Tuesday, February 3, 2015

China Launches New Crackdown on Underground-Church Movement

China Launches New Crackdown on Underground-Church Movement
Several prominent house-church leaders have been arrested since January in an intensified wave of religious persecution

 Christians in China are expecting a spiritual revival to follow a new wave of persecution on the unregistered churches in the communist nation, says the head of a Pennsylvania-based organization dedicated to raising awareness about religious liberty abuses in China.

Bob Fu, head of China Aid Association based in Glenside, Pa., says believers in China are expecting a recent crackdown on the underground church to result in hundreds coming to Christ. "They feel another round of revival is coming," Fu told Charisma. "Whenever there is a major wave of persecution ... there is a major spiritual revival."  Since January several prominent house-church leaders have been arrested, including Deborah Xu Yongling, 58, the sister of Peter Xu Yongze, founder of the Born Again church movement, which has millions of followers. Police reportedly arrested her Jan. 24 in Henan province while she was sleeping at her niece's house, Asia Harvest reported. After significant international pressure, she was released on bail March 15, China Aid said.  Voice of the Martyrs (VOM) reported that also on Jan. 24, police arrested Qiao Chunling, 41, who is closely associated with Li Tian'en, one of China's most prominent house-church leaders. The following day Zeng Guangbo, 35, was arrested at a house church in Zengzhuang village, located in Henan province, China Aid Association said. A former military policeman who was fired in 1988 because of his work with the underground church, Zeng escaped two days later, but police rearrested him March 1 when he tried to pass through the Inner-Mongolia border into Russia.  The arrests came after top leaders from the Religious Affairs Bureau and the United Front Work Department, which oversee religion in China, viewed a four-hour documentary titled The Cross: Jesus in China by California-based China Soul for Christ, and were briefed on a recent book, Jesus in Beijing, by journalist David Aikman. Both works document the unprecedented growth of the underground church in China.  Aikman, a former China correspondent for Time magazine, said none of the leaders arrested recently were named in his book. He said he carefully masked the identities of others. "I don't, frankly, think any of the older [house-church leaders] were picked up as a result of my book," Aikman told Charisma. "They are hardly news to the authorities.  "This is just one of a series of crackdowns. I hope it is short-lived. ... But if you pretend nothing is going on, you do tremendous disservice to the Chinese Christians, who have been [facing persecution] for years." The video, written and directed by Christian pro-democracy leader Yuan Zhiming, clearly shows the faces of several house-church leaders who agreed to be interviewed before the camera. But China Soul for Christ President Wenji Xie said the documentary had nothing to do with the recent arrests.
"The situation [in China] is the same," he told Charisma, adding that there may have been an increase in arrests in certain areas. "This is part of their annual crackdown. They always do this right after the Chinese New Year."  Fu said a heightened repression of the house-church movement had been in motion for more than a year. But he believes it may have intensified after participants in the National Religious Working Conference saw the video and were briefed on the book.  "Maybe they used this as a pretext, an excuse, to do more," Fu said. "From the beginning of 2003 until now, almost every province has been affected by the campaign to stop the growth of the house-church movement."  Fu said the government may treat incarcerated Christians in much the same way they treated members of the Falun Gong cult, subjecting them to brainwashing, torture and political study camps, or forcing them to sign a paper renouncing their faith or join a state-sanctioned church. Christian advocacy groups encourage believers in the West to write letters to the Chinese Embassy, the U.S. ambassador to China and congressional leaders. To that end, VOM recently launched a Web site, www.PrisonerAlert.com, dedicated to mobilizing Christians to write letters of encouragement to Christians imprisoned for their faith and to relevant officials.  At press time, journalist Li Ying was pictured on the site. She is currently serving a 15-year sentence for producing an underground-church magazine. By mid-March, VOM spokesman Todd Nettleton said more than 1,400 people had written her letters, which were translated into Chinese at the site.
Adrienne S. Gaines

