Catholic ordination in China is to come under the authority of the
government, after two state-controlled Catholic organisations endorsed
new plans.
The Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association and the bishop's
conference said, after meeting on February 25, that they will only
ordain bishops "under the leadership of the government" and convert
unregistered clergy to the Open Church, according to UCA news.
The Open Church requires members to join the Patriotic Association,
which is a lay government-controlled organisation that oversees the
state-church. This has led many underground church leaders to refuse to
join for fear of government interference.
The meeting, held in Beijing, was convened by Bishop Joseph Ma
Yinglin, a bishop ordained by the Chinese government. It hosted
officials from the State Administration for Religious Affairs (SARA) and
the Communist Party's United Front Work Department, which controls all
official religious activity in China.
These two bodies are also preparing for an upcoming national Catholic congress expected sometime this year, run by SARA.
The most recent national congress was held in 2010. It led to an
illicit bishop (ordained by the Chinese authorities rather than the
Vatican) being elected chairman of the bishops' conference and a
freezing of China-Vatican relations, as the government forced bishops to
partake in eucharist with illicit bishops.
Commenting on the situation at the time, the Vatican said these
actions "manifest a repressive attitude with regard to the exercise of
religious liberty, which it was hoped had been consigned to the past in
present-day China."
Condemning the power of ordination coming under the authority of the
Chinese government, Christian persecution organisation International
Christian Concern said: "China is attempting to control Christianity in
two ways; demolishing the Christian image and arresting leaders and
manipulating them through a government run church."
In the last two years, officials in Zhejiang province on China's east
coast have removed more than 1,200 crosses from churches and many
church buildings have been destroyed. A number of pastors and human
rights lawyers have also been imprisoned. Pastor Bao Guohua and his wife
Xing Wenxiang, who resisted cross removals, were sentenced to 14 years
in jail and his wife to 12 years last week.
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