LUOJIANG, China, January 17, 2020 (LifeSiteNews)
— A Chinese Catholic bishop is homeless and sleeping on the doorstep of
his former residence after he and the priests who work with him were
evicted by communist authorities earlier this week, Asia News reported Thursday.
Chinese authorities evicted Msgr. Vincenzo Guo Xijin, 61, and an
undisclosed number of priests from their curial house in Luojiang on the
grounds that the building violated fire regulations.
In reality, the action is a punitive measure against Guo and his
priests for refusing to join the “independent” Catholic Church and is
part of a wider crackdown in the Mindong diocese in Fujian province,
which has become a “pilot project” for implementing the Vatican’s 2018
disastrous secret accord with China, Asia News reported.
Overseen by Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Vatican-China agreement
gives President Xi Jinping’s government a say in the appointment of
bishops, among other concessions, and paves the way for unification of
the state-sanctioned Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association (CPCA),
which the communist government created in the 1950s, and the secret
underground Church, whose members remained united to the Holy See
despite the risk of being killed, imprisoned, and otherwise persecuted
for their faith.
Hong Kong cardinal Joseph Zen condemned the Vatican-China accord as
an “incredible betrayal,” and a U.S. congressional report released this
month linked the secret deal to an “intense” spike in persecution of Christians not seen in China since the Cultural Revolution.
And while President Xi has made membership in the “independent
Church” a condition for Catholics to live in China, that’s unacceptable
to underground Catholics because “the Party intends this ‘independence’
also as a detachment from the Holy See and the universal Church,” noted Asia News.
The Vatican asked underground Bishop Guo to step down in 2018 in
favor of Bishop Vincenzo Zhan Silu, one of seven formerly excommunicated
CPCA bishops whom Pope Francis readmitted to communion as part of the
agreement.
Guo was told at the time that the pope himself asked for this “sacrifice for the general situation of the Chinese Church,” Asia News reported.
But while Guo agreed to step aside, the now-auxiliary bishop never
signed on to the “independent Church,” and his eviction this week comes
after ongoing and relentless harassment by authorities for him and
fellow priests to do so.
“For months, the Fujian authorities have been exerting pressure,
blackmailing and threatening priests to push them to sign this accession
in exchange for government recognition without which their ministry is
forbidden,” Asia News reported in November.
Government-sanctioned Bishop Zhan is also pressuring the estimated 20
of 57 underground priests in his diocese who have so far refused to
join the “independent” Church, telling them that doing so is indicated
in the Holy See’s Guidelines published last June.
But the faithful priests say joining the government-run Church “is
only the beginning of greater persecution and control” that will make
them into “party officials” who “agree not to evangelize young people
under the age of 18” and subject “every initiative of evangelization to
the supremacy of the Communist Party,” Asia News reported.
Authorities have now closed down at least five Catholic parishes of
resistant priests in the Mindong diocese, citing “fire safety
standards.”
Those include a huge parish in Fuan with more than 10,000 members and one in Saiqi with about 3,000 parishioners, according to Asia News.
Authorities evicted 71-year-old Fuan pastor Fr. Liu Guangpin from his
residence, although he remains in Fuan, and exiled 50-year-old Saiqi
parish priest Fr. Huang Jintong from the city, it reported.
On January 13, authorities shut down a home for about 30 indigent
elderly near the Saiqi parish run by Little Sisters of Mercy and
Charity. While some former residents have been taken in by relatives,
others are now homeless.
The Suanfeng parish was also closed for violating fire regulations,
but after Bishop Zhan appointed a priest who is a member of the
“independent church,” it was reopened without any repairs made, Asia News reported.
Meanwhile, there is no news of underground Bishop Agostino Cui Tai
of the Xuanhua diocese in Hebei province, who was arrested in March
2019 along with his episcopal vicar, Fr. Zhang Jianlin, after a priest
alleged he was not “following Vatican instructions” to merge underground
and government-controlled parishes, Asia News reported at the time. Catholics in China have asked Christians everywhere to pray for their safety.
The U.S. Congressional-Executive Commission on China (CECC) annual report,
released January 8, noted that subsequent to the Vatican-China secret
deal in September 2018, “local Chinese authorities subjected Catholic
believers in China to increased persecution by demolishing churches,
removing crosses, and continuing to detain underground clergy.”
Moreover, the “Party-led Catholic national religious organizations
also published a plan to ‘sinicize’ Catholicism in China.” The report
also documented China’s increased persecution of other Christians and
unregistered churches.
Of the approximately 10 million Catholics in China, about 6 million are members of the state-controlled CPCA, it reported.
According to Asia News, Mindong diocese had more than 90
thousand Catholics. “Of these, at least 80 thousand belonged to the
unofficial Church, served by 57 priests, 200 nuns, 300 consecrated lay
people and hundreds of lay catechists. The priests of the official
community were 12,” it reported.
Sign the petition to support Cardinal Zen’s plea to the cardinals to “stop the murder of the Church in China” here.
https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/chinese-bishop-sleeping-on-street-after-refusing-to-join-communist-schismatic-group
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