Christian Persecution in the China house church

 
Christian Persecution in the China house church
 

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Christian Persecution in China
Information gathered by the American Policy Roundtable Christians in China Statistics (Estimates)
Totals for the number of Christians in China leaked from two Chinese government bodies reveal far larger estimates of the number of Protestants than official church leaders have previously admitted.
At a January Religious Affairs Bureau (RAB, the government body responsible for oversight of religions) conference, delegates were told the number of Protestants in China was 25 million. A leaked report from China's security organization -- the Public Security Bureau (PSB) -- put the total at 35 million.
Official spokesmen, such as China Christian Council Chairman Dr. Han Wenzao, have long denied the possibility that there are more than 15 million Christians in China. Three Self Patriotic Movement (TSPM) statistics claim there are only 13.3 million Protestants. The TSPM is the official Protestant church organization in China.
"These leaks clearly show the Three Self leaders have been deliberately deceiving their Western audiences by pretending the total of Christians is far lower than their own government supervisory estimates, which they must have had access to," said a Hong Kong-based China watcher.
Many Western missions maintain the true number of Christians in China is likely to be 60 million and up. (More, from Worthy News)
World Serve
Source: Worldserve.org
WorldServe Ministries is a 30-year-old international ministry focused on church planting in areas that are either closed or have restricted-access to the Gospel of Jesus Christ. We are uniquely positioned on the vanguard of the greatest turning to God in the history of the church.
Our core philosophy is to come alongside the chosen servants of God in these difficult countries and lose our identity as we "serve" them and provide resources they desperately need - or as we like to call it, Following God and Fueling the Fires.
As we have continually sought God's direction, He has focused WorldServe's heart on one particular aspect of our work - indigenous church planting movements. God's chosen vehicle is the local church. When it is strong, maturing, and mobilizing its members, the foundation is laid for dynamic growth.
The fruit of those efforts is supernatural - Tens of thousands of new churches are being planted and millions of new believers choosing to follow Christ and mature with a local body of believers.
In 2005 alone, WorldServe Ministries documented the incredible work of His Spirit, His people, and the resources entrusted to us.
• 13,684 new churches planted
• 1,072,567 individual decisions for Christ
• 13,388 pastors and workers trained
• 2,944 Church planters and workers trained
• 365,000 Bibles and Bible Scripture portions provided
• 5,703,000 Evangelistic booklets distributed
• 2,050,000 tracts distributed

Read more about World Serve. 
 
 
Resources
 
Listen Now Listen to: Wayne's Trip To China
Listen to: Direct Report on the Church in China
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Related Books
Wise as Serpents, Harmless as Doves, by Jonathan Chao
China's Christian Millions, Tony Lambert
Related Articles
Underground Churches in China Find Faith, CBS News
Up From the Underground, Washington Post
Christian Home Churches Gaining in China, News America Media
China arrests followers of banned church, BBC News
China Defies Vatican Over Bishop, BBC News
China Detains Americans and House Church Leaders After Worship Service, BosNewsLife
A New Religion, CBS News
Quotes
All these people died still believing what God had promised them. They did not receive what was promised, but they saw it all from a distance and welcomed it. They agreed that they were foreigners and nomads here on earth. – Hebrews 11:13, New Living Translation The communist party here does not want to see anybody more organized then they are. -Wayne Shepard in China

I asked, in the particular area of China,…how many Christians are there. We get many various reports in the states. They said that in that province, of about 9 million, about 5 million were members of the underground church. - Wayne Shepard in China

[These people are] putting there personal freedom, if you will, on the line, just coming to worship the Savior that we have the ability to go worship everyday – freely. – Rob Walgate, Vice President, American Policy Roundtable

The burden is for urban church planting….The number one need that has come up…is that we need to equip these urban churches planters, we need to get them educated, get them trained, get them placed in the city. - Wayne Shepard in China

Bibles [in China] are so necessary right now. - Wayne Shepard in China

Prayers are important, promise have to be kept. – David Zanotti, President, American Policy Roundtable

