The Next Pope Needs a
Better China Policy
Nina
Shea May 2, 2025
Reforming
the Vatican’s policy on China should be a priority of the next papacy. The
current approach is defined by the Vatican’s controversial 2018 agreement with
China to share power with Beijing in the appointment of Catholic bishops. It
severely compromises the Catholic Church in China and erodes papal religious
and moral authority.
Vatican Secretary of State Pietro Cardinal Parolin is the
architect of the China deal and its chief enthusiast. Beijing has not-so-subtly
signaled that he is China’s top pick for the next pope. At a press conference
on April 22—one day after Pope Francis’s death—Chinese Ministry of Foreign
Affairs spokesman Guo
Jiakun dangled the prospect of “improvement of China-Vatican
relations” through “continued” partnership, and no one among the leading papal
candidates has more experience working with China than Cardinal Parolin.
The deal endangers faithful clergy in China. A stark
reminder of this reality came last month when the Chinese state security
authorities indefinitely detained Bishop Peter Shao Zhumin of the Catholic
diocese of Wenzhou without due process. This is the sixty-one-year-old
underground prelate’s eighth detention over the last seven years.
At least ten Catholic bishops in China are presently
in indefinite detention or otherwise restricted in their ministries for
opposing government control over their church. The Vatican silently accepts and
covers up this repression and, after the 2018 deal, has withdrawn its support
from the underground church.
In addition to these sidelined bishops, there are those who
died in the past seven years and left their seats vacant. The Vatican and China
have only replaced about a dozen of them, leaving approximately thirty
bishoprics empty. Nevertheless, the Vatican, like Beijing, insists that the
deal is working, and renewed it last October for another four years.
China immediately began using the agreement to pressure
bishops into joining the Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association, a group
directed by the Chinese Communist party’s United Front Work Department. Members
are required to make an anti-Catholic pledge of “independence” from the pope.
No pope has recognized the association as legitimate.
Cardinal Parolin has cooperated in pushing Catholic clergy
into the Patriotic Association. In 2019, the Vatican, under its own name and
not the pope’s, issued pastoral guidelines that established association
membership as the new normal for the Chinese clergy, while permitting
conscientious objection to it. At the same time, China took the lead in
appointing Chinese bishops.
As a result, clergy who express political loyalty to
President Xi Jinping earn favor with the Chinese government, and those who
refuse to renounce religious affiliation with the pope are suppressed. The
diocese of Shanghai is a prime example of this. Since the seventeenth century,
Shanghai has been China’s largest and most important diocese. It was the
diocese of Ignatius Cardinal Kung Pin-Mei, the world’s first Chinese Catholic
bishop, who endured thirty-three years of imprisonment for refusing to renounce
the pope. Thanks to the China deal, this venerable diocese is now in the hands
of the Patriotic Association, with papal blessing.
In the last fourteen years, two Vatican-approved bishops of
Shanghai have been persecuted. Joseph Xing Wenzhi mysteriously disappeared from
public view in 2011 after serving as auxiliary bishop for six years with
government approval. He lost party trust after proclaiming that he would
“loyally serve” the pope at his episcopal ordination and after consistently
resisting membership in the Patriotic Association. The following year, Thaddeus
Ma Daqin was appointed bishop of Shanghai with approval of both the Vatican and
Beijing. At his ordination Mass, he publicly quit the Patriotic Association,
invoking the words of St. Ignatius: “We have to choose a way that will serve
God with greater glory.” He was put under house arrest that day in a seminary
where he remains imprisoned without due process. Neither his nor Xing’s freedom
was part of the Vatican’s deal.
On April 4, 2023, the Patriotic Association’s council of
bishops unilaterally appointed Bishop Joseph Shen Bin, its own head, to lead
the diocese of Shanghai. Pope Francis was given no say in the matter, but he
nevertheless approved Shen’s installation three months after the fact. Cardinal
Parolin quickly praised Shen as an “esteemed pastor” and misleadingly stated
that papal approval was “to rectify the canonical irregularity” for the
“greater good of the diocese.” He also hoped that cooperating with China might “favor a just
and wise solution” for Bishops Xing and Ma. Those hopes were dashed when, on
April 28, Beijing bypassed them for the auxiliary bishop position in Shanghai,
brazenly using the papal interregnum to again violate the agreement and “elect”
a patriotic priest as a new bishop and unilaterally appoint him as Shen’s
auxiliary.
Bishop Shen exhibits a party fervor that, given his new
stature, promises to drastically transform the Chinese Catholic Church. In an
August 2023 diocesan interview, he was adamant that his flock reject papal
authority, insisting that they “adhere to the principle of independence and
autonomy in running the Church.” A few months earlier, Shen had summoned Hong Kong clergy to a meeting that
he opened by hailing the CCP’s recent “victoriously held” Twentieth National
Congress, and saying the “spirit” of the congress would aid the Patriotic
Association’s aim of “Sinicization” of the Church in China. He also affirmed
“Xi Jinping’s thought on socialism with Chinese characteristics for a new era,”
boding a worrying syncretism of Catholic and communist ideology as the CCP
attempts to conform religion to party doctrine. Shen shocked the Hong Kong clergy,
stating: “It is necessary to jointly promote [with the government] the
translation and interpretation of the Bible.”
Shanghai is not the exception. Since the agreement, other
episcopal posts have been filled with CCP zealots, approved by the Vatican,
while the faithful bishops are persecuted. For example, at Beijing’s insistence
in 2018, the Vatican asked Bishop Vincent Guo Xijin of Mindong to step down to
make way for an excommunicated bishop who was then rehabilitated and approved
by Pope Francis. In January, Bishop Guo was last photographed locked up in a parish church compound.
The Vatican has long applied its Ostpolitik policy of not
criticizing China. But in 2018, when the Curia began pushing the deal, it
started actively whitewashing Beijing. That year, the chancellor of the
Pontifical Academy of Sciences made headlines when he lauded the Chinese for “best realiz[ing] the social
doctrine of the Church.” Cardinal Parolin has repeatedly promoted Chinese
propaganda. At a 2020 press conference, he outright denied China’s
“persecution” of the Church, saying there were only “regulations that are imposed
and which concern all religions.”
The cardinal also falsely asserted that “Sinicization” refers “without
confusion” to “inculturation,” which is the missionary practice of adopting
local art and approved cultural practices in Christian devotion. Yet,
Sinicization under the CCP requires sermons to be centered on Xi Jinping’s
sayings and children to be “shielded” from religious exposure. As of May 1, foreigners and Chinese are not allowed to
participate together in religious activities, among other restrictions.
Joseph Cardinal Zen of Hong Kong accused Cardinal Parolin of
“manipulating” Pope Francis into approving the deal by falsely claiming that
Pope Benedict XVI had approved its draft. In an October 2020 blog post, the
Hong Kong cardinal didn’t mince words: “Parolin knows he is lying, he knows
that I know he is a liar, he knows that I will tell everyone that he is a
liar.”
Beijing has taken advantage of the agreement, and the
Catholic Church is suffering for it. A better policy—one that does not share
the pope’s important power of appointing Catholic Church leadership with an
atheistic government and that supports the perpetuation of the Church through a
faithful underground—is long overdue.
https://firstthings.com/the-next-pope-needs-a-better-china-policy/
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét