The Vatican bears responsibility for restoring dialogue with China's
government-backed church after its criticism of leadership changes here
frayed ties, a Chinese church official said Friday.
China's
official Catholic church named new leaders at a conference not
recognized by the Vatican, which last week condemned the election as a
violation of religious freedom and human rights.
China on
Wednesday called those comments harmful to the Catholic church's
development in China.
The exchange left Vatican-China relations at their
lowest point in years.
Liu Bainian, the outgoing head of
Beijing's powerful church oversight body, said the Holy See had never
before objected to the twice-a-decade conference and its unwelcome
comments this time warranted a strong response.
"We can't just not
hold the meeting because the Vatican opposes. People wouldn't accept it
and it would be akin to turning China into a colony," Liu said at his
office on Christmas Eve.
His new role will be as honorary chairman of
the Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association that oversees the church in
China.
Repairing ties that had been gradually improving in recent years was now the responsibility of officials in Rome, he said.
"It's
not the Chinese government or the Chinese church that is affecting
China-Vatican relations," Liu said. "I urge the Vatican to be proactive
because it's they who created the problem."
China forced its Roman
Catholics to cut ties with the Vatican in 1951 shortly after the
communist seizure of power. Dialogue has been used to ease tensions, but
a main sticking point has been the Chinese church's insistence that it —
not Rome — has the right to appoint bishops.
The sides had come
to a fragile accommodation in recent years whereby Rome tacitly approved
the bishops nominated by Beijing.
That appeared to break down last
month when the Chinese church ordained a bishop who did not have the
pope's approval, a move it said it was forced to take because of a lack
of response from the Vatican.
The frictions worsened after this
month's meeting of about 300 bishops, priests and laymen in Beijing, at
which Bishop Ma Yinglin — who is not recognized by the Holy See — was
chosen as head of the Bishops' Conference of the Catholic Church of
China.
Liu said the bishop's conference is purely an administrative
organ and that no theological conflicts exist with the Holy See.
"The
bishops are all clear. On matters of faith, God gives the right to the
Pope. On matters of politics, God gives the right to each country's
government," said Liu.
Despite China's lack of diplomatic ties
with the Vatican, the Catholic church has thrived in China over recent
decades alongside Protestant sects that are also closely regulated by
the government.
Although only state-backed Catholic churches are
recognized, millions of other Chinese belong to unofficial congregations
loyal to Rome.
Officially, China has more than 6 million
Catholics, up from just over 2 million before the 1949 revolution.
About
100,000 join the church every year, Liu said, with Christmas being a
particularly productive period for attracting converts.
"In the
past, only Catholics and Protestants celebrated Christmas. Now many
university students, young people and intellectuals have become
interested and Christmas services are packed so tightly some churches
have to issue tickets to attend," Liu said.
"So for China it is the best time to spread the good news."
SIC: AP/INT'L