The answer is not to collect Bibles and ship the over here, of course. The answer is to give them the resources to print them here. There are, both in Vietnam and in China, there are ways to get the Bibles printed legally. - Wayne Shepard in China

Public pressure, here, means a lot. - Wayne Shepard in China
 
 

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Welcome to the Believers Underground Network


Welcome to the Believers Underground Network


On this site you will find useful and informative information about the biblical concept of the church. Surprisingly, it is far from what most christians have experienced the church to be.
We have organised the materials here into two main categories. Information about the house church concept itself and how it compares to the institutional church; and a collection of edifying (and currently unsorted!) articles that would benefit house church groups and individuals alike.
The goal of the Believers Underground Network is to locate and bring together the members of the Body of Christ and to help provide the tools and encouragement toward bearing much fruit.
If you believe the Lord has put it on your heart to support this ministry, we would be very grateful for your assistance. Please send any donations to The Believers Underground Network, P.O. Box 8972, Riccarton, Christchurch, New Zealand.
If you have any article submissions, comments or questions please write to the above address or email bun@orcon.net.nz
We are gathering a database of people who are interested in house church. If you would like to be a part of a house church, please register your interest to bun@orcon.net.nz and we will put you in contact with others in your area who are like minded.


Information about the house church concept

Eric Svendsen

Why Meet in Homes?An article which guides you through the new testament highlighting the church in the home.

Wolfgang Simson

Houses That Change The World (PDF, 730KB)Chapter summary:
• A vision too good to be true?
• Fifteen Theses towards a Re-Incarnation of Church
• Bridging the church gap
• Housechurches in History Rediscovery
• The nature of housechurches What they are, what they do, and how they function
• The Five-Fold Ministry God’s resources and structure for multiplying housechurches
• Housechurch or cellchurch?
• Thirteen reasons why housechurches are the natural solution
• Developing a persecution-proof structure
• How to develop a persecution proof spirit
• Fathering the next Generation Who will do all the work?
• Models of Church Multiplication How to plant churches

Robert Fitts

The Church in the House: A Return to Simplicity (PDF, 181KB)Covers the following topics:
• The Case for House Churches
• Mission Statement
• The House Church in the New Testament
• What is a Church?
• What is House Church?
• Church membership
• Saturation church planting
• The wheel & the vine
• Unity
• What do you do in a house church
• How to start a house church

Neal Griffin

Churchanity - More on ChurchanityHow the church of today is NOT what God intended.

How to Start a House Church

Part 1 - Part 2 - Part 3If God is calling you into a house church, or to start a house church, this book is for you. May you be clearly led by the Lord and used mightily for His purposes in this day.


Articles

Bernard of Clairvaux

On Loving God
Why we should love God and the measure of that love.

David Brainerd

Journal Part 1 (131KB) - Part 2 (135KB)
David Brainerd. 1718 -1747. Protestant missionary, born in Haddam, Connecticut, USA. An emotional, sickly child, he achieved a religious conversion after much anguish in 1739. He was expelled from Yale in 1742 for making derogatory remarks about a tutor, but he obtained a license to preach and ministered to Indian tribes in Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey. Poor health forced him from the field in early 1747, and he died shortly thereafter. Jonathan Edwards published an account of Brainerd's life in 1749.

Thomas Brooks

Love the Lord Jesus Christ!
An analysis of what it means to love the Lord your God.

Brother Lawrence

Practicing the Presence of God
Good when He gives, supremely good; Nor less when He denies: Afflictions, from His sovereign hand, Are blessings in disguise.

Jeremiah Burroughs

The Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment (490KB)
This article describes Christian contentment, the mystery of contentment, how Christ teaches contentment, the excellence of contentment, the murmuring spirit, aggravations of a murmuring spirit, the excuses of discontentment, and how to attain contentment.

John Flavel

Christ Altogether Lovely
Jesus Christ - Who he is. - What he is. - What he is like.

Christ the Desire of All Nations
That the desires of God's elect in all kingdoms, and among all people of the earth, are, and shall be drawn out after and fixed upon, the Lord Jesus Christ.

On Keeping the Heart (201KB)
The heart of man is his worst part before it is regenerated, and the best afterward; it is the seat of principles, and the fountain of actions. The eye of God is, and the eye of the Christian ought to be principally fixed upon it.

Madame Guyon

The Way of God & Of the State of Union
The different transitions in relationship with God (conversion, will, passivity and sacrifice, faith, death, resurrection, life with God, and transformation).

The Method of Prayer (127KB)
This little treatise, conceived in great simplicity, was not originally intended for publication. It was written for a few individuals, who were desirous of loving God with all their heart. Many, however, because of the profit they received in reading the manuscript, wished to obtain copies, and, on this account alone, it was committed to the press.

Pere La Combe

Spiritual Maxims from a friend of Madame Jeanne Guyon

D.L. Moody

Christ All In All
Read Colossians 3:11. CHRIST is all in all to every one who has truly found Him.

The Secret Power (171KB)
One man may have "zeal without knowledge," while another may have knowledge without zeal. If I could have only the one, I believe I should choose the first; but, with an open Bible, no one need be without knowledge of God's will and purpose; and the object of this book is to help others to know the source of true power, that both their zeal and their knowledge may be of increased service in the Master's work.

Prevailing Prayer: What Hinders It? (192KB)
A look at the ten contributing factors to prayer (prayers of the bible, adoration, confession, restitution, thanksgiving, forgiveness, unity, faith, petition, submission, and answered prayers).

Andrew Murray

The Deeper Christian Life (141KB)
The first and chief need of our Christian life is, fellowship with God.

Samuel Rutherford

A Collection of his Letters (264KB)

Charles Spurgeon

The Letters of Charles Spurgeon (375KB)
Letters by Charles Spurgeon collected by his son

Encounters with Jesus Christ (213KB)
"For me to live is Christ." Philippians 1:21

Fragrant Spices from the Mountains of Myrrh
Christ has a high esteem for his Church. He does not blindly admire her faults, or even conceal them from himself. He is acquainted with her sin, in all its heinousness of guilt, and desert of punishment. That sin he does not shun to reprove. His own words are, "As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten." (Revelation 3:19.)

J.O. Sanders

The Divine Art of Soul Winning (PDF, 208KB)
This book covers:
• A Concern for Souls
• The Fitness of the Worker
• The Place of Prayer in Soul-Winning
• Do's and Don'ts for the Soul-Winner
• An Old Testament Illustration and a New Testament Example
• Opportunity, Approach, and Diagnosis
• How to Deal with Various Classes
• How to Deal with Various Classes (continued)
• Working Among False Cults
• Miscellaneous Suggestions

T. Austin Sparks

Faith's Persistency
Two of the major elements in the spiritual life and experience of God's people are the seemingly slow and hidden ways of God and the demand for persistent faith in His servants.

Faith Unto Enlargement through Adversity (PDF, 256KB)
A short book by Austin Sparks on faith.
• Faith Unto Enlargement Through Adversity
• The Key Of Faith
• The Key Of Faith (Concluded)
• Faith In Relation To Life
• In Relation To God's Principle
• Light Through Death And Resurrection
• The Shining Of The Light

The Lord's Attitude To His Children in AdversityAdversity amongst the people of God is recognised and accepted-that is, it is taken for granted. It is unnecessary to say that, amongst the people of God, adversity is a fact.

Thomas Watson

The Art of Divine Contentment (241KB)
An Exposition of Philippians 4. 11: "I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content."

Mystic Union between Christ and the Saints
In this Song of Songs we see the love of Christ and his church running towards each other in a full torrent. The text contains three general parts: 1. A symbol of affection: "My beloved." 2. A term of appropriation: "is mine." 3. A holy resignation: "I am his."

George Whitefield

The Knowledge of Jesus Christ - The Best Knowledge
In the following discourse, I shall, FIRST, Explain what is meant by "not knowing any thing, save Jesus Christ, and him crucified." SECONDLY, Give some reasons why every Christian should determine not to know any thing else. And THIRDLY, Conclude with a general exhortation to put this determination into practice.


