mardi 30 janvier 2018

Xi Jinping's Pope: The Secret History of Francis


Francis courts China with plan to install communist bishops
Associated Press

Cardinal Joseph Zen, pictured here in 2013, said he was revealing confidential information because Chinese Christians should know the truth. 

The retired cardinal of Hong Kong has revealed the Vatican’s efforts to improve relations with China included a request for a bishop to retire in favour of an excommunicated one recognised by Beijing.
Cardinal Joseph Zen, the most vocal opponent of Pope Francis’s overtures to China, bitterly criticised the proposed change in Shantou diocese, Guangdong, and revealed in a Facebook post Monday that he had travelled to the Vatican this month to personally raise it with the pope.
Zen confirmed reports by the AsiaNews missionary news agency that the Vatican had asked Shantou bishop Peter Zhuang Jianjian, 88, to step aside for Bishop Joseph Huang Bingzhang
Huang was excommunicated by the Vatican in 2011 after he was consecrated without papal approval.

Pope's deal with China would betray Christ, says Hong Kong cardinal.

Zen said he was exposing the “confidential” information – including the contents of his audience with Pope Francis on 14 January – so China’s Christians “may know the truth to which they are entitled”.
“My conscience tells me that in this case, the right to truth should override any such duty of confidentiality,” he wrote.
The issue of bishop nominations is the key stumbling block in Vatican-Chinese relations, which were officially severed when Beijing ordered Chinese Catholics to cut ties with the Holy See soon after the foundation of the Communist state in 1949.
The Vatican insists only the pope can nominate successors to Christ’s apostles. 
China views the Vatican’s insistence as interference in its sovereignty.
Popes from John Paul II onward have expressed hope for restoring diplomatic ties, with Pope Benedict XVI taking the boldest step in 2007 by urging the millions of Chinese Catholics worshipping in both the state-controlled churches above ground and the oft-persecuted clandestine underground churches to unite under his jurisdiction.
Francis is taking that overture further to try to reach a deal with the state-backed Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association.
“Do I think that the Vatican is selling out the Catholic Church in China?” Zen asked in his post. 
Yes, definitely, if they go in the direction which is obvious from all what they are doing in recent years and months.”
Vatican spokesman Greg Burke declined to comment, or to confirm or deny the AsiaNews report.
The news agency, which follows the Catholic Church closely in China, reported this month that a Vatican delegation was in Beijing in December to negotiate Zhuang’s retirement and Huang’s nomination in Shantou.
The Vatican asked the legitimate bishop of Mindong, Monsignor Joseph Guo Xijin, to accept a demotion to become an auxiliary bishop to Bishop Vincent Zhan Silu, who isn’t recognised by the Vatican, the agency reported.
But Zen wrote that when he raised the cases with Francis during a private audience, the pope said he had told his aides “not to create another Mindszenty case”.
The reference was to the Hungarian cardinal Jósef Mindszenty, who was imprisoned by Hungary’s Communist rulers and, during a brief spell of freedom during the revolution of 1956, took refuge in the US embassy in Budapest. 
Pope Paul VI eventually stripped him of his titles under pressure from the Hungarian government.
Zen said he felt encouraged by the pope’s refusal to allow a similar fate to befall China’s underground churchmen. 
“His words should be rightly understood as of consolation and encouragement more for them than for me,” he said.
Calls to the ethnic and religious authorities in the two dioceses went unanswered. 
There was also no answer at the China Patriotic Catholic Association.

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