One of China’s top leaders has told Chinese Catholics that they need
to promote socialism and patriotism through religion and operate
“independently” of non-Chinese authorities.
Yu Zhengsheng’s speech came at the end of a meeting of China’s
official Catholic church that was being closely watched by the Holy See.
Yu is one of seven members of the Politburo Standing Committee, China’s
top decision-making body. His speech could be a measure of how much
Beijing is willing to yield in potential dialogue with the Holy See.
Yu called on Catholics to take decisions independently from Rome,
saying: “The Church should adhere to the principles of
self-administration, run religious affairs independently and guide
believers to adhere to the Sinicisation path of the religion.”
State media reported that Yu called on Catholic churches to adhere to
“socialism with Chinese characteristics” – a term that describes
China’s model of development, which for decades has favoured economic
liberalisation but not political reform. China’s ruling Communist Party
is officially atheistic. Yu also said Chinese Catholics should adhere
“to the correct direction of development.”
China and the Vatican have long clashed over whether the
party-controlled Chinese church could operate outside the Pope’s
authority. Beijing severed relations with the Holy See in 1951, shortly
after the Communist Party took power, and officially allows worship only
in state-sanctioned churches.
Many of China’s estimated 12 million
Catholics are thought to worship in underground congregations.
Starting under Pope Benedict XVI, the Vatican has sought to unite
Chinese Catholics under the Holy See. Pope Francis has said that both
sides had resumed meetings of working groups over the naming of bishops,
an issue central to the dispute between both sides.
But just last week, the Vatican said it was saddened that the
ordination of two new Chinese bishops was marred by the presence of a
bishop ordained without the Pope’s consent.
It said it would watch this
past week’s conference with hope for new confidence in the Vatican-China
dialogue.
Wang Zuo’an, China’s head of religious affairs, said earlier this
week he hoped the Vatican would be flexible and pragmatic, and take
concrete steps to improve relations, state media reported. No details
were given of what Beijing expects.
State media also reported that Bishop Ma Yinglin was re-elected
president of one of the groups at the conference, the Bishops Conference
of Catholic Church of China. Ma was excommunicated in 2006 by the
Vatican after being named by the Chinese church as a bishop in
southwestern Yunnan province.
The Vatican-affiliated AsiaNews service, which closely covers the
underground church in China, quoted on Thursday one priest from northern
China calling the meeting “a staged theatrical representation.”
The priest, identified only as “Fr Peter”, said: “Everything was very
well planned: the assignment of roles, their scripts, the well-chosen
audience, who raised their hands to vote and approve content, the media
coverage.”