Will True Christian Churches Be Forced Underground in America?

Will True Christian Churches Be Forced Underground in America?
underground church
Preacher draws lunchtime crowd in New York City's Battery Park. But could the American church soon be forced underground? (U.S. National Archives and Records Administration)
Will the real Christian churches please stand up? Or, er, should they rather go underground?
In order to stay true to their belief and to God, one conservative Christian commentator is convinced that the “real” Christian church in America is going to be forced to do as the early Christians did—go underground.
J.D. Longstreet is making a lot of noise with a commentary that argues many of the mainline Christian churches have slipped away from the foundation of Scripture to adopt secular tenants and leftist, politically correct philosophies until they have become only a shadow of the true followers of Christ.
Strong words, but words that Longstreet—who left his own denomination a few years ago because he said it was forsaking the tenants of the Bible and the gospel—is standing on.
“Unfortunately, many of our mainline denominations have become nothing more than social clubs with many franchises nationwide,” Longstreet writes. “Their pastors ‘preach’ feel good ‘sermonettes’ about the environment, and things like ‘social justice.’ In my opinion, that is not the mission of a church that purports to follow Christ. In fact, Christ Himself, spelled out the mission of the church in what we refer to as the Great Commission.”
As Longstreet sees it, pastors in America are fearful of preaching scriptures and of pointing out main’s failings. They are concerned that they will be accused of slander or sued for libel. Longstreet admits that’s a real threat in America—and that’s why he is suggesting churches that hold true to the gospel will be forced underground.
“And very soon now, I believe, the Supreme Court of the land will be in the hands of socialists, as well, and that will be the end of the experiment called ‘America’—a nation which was to have been governed only by the voice of it’s people and their God,” he writes. “The wickedness of Sodom and Gomorrah could not hold a candle to the wickedness in America today. If the true Christian church is to survive in America, it must go underground.”
Do you agree with Longstreet?

Ethiopia: Lalibela's underground churches

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  • Ethiopia: Lalibela's underground churches

