Chinese Catholics gather in Chicago to discuss the Church’s challenges in China today

Chinese Catholics gather in Chicago to discuss the Church’s challenges in China today
Bishop Pei distributes Communion during a Mass at St. Vincent DePaul Church—concelebrated with Blase Cardinal Cupich Chicago and about 20 priests from China and the US on August 3. Photo: OSV News /Simone Orendain

CHICAGO (OSV News): An August 2-4 conference, hosted by the Berkeley, California-based US-China Catholic Association in Chicago on the life of the Catholic Church in China covered both the difficulties and strengths of being a Church under a heavily regulatory communist government. The event included presentations from four priests registered with the Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association, marking a first.

In his talk, Bishop Paul Pei Junmin of Liaoning, emphasised the need to address a trend, similar to that of the Western world, of waning priestly vocations, and also a need for the laity to take up the task of evangelisation.

Citing both Pope Francis and the late Pope Benedict XVI, Bishop Pei said clergy and religious had to embark on a journey of ongoing formation and “constantly be inspired to return to their own Galilee to rekindle the first love.”

The the 55-year-old bishop, who trained in the US, said secularisation was one of the main reasons for diminishing vocations in China, a trend that he said started in the early 2000s.

“[For clergy and religious] the impact and destructive power of secularisation on the Chinese Catholic Church is actually greater than any external forms of violence,” he said.

The bishop, who is vice president of the state-sanctioned Bishops’ Conference of the Catholic Church in China, said he believes that for clergy and religious there is a lack of awareness of the effects of secularisation, while doubts about the spiritual world have stifled growth in spiritual life. 

[For clergy and religious] the impact and destructive power of secularisation on the Chinese Catholic Church is actually greater than any external forms of violence

Bishop Paul Pei Junmin

They are beset with unidentifiable busyness and have difficulty calming their minds to pray, he said, adding that the rise of individualism has brought a “lack of emphasis on the Church’s traditional and spiritual exercises.”

Additionally, Bishop said the laity have a significant role in “pastoral and evangelisation work,” stressing, “Families and parishes are the school of faith and the cradle of vocations.” 

He said, “They should find ways to ensure that the young people learn about the Church’s teaching, understand about the spirit of gospel, and develop the various qualities and religious sentiments needed for vocation.”

However, in a country where those under 18 are barred from worshipping, the task has not been easy.

Bishop Pei said young people do go to church in large cities such as Guangzhou, Shanghai and Beijing. He said although catechism, including teaching and training, may be lacking for children in villages, the environment of Catholicism is very friendly, so children and families do participate in Church life together.

Under Pope Francis, the Vatican has focused on forging diplomatic relations which China, broken off in 1951 shortly after the communist victory in China’s civil war. In May, the Vatican expressed hope for establishing a diplomatic presence in China.

They should find ways to ensure that the young people learn about the Church’s teaching, understand about the spirit of gospel, and develop the various qualities and religious sentiments needed for vocation

Bishop Pei

The 2018 Provisional Agreement on the Appointment of Bishops which has been renewed twice and is up for renewal again this year, is meant to address the Vatican’s concern of having bishops in communion with Rome who are also recognised by China’s government.

But since the second renewal, at least two episcopal appointments reportedly happened without the Vatican’s approval. The Vatican reiterated that all such appointments be made by consensus. 

Last July, Pope Francis belatedly approved the transfer of Bishop Joseph Shen Bin from Haimen to Shanghai, which has a controversial counterrevolutionary history and whose bishops have been detained. 

In November 2022, the other bishop, Bishop John Peng Weizhao of the Diocese of Yuijang was made an auxiliary bishop of Jiangxi.

Anthony Clark, a history professor at Whitworth University specialising in Catholicism and faith in China, opened the conference with a talk on the history of the Church in China trying to keep its Catholic identity while also remaining culturally Chinese, with lessons from Jesuit Father Mateo Ricci, who worked in the late 1500s within the culture while serving in China.

The 2018 Provisional Agreement on the Appointment of Bishop which has been renewed twice and is up for renewal again this year, is meant to address the Vatican’s concern of having bishops in communion with Rome who are also recognised by China’s government

Clark, a Catholic, remarked that in his nearly 30 years experience of travelling to China to teach, the bishops he has met are “100 per cent loyal to the Holy See, both the sanctioned and underground, with almost no exceptions.”

“They are finding a middle ground to both obey the state, but try and be more obedient to the faith, and that middle ground is a very difficult place to be in,” he explained. “So the big question is: if there are no bishops, then there are no ordinations; if there are no priests, there are no sacraments; and the state could at any given moment eliminate even the underground church by and large. So what that means is, that in order to preserve the Church, you have to exist in that liminal middle space.”

For one priest of the unofficial Church, that middle space is his life. He described his ministry going “with the grace of God” from diocese to diocese in China training religious, teaching scripture to believers whom he said are eager to learn, and forming youth leaders who “have a deep longing for our faith.”

He said there is a strong demand for this ministry and that in his work he has seen the number of believers growing. There are an estimated 10-12 million Catholics in China. But at the same time, like Bishop Pei, the priest also noted that influences of the secular world have had an impact on people leaving the faith.

“We don’t really feel everyday we are in fear,” he said, adding, “Sometimes maybe a bit more, sometimes a bit less … but we know it’s the situation. We can live in it and we enjoy our work there.”

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