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A Tale of Two
Bishops
M.A. Thiessen
SHANGHAI-It's 8 a.m.,
and the dingy apartment building is momentarily unguarded. A woman
sweeping her doorway across the street cranes her neck to watch the
American walking hurriedly toward the home of her infamous neighbor.
I knock, keeping my back to the police camera hidden in the hallway.
An elderly man-not the one I've come to see-answers the door,
surprised to see a Western face. "It is not good that you have
come," he says nervously, protectively. A moment of confusion-should
I leave? As I'm about to turn away, a voice from inside the
apartment instructs the man to let me in. He does so but tells me
not to stay long.
Dressed in a moth-eaten sweater and worn slippers, the 83-year-old
Joseph Zhongliang Fan shuffles across his small, dingy apartment,
guiding his unexpected visitor to a back room. He lives under
virtual house arrest here, and Chinese State Security stands watch
outside his residence, monitoring everything. As he slumps into a
ratty old chair, it's hard to believe Communist authorities consider
him one of the most dangerous men in China.
His collar reminds me why: Fan is the Roman Catholic bishop of
Shanghai and longtime deputy of the late, exiled Ignatius Pin-Mei
Cardinal Kung, spiritual leader of China's eight to nine million
underground Roman Catholics.
Bishop Fan has spent most of his life in the Laogai-the Chinese
gulag. On September 8, 1955, Father Fan and Bishop Kung were seized
by Communist authorities along with hundreds of others in an
overnight crackdown of the Shanghai diocese. Father Fan spent the
next three decades in prison. His crime? Refusing to renounce the
pope.
After being released in 1985, he was ordained coadjutor bishop of
Shanghai-second in command to Bishop Kung-ministering to Shanghai's
underground Catholics while Kung remained under arrest (and later
during Kung's exile in Connecticut). When Kung died in March 2000,
Fan succeeded him as the rightful bishop of Shanghai.
But
Bishop Fan is forbidden to set foot in his cathedral, much less
administer his diocese. His movements are restricted, and he's
harassed for any communication with the outside world. It's
virtually impossible to visit him.
In
fact, I'm the first Westerner to see him in many years-and I
succeeded only because my visit caught the Chinese authorities by
surprise. When a group of U.S. religious leaders (including
Washington's Theodore Cardinal McCarrick) came to Shanghai in 1999,
Bishop Fan says a phalanx of State Security agents arrived at his
door. "They took me to a hotel and blocked the entrance with a line
of cars" so the visiting delegation could not meet with him. The day
after my visit, Chinese State Security interrogated the elderly man.
A
Long Legacy of Terror
Bishop Fan is not alone in suffering harassment at the hands of
state authorities; the persecution of underground Catholics in China
is systematic, ongoing, and brutal. Bishops, nuns, priests, and
laity are arrested, beaten-sometimes killed.
Soon
after my visit with Bishop Fan, 150 State Security agents swooped
down on the home of his colleague, Archbishop Yang Shudao, and
dragged him off to prison.
On
September 11, 1999, in the Fujian province, Rev. Ye Gong Feng was
beaten into a coma by State Security agents who had surrounded his
home.
Two
years before, Bishop Su Chimin of Baoding was arrested after hiding
for 17 months from Chinese secret police. He hasn't been seen since.
In
1999, while saying Mass at a private home in Beijing, Rev. Yan
Weiping of Hebei was arrested by State Security forces and dragged
off before the eyes of his horrified congregation. Later that night,
his body was found on a Beijing street corner-he'd been beaten and
thrown out of a window.
And
just three months ago, authorities arrested Bishop Lucas Li Jingfeng
of Feng Xiang and a dozen priests, and closed a monastery and two
convents. Today, numerous priests and bishops are missing or under
arrest.
The vicious Chinese regime not only arrests underground clergy, it
systematically searches out and destroys underground churches. Since
1999, in one eastern province alone, Chinese authorities have torn
down at least 1,200 churches. On October 25, 2001, they demolished
one church in that province for the third time in just 18 months;
each time they tore it down, the faithful came back and rebuilt it
from the rubble.
