil recognition.
Therefore, the search for an agreement between the ecclesial
and political Authorities on these points, even if imperfect, is extremely
necessary and urgent in order to avoid the harm of further opposition. For this
reason, the actions of the last three Popes has moved along the same lines:
fostering the unity of the whole Catholic community; helping “illegitimate”
Bishops return to full communion; and, at the same time, supporting the
fidelity of those Bishops, whether “official” or “clandestine,” who are already
in communion. Ultimately, they have sought to journey towards a reality of
Church that lives communion in its fullness.
In response to a question on the situation of the Church in
China, Pope Benedict XVI answered:
A variety of factors have favoured the positive
development of the Catholic Church in China… On the one hand, a fervent desire
to be in union with the Pope has never been absent among the illegitimately
consecrated bishops. This made it possible for practically all of them to
embark on the path to communion, a process during which we patiently
accompanied them and worked with them one-on-one. There was a basic Catholic
sense among them that said one is only really a bishop precisely in this
communion. On the other hand, the secretly consecrated bishops, who were not
approved by the State, can now profit from the fact that, even for purely
political reasons, it is no longer advantageous for the government to imprison
Catholic bishops and deprive them of their freedom on account of their
allegiance to Rome. This is a non-negotiable precondition of, and at the same
time a decisive help to, the reestablishment of full union between the two
Catholic communities (“Light of the World: The Pope, the Church, and
the Signs of the Times,” 2010, p.42).
*****
This is the sixth in a series of in-depth articles on the
dialogue between the Holy See and China.
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