    By Chris Pritchard
    Awe-struck visitors often call Lalibela's underground churches the most impressive sight in all of Africa. They're also arguably Africa's most mysterious attraction.
    Photo / Thinkstock
    Photo / Thinkstock
    Ruins such as Cambodia's Angkor Wat and Peru's Machu Picchu spark intense speculation about how they came to be built - along with unabashed amazement at the ancients' architectural abilities.
    Such destinations are firmly on tourist trails, with multitudinous hotels and diverse attractions to complement exploration of the ruins themselves.
    But Lalibela is far less widely known.
    Tourists occasionally boast of encountering no other visitors.
    Egypt's pyramids are commonly considered Africa's top constructed attraction. However, some who've eyeballed Lalibela maintain it's even more memorable than the pyramids of Giza.
    My low-level flight from Addis Ababa to Lalibela crosses semi-arid countryside more reminiscent of Australia's outback than the lush jungles of equatorial Africa. Long ridges extend like giant's fingers over a harsh landscape. Some farming families' homes perch precariously at cliff edges.
    Lalibela lures foreigners to Ethiopia, a regionally important Horn of Africa nation. It's still visited mostly by intrepid backpackers and upmarket tourists (some on escorted packages). Mid-market tourism is in its infancy.
    The town is named after King Lalibela, a revered 12th-century monarch. Why were the underground churches built? The answer is a mix of oral history and local legend.
    The story goes like this. A prince was miraculously unhurt after being covered as a baby by a swarm of angry bees. It was an omen that he'd one day rule a vast swathe of what is present-day Ethiopia.
    However, his brother, the king, was jealous of Lalibela's popularity and tried poisoning his younger sibling with a herbal potion. Against all odds, the prince survived. But, while drugged by the poison, he was taken to heaven to see a complex of churches. Angels instructed him to build similar structures on earth.
    So, when Lalibela became king he assembled a vast army of workers who built 11 churches in three clusters on a patch of land, roughly one square kilometre in size, alongside the town.
    The still-used complex remains sacred to just over half of Ethiopia's 90 million people - followers of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, one of the world's oldest Christian denominations which traces its history to the fourth century.
    The churches occupy pits, roughly the size of squash courts, scooped from surrounding red earth to expose giant rocks.
    Each large church - a few of which are linked by tunnels - is, in fact, a big rock.
    Expert carvers painstakingly hollowed the rock to create big chambers complete with ornate religious sculptures.
    The end-result looks as if the churches were dropped into the pits that contain them. Though called "underground churches'' the sky is visible above.
    Priests in ornate robes sit reading Bibles or praying quietly inside churches largely devoid of pews. Instead, the faithful stand - usually leaning against T-shaped sticks.
    Some churches are filled with religious art - including gory portrayals of the spearing or impaling of non-believers - as well as elaborately carved relics of gold, brass and wood.
    Priests show visitors goatskin bibles, with monks' handwritten text in distinctive Amharic script interspersed with colourful religious art.
    Outside the churches, monks live in caves in the pit walls, relying for survival on donations from local residents and visitors, and spending their waking hours praying or reading religious texts.
    A monk invites me to inspect his small cave, signalling me to stand on a wooden box to peer into the dim interior.
    It is empty except for a little crate containing all his worldly possessions - and a skeleton in a corner.
    An English-speaking guide tells me later that the bones are those of another monk who died many years earlier. These bones, believed holy, were exhumed - and the monk keeps them next to him.
    On a mule's back I make a seven kilometre journey to a small church and monastery called Na'akuto La'ab. It is one of several in the area - natural caves that, over the centuries, have had their mouths covered with stone and doorways constructed.
    Water drips from the cave's roof into a jug. A priest tells me it's holy water, capable of curing most ills.
    To reach the cave we cross farmland, following narrow paths between fields planted with teff (a staple grain common in Ethiopia).
    We stop to chat to friendly farmers who are keen to show off their few English phrases.
    The locals' huts resemble those in much of Africa - except that they're double-storeyed. It's peculiar to parts of Ethiopia, with a different family occupying each level.
    My recalcitrant mule transports me back to Lalibela for repeat visits to several churches. Bete Medhane Alem is the world's biggest monolithic church; Bete Maryam, according to archaeologists, is the oldest of Lalibela's holy places; Bete Giyorgis is most visited and in best condition; Bete Golgotha is most sacred, containing a tomb believed to hold King Lalibela's remains.
    But there's something missing. There's no-one trying to sell me postcards and guidebooks. Not yet.
    - AAP

    Benedict Delivers Chinese Catholics to Communism




    A Column of Catholic Orientation

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    Benedict Delivers Chinese Catholics to Communism
    Marian T. Horvat, Ph.D.

    Many people are commenting on the Motu Proprio released July 7. Hardly anyone seems to have noticed its ugly sister, a much longer document – 18 pages in its English version – discreetly released by the Vatican at noon June 30. I am referring to the Letter of Benedict XVI to the Catholic Church in the People’s Republic of China. It is an extraordinary open letter that signifies a delivering of the underground Chinese Catholic Church to Communism.

    Religious perspective

    On the religious level, Benedict quite calmly and eloquently tells the heroic Chinese Catholic resistance against Communism that the way of the future is to unite with the government-sponsored Patriotic Church.

    M014_Ratz02.jpg - 113110 Bytes

    Benedict urges the underground Catholics
    to accept the Patriotic Church
    As most readers are surely aware, there are two religious realities in China, the faithful underground Roman Catholic Church that has been fiercely persecuted by the Communist government for more than a half-century, and the Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association (CCPA), established in 1957 and directed by the Communist government. It appoints its own bishops and priest, and officially declares its autonomy from the Pope.

