From the bishop of Hong Kong

There is but “one, holy, Catholic, Apostolic and Roman” Church in China at this point and we can no longer speak of two Churches, so much so that if the government were to acknowledge this, it will also see “the convenience of reaching a normalization” with the Holy See, Monsignor Joseph Zen Ze-kiun, Bishop of Hong Kong, said today at the Synod, explaining also that almost all the official bishops in China have actually been “legitimized by the Pope.”

“The Church in China,” the Bishop said, speaking in Italian, to the approximately 250 Synod Fathers, “which appears to be divided in two – an official one recognized by the government and an underground one which refuses to be independent from Rome – is actually a single Church, because everyone wants to stay united with the Pope.”  “After long years of forced separation,” the Bishop went on to explain, “the vast majority of bishops of the official Church have been legitimized by the magnanimity of the Holy Father.”  Monsignor Zen did not specify if only by John Paul II or also by Benedict XVI.  “Especially in recent years,” he continued, “it is becoming ever clearer that bishops ordained without the Roman Pontiff’s approval are accepted by neither the clergy nor the faithful.”  “One would hope that, in the face of this ‘sensus Ecclesiae’, the government of Beijing sees the convenience of reaching a normalization of the situation, even if ‘conservative’ elements within the official Church put up resistance for obvious, self-serving reasons.”

More from Beliefnet and our partners
Close Ad