Church in China - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Thu, 23 Jul 2020 05:58:31 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Church in China - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Chinese Christians told to replace Christ with Mao https://cathnews.co.nz/2020/07/23/chinese-christians-christ-mao-xi/ Thu, 23 Jul 2020 08:09:46 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=129000

Chinese Christians receiving government assistance have been told to replace Christ with Mao or risk losing their welfare payments. Compliance includes replacing all religious symbols in their homes with pictures of Chairman Mao and President Xi Jinping. Christians in several provinces have had visits from government officials and had their religious images replaced. The policy Read more

Chinese Christians told to replace Christ with Mao... Read more]]>
Chinese Christians receiving government assistance have been told to replace Christ with Mao or risk losing their welfare payments.

Compliance includes replacing all religious symbols in their homes with pictures of Chairman Mao and President Xi Jinping.

Christians in several provinces have had visits from government officials and had their religious images replaced.

The policy also applies to members of state-run churches. A member of the Three-Self Church, which is the Chinese Communist Party's official Protestant denomination, says images of Jesus and a religious calendar were taken down from his house and replaced with images of Chairman Mao.

As a result of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, increasing numbers of people are relying on government payments to stay financially afloat. At the same time, the government has overseen a renewed crackdown on places of worship.

A preacher from an illegal-but-tolerated house church says the government is "trying to eliminate our belief and wants to become God instead of Jesus."

In one province which has seen multiple reports of Christian persecution in the last year, a Christian reported that his disability payment was revoked because of his attendance at church.

His wife says he was told they would be "treated as anti-Party elements" if they did not stop going to church.

An elderly member of the Three-Self Church says she lost her government aid after she said "Thank God" upon receiving a subsidy payment.

"They expected me to praise the kindness of the Communist Party instead," she reported.

In April, another elderly woman said her minimum living allowance was canceled when officials discovered a cross on her house's door. The woman, who is a diabetic and needs frequent injections, lost all government aid due to her religious beliefs.

A Christian man told media that in China Mao and Xi Jinping were the "greatest Gods."

"If you want to worship somebody, they are the ones," an official told him.

Since 2015, the Communist government has pushed forward with a program of "sinicization" of religion.

Regular reports of churches being demolished, priests and bishops being harassed and arrested, and strict censorship being imposed on religious teaching continue to emerge from the country.

In some cases Chinese Christians were made to remove displays of the ten commandments from their churches and replace them with sayings of President Xi.

At present between 900,000 and 1.8 million mostly-Muslim Uyghurs are estimated to be in more than 1,300 detention camps set up by Chinese authorities, ostensibly for "re-education" purposes.

Survivors have reported indoctrination, beatings, forced labor, forced abortions and sterilizations and torture in the camps.

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Chinese Catholics barricade themselves in church to prevent demolition https://cathnews.co.nz/2019/11/04/chinese-catholics-church-demolition/ Mon, 04 Nov 2019 06:53:44 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=122677 Priests and parishioners have barricaded themselves in a Catholic church in the Chinese province of Hebei. According to reports, the Catholics are attempting to prevent the Chinese government from tearing down the Church. The protest began at 6am Thursday morning at the church in Wu Gao Zhang, part of the Guantao district of Hebei, on Read more

Chinese Catholics barricade themselves in church to prevent demolition... Read more]]>
Priests and parishioners have barricaded themselves in a Catholic church in the Chinese province of Hebei. According to reports, the Catholics are attempting to prevent the Chinese government from tearing down the Church.

The protest began at 6am Thursday morning at the church in Wu Gao Zhang, part of the Guantao district of Hebei, on the coast of northern China.

Officials have ordered that the church be destroyed even though it is fully recognized and approved by the government. According to the website AsiaNews, local authorities have said the building lacks appropriate permits. Read more

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China's modern martyrs https://cathnews.co.nz/2014/09/09/chinas-modern-martyrs/ Mon, 08 Sep 2014 19:12:49 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=62785

The blood of martyrs has proven to be the seed of the Church in China, as vibrant communities thrive despite government interference and restrictions. "We should be glad and rejoice. "As the Shanghai Catholic youths said: ‘We are greatly honored to have been born and lived at this important time.'" — Cardinal Kung Pin-mei, Sermon Read more

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The blood of martyrs has proven to be the seed of the Church in China, as vibrant communities thrive despite government interference and restrictions.

"We should be glad and rejoice.

"As the Shanghai Catholic youths said: ‘We are greatly honored to have been born and lived at this important time.'" — Cardinal Kung Pin-mei, Sermon for Catholics in China (Rome, June 30, 1991).

When I published my book, China's Saints, in 2011, I thought that only a few interested scholars would read it.

I wrote it, after all, as an academic study, a work for curmudgeonly professors like myself more inclined to read objective history than pious hagiography.

So I was surprised when a Jesuit priest mentioned to a large crowd of academics and ecclesiastics recently gathered in Chicago that he had been reading my book "for his daily devotions."

Results seldom match expectations, and that is the theme of my final entry in this four-part series on China's Catholic martyrs from Mao to now.

In truth, even the most objective historian—secular or religious—must admit that decades of suppression, persecution, and suffering have resulted in a vibrant Catholic community.