    To be faithful to her mission, the Church has always maintained the impossibility of reconciling with Communism. How could it be otherwise? The Communist doctrine clashes head on with Catholic doctrine in many dogmatic and moral points. It also denies basic tenets the Church holds on private property and family, contradicting several Commandments. Therefore, since the 1950s, the Vatican always supported those underground Catholics who opposed Communism and were faithful to Rome, granting them special concessions to ordain their Bishops and priests. Simultaneously, to stress its support for the underground Catholics, Rome denied the CCPA’s authority to ordain bishops and priests, did not recognize any of them, and excommunicated them. That is, the CCPA and its members were condemned for its bad doctrine and incurred schism.

    It is necessary to say that to this date neither the CCPA nor its boss, the Communist regime, have made any change in its policy toward the Catholic religion.

    Notwithstanding, the recent letter of Benedict XVI turned the thus-far coherent position of the Holy See in China upside-down. Yes, he acknowledges those Catholics who have suffered for fidelity and loyalty to the Pope. But he also recommends that they submit to the Communist-oriented CCPA, saying that “authentic communion” demands “arduous efforts of reconciliation.” Indeed, forgetting that he was dealing with a Communist association, he states:
    “The purification of memory, the pardoning of wrong-doers, the forgetting of injustices suffered and the loving restoration to serenity of troubled hearts … can require moving beyond personal positions or viewpoints, born of painful or difficult experiences. These are urgent steps that must be taken if the bonds of communion between the faithful and the Pastors of the Church in China are to grow and be made visible.”
    M014_ChinesePatrioticChurch.jpg - 53794 Bytes

    Religious ceremony in the Patriotic Church
    under Communist supervision
    Thus his letter to China goes on saying that it is time for the underground Church to forgive all past “wrongdoings,” and for the two sides to dissolve “tensions, divisions and recriminations” to reconcile in “authentic communion.”

    Finally, Benedict revokes “all previously granted faculties and directives designed to address particular necessities in truly difficult times.”

    What does this mean? Nothing less that wiping away those directives by his predecessors granting special privileges to the underground Church, e.g.:
    • The faculties that allowed underground Catholic Bishops to ordain other Bishops and priests;
    • Directives advising the underground Catholics to avoid receiving sacraments from bishops or priests who belonged to the CCPA;
    • The 1988 guideline that said any bishop ordained by CCPA would incur an automatic excommunication.
    All this was wiped out, in the name of unity and communion, and to facilitate the establishment of Vatican relations with red Beijing.

    It is a scandal, a betrayal of those Catholics who, shedding their blood, have maintained their fidelity to the See of Peter without compromises.

    Coexistence of persecutors and victims

    In his letter, Benedict lays out the three groups of bishops in Communist China, and offers solutions for all - since they are all “sons of the Chinese people” so that a “respectful and constructive dialogue” might begin.

    M014_BishopChang.jpg - 26990 Bytes

    Above, underground Bishop Chang, 24 years in prison for his allegiance to the Pope. Below, CCPA bishops enjoy freedom, promoting abortion and one-child per family law

    M014_cpabishops.jpg - 31575 Bytes
    First, there are the “clandestine Bishops” faithful to Catholic tradition and in communion with the Successor of Peter. He encourages them, insomuch as it is possible, to apply for recognition by the civil authorities. In return he asks that the Communist government also recognize “these legitimate Pastors.”

    Overlooking that the Primitive Church lived in the Catacombs for more than 200 years, he points out that an underground Church “is not a normal and lasting situation” for the Catholic Church. Implying that the immutable doctrine of the Church has now changed, he asks the underground Catholic Church to surface and swim in the tide of Communism.

    Second, Benedict observes that we have those “other pastors” who were made bishops by the Communist government and subsequently asked to be recognized by the Pope. He wants to assure all the Chinese people that “the Pope has granted them the full and legitimate exercise of episcopal jurisdiction” because of his “profound pastoral concern to favor the establishment of full communion.”