I shall here outline the "ongoing growth of these communities," as Father Jeremy Clarke puts it, "even in spite of attempts to make them disappear."[1]

In the first three installments of this series I focused on a very dark era in the history of Chinese Catholicism: the attack against Yangjiaping Trappist Abbey and the massacre of many holy monks, Chairman Mao's malicious media campaign against the Church, the wave of arrests that followed, and the atrocious martyrdoms of such priests as Father Beda Chang and Father Wang Shiwei.

I have also recounted the Maoist destruction of Catholic churches during the Cultural Revolution (1966-1976) and more recent efforts to suppress popular Catholic devotions in China, such as the annual pilgrimage to honor Our Lady of China at Donglü. Continue reading

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China's modern martyrs: from Mao to now, part 2 https://cathnews.co.nz/2013/09/17/chinas-modern-martyrs-mao-now-part-2/ Mon, 16 Sep 2013 19:13:32 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=49681

The little-known story of the murder of 33 Trappist monks by Chinese Communists in 1947: "The body of Christ which is the Church, like the human body, was first young, but at the end of the world it will have an appearance of decline." — St. Augustine As I sat with Brother Marcel Zhang, OCSO Read more

China's modern martyrs: from Mao to now, part 2... Read more]]>
The little-known story of the murder of 33 Trappist monks by Chinese Communists in 1947:

"The body of Christ which is the Church, like the human body, was first young, but at the end of the world it will have an appearance of decline." — St. Augustine

As I sat with Brother Marcel Zhang, OCSO (b. 1924), in his Beijing apartment, I thumbed through his private photographs of Yangjiaping Trappist Abbey. Some were taken before its destruction in 1947, and some he had taken during a recent visit to the ruins. What was once a majestic abbey church filled with divine prayer and worship had been reduced to debris and an occasional partial outline of a gothic window. When the People's Liberation Army (PLA) attacked the monastery in 1947 and began its cruel torments against the monks, Zhang was one of the monks. He shared with me some of his recollections, no doubt at great risk. As we looked at a picture of the Abbey church as it appears today, where the monks gathered for daily Mass prior to 1947, Zhang paused to contemplate the ruins. "It's already gone . . . already, the church is like this," he said, insinuating that the ruins of the Abbey "church" metaphorically represented the "Church" in China, still haunted by the past, still tormented in the present.1

After the People's Court had demanded the collective execution of the monks of Our Lady of Consolation Abbey at Yangjiaping, the Trappists were bound in heavy chains or thin wire, which cut deeply into their wrists, and were confined to await their punishments. Brother Zhang recalled that during the many trials, Party officials presiding over the interrogations accused the Trappists of being, "wealthy landlords, rich peasants who exploit poor peasants, counterrevolutionaries, bad eggs, and rightists". Essentially, they were charged with all of the "crimes" commonly ascribed to the worst classes in the Communist list of "bad elements."2 Normally, only one of these accusations was sufficient to warrant an immediate public execution, but some of the accused from the abbey were foreigners, and news that Nationalist forces were on their way to save the monks alarmed the Communist officers. Punishments had to be inflicted on the road, on what became the Via Crucis of the Trappist sons of Saint Benedict. More interrogations were staged during stops, and Brother Zhang noted that new trials, or "struggle sessions" (鬥爭) as he called them, were orchestrated at every village. Zhang himself was questioned more than twenty times at impromptu People's Courts. He remembered that he was treated with much more leniency than the priests, as he was still only a young seminarian in 1947. The priests were much more despised. "After the interrogations," Zhang recalled, "we would go out to relieve ourselves, and I saw the buttocks of the priests, which were red [from their beatings]; the flesh hung off like meat."3 Chinese Catholics who know about the Yangjiaping incident refer to these torments as a "siwang xingjun," 死亡行軍 or a "death march," and this is when most of the Trappists who died received their "palms of martyrdom." Continue reading

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Priests, nuns in Shanghai to undergo compulsory 'study classes' https://cathnews.co.nz/2012/10/05/priests-nuns-in-shanghai-to-undergo-compulsory-study-classes/ Thu, 04 Oct 2012 18:27:53 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=34728

All priests and nuns in the Diocese of Shanghai have been required to attend compulsory "study classes," the Union of Catholic Asian News reported. The report quoted observers as saying that authorities imposed the classes in response to Auxiliary Bishop Thaddeus Ma Daqin's controversial ordination in July. The 45-year-old prelate quit the Catholic Patriotic Association Read more

Priests, nuns in Shanghai to undergo compulsory ‘study classes'... Read more]]>
All priests and nuns in the Diocese of Shanghai have been required to attend compulsory "study classes," the Union of Catholic Asian News reported.

The report quoted observers as saying that authorities imposed the classes in response to Auxiliary Bishop Thaddeus Ma Daqin's controversial ordination in July.

The 45-year-old prelate quit the Catholic Patriotic Association at his ordination on July 7. Since then, he has been in "retreat" at the Sheshan Seminary with a "certain degree of freedom," sources told ucanews.com

The report, quoting sources, said the prelate's recognition violated regulations in relation to episcopal ordinations.

The report added that some 80 diocesan priests and 80 nuns of the Our Lady of Presentation Congregation were divided into three groups to take three-days of classes at the Shanghai Institute of Socialism lasting 12 hours each day.

The first classes began on September 10 and the final ones concluded last week.

Church sources said university professors gave lectures aimed at strengthening their sense of duty toward the country, law and the independent Church principle.

Among the subjects included in the classes are state-religion relations, the Communist Party's religious concepts, policies and regulations, the socialist core value system and economic development in China.

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