    Most of the true Catholic faithful, however, have refused to recognize those bishops who were created by and follow the orientation of the Communist government. Now, Benedict tells the underground Catholics that they should publicly recognize those CCPA bishops. They must accept and grant them the same respect they have for the Bishops of the underground Church. That is, the Pope accepts the state-appointed Bishops who have cooperated with the Communist regime and obliges their opponents to submit to them.

    Third, Benedict encourages those state-appointed bishops who have been ordained without the Pontifical mandate and who have not asked for it to seek the necessary legitimization. In the meantime, the faithful can consider the sacraments received by them as “illegitimate, but valid.” The consequence:
    “Therefore the faithful, taking this into account, where the eucharistic celebration and the other sacraments are concerned, must, within the limits of the possible, seek Bishops and priests who are in communion with the Pope: nevertheless, where this cannot be achieved without grave inconvenience, they may, for the sake of their spiritual good, turn also to those who are not in communion with the Pope.”
    As far as I can see this is a call for the faithful to go to the Patriotic Church.

    Then he invites the three groups to join together to form a single Episcopal Conference, to achieve the aim of governing together in communion. Persecutors and victims living together...

    Let it be duly noted that the letter includes a reaffirmation of the Vatican’s right to appoint Bishops, calls on China’s Communist rulers to respect “authentic religious freedom,” and notes that the Chinese Patriotic Association is “incompatible with Catholic doctrine.”

    All rhetoric and speechifying aside, what is being conceded is simple enough: “Well, we will not admit that you can name bishops, but we will accept the bishops you name …”

    Political perspective: Communism is no longer a problem

    M014_Pope_Zen.jpg - 26822 Bytes

    Card. Zen of Hong Hong praises Benedict's letter as
    "a common starting point for dialogue" ...
    In his letter addressed to an estimated 10 million Chinese Catholics loyal to the Holy See, Benedict never mentions Communism. Instead, he reassures the Chinese government that the Vatican offers no political challenge to its authority, that the Church “does not have a mission to change the structure or administration of the State.” He also asks Catholics in China to be good and respectful citizens and "active contributors to the common good in their country."

    The message to the Chinese Catholics? That the Church and the Communist regime can be allied in dialogue, and that Catholics can be good Chinese Communist citizens.

    The first reaction of China’s CCPA was to praise Benedict’s letter. “This is different from earlier papal letters,” said Liu Bainian, deputy head of the Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association. “Earlier papal letters were opposed to Communism and the Socialist system. They wanted to punish members of China’s patriotic church. Now the situation is different. The pope wants to better understand China’s church.”

    Abandonment of Taiwan

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    Our Lady of China, help the underground Catholics remain steadfast in their opposition to Communism
    For years the Communist government has insisted on two conditions for the normalization of relations: First, that the Vatican surrender the authority to appoint members of the clergy. Second, that the Vatican break off ties with Taiwan, which China claims as part of its territory, and establish its capital in Beijing.

    In a note attached to the document, Benedict affirmed that the Vatican was ready to move its diplomatic representation from Taiwan to Beijing “at any time.” The Vatican officially committed itself to meet one of China’s conditions for dialogue.

    It is a second betrayal, on the political level, of Taiwan as the representative of anti-Communist China.

    Several hours after publication of the letter, the Foreign Affairs Ministry in Beijing released a terse communiqué reiterating China’s pre-conditions to restoration of diplomatic relations: The Vatican must sever its so-called diplomatic ties with Taiwan and “recognize the People’s Republic of China as the sole legitimate government representing the whole of China,” and promise it will “never interfere in China’s internal affairs, including in the name of religion.” Strangely, the Vatican media reported this rude response as “a sign of modest progress” (“Subdued but predictable reactions in China to Pope’s Letter, Asia News, July 2, 2007).

    Underground Chinese Bishops, priests and faithful, betrayed by the Pope they always supported, may understandably be plunged into an enormous spiritual trial. We must pray they will remain steadfast in resisting any coexistence with the Communist regime, be it promoted by CCPA or, something much harder, by the Vatican itself.

    Posted July 13, 2007

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