Bishop Fan and his compatriots could easily avoid this harassment
and brutality-all they need to do is renounce the pope and join the
Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association. A parallel schismatic church
set up by the Chinese Communists in 1957, the Patriotic
Association's constitution declares autonomy from Rome, rejecting
the supreme administrative, legislative, and judicial authority of
the pope.
In
his 1954 encyclical, Ad Sinarum Gentem (To the Chinese People), Pope
Pius XII warned Chinese Catholics that the new regime was "striving
by every means in their power to establish among you a 'national'
Church" and declared that "this church, if it should come into
being, would no longer be Catholic" because it refuses to "be
subject in all things to the Sovereign Pontiff, the Vicar of Christ
on earth."
Before his trial, the Communist authorities offered Bishop Kung his
freedom if he would agree to lead this new "Patriotic" church. He
refused. "I am a Roman Catholic bishop," he declared. "If I renounce
the Holy Father, not only would I not be a bishop, I would not even
be Catholic."
Yet
some have chosen to do just that. While Bishop Fan is barred from
entering his cathedral and taking his rightful place, another man
occupies his chair.
I needed to meet that man.
The Counterfeit Bishop
I
follow my guide out of the elevator and through the VIP wing of the
Shanghai hospital. While reserved for Communist Party cadres, the
building is surprisingly nondescript.
Bishop Aloysius Jin Luxian is waiting for me. Dressed in pajamas and
a Roman collar, he has a lovely smile and the warm, kind manner one
would expect in a Catholic priest. He already knows my name
(apparently, he has been briefed) and welcomes me in excellent
English. He and Father Francis, a young Patriotic priest with him,
lead me to a small sitting room.
We
take a seat, and Jin grasps my hand, which he holds throughout the
meeting, squeezing it from time to time to emphasize a point.
When
I ask him to explain the division between the Patriotic and
underground Churches, he protests immediately: "There is no
'Patriotic' church. There is no 'official church' and 'underground
church.' That is not true. There is only one Church in China-the
Roman Catholic Church. Both are very loyal to the pope. Every day, I
pray for the pope."
Like
Fan and Kung, Bishop Jin also spent many years in prison. An eighth-
generation Chinese Catholic, he was or- dained a Jesuit priest in
1945. After studying several years in Europe, Father Jin returned to
Shanghai in 1950, where he served as a faithful collaborator of
Bishop Kung. Sensing what was about to befall the Church, Kung
scrambled to prepare as many young men for the priesthood as
possible. He trusted Father Jin deeply enough to make him rector of
the local seminary, giving him the responsibility of forming
Shanghai's clergy.
Those were terrifying days for the Church in China. The axe of
persecution was soon to fall. In 1954, to confirm the loyalty of his
flock in the face of the coming test, Bishop Kung led his priests
and seminarians to the shrine of Our Lady of Sheshan. There, as one,
they took an oath not to betray the faith.
One
year later, they were captured and imprisoned. Bishop Kung stood
unbowed and was given a life sentence.
Father Jin broke.
Jesuit historian Rev. Lazlo Ladany writes in his book, The Catholic
Church in China, that Father Jin received a reduced sentence for
cooperating with Communist authorities: "The court verdict stated
that he was given only 18 years because, while in jail, he was
willing to reveal the 'crimes' of others."
Margaret Chu, a lay Catholic who spent 23 years in prison and labor
camps, writes of the 1955 crackdown: "I was particularly shocked
when I learned what my spiritual director, Father Aloysius Jin,
S.J., had done after his arrest. He was a very eloquent priest...and
had great influence among the faithful. Soon after he was arrested,
he recorded a tape to persuade loyal Catholics to support the
Communist government. This tape was used for broadcast in many
prisons. Many of my friends heard this tape in jail."
Jin
must have come under enormous pressure. His prominent position made
him, next to Bishop Kung, one of the prime targets of Communist
authorities. Whatever he did after his arrest, he spent more than
two decades in prison-including several years in labor camps-during
which time he suffered greatly. But by 1985, the once-faithful
priest agreed to be consecrated without papal authorization as a
Patriotic bishop and incurred an automatic latae sententiae
excommunication. Not only did he capitulate, but in 1988, he usurped
Kung's rightful place as bishop of Shanghai. His betrayal was
complete.
By
that time, Kung's life sentence had been commuted to ten years under
house arrest. According to Rev. Raymond Dunn's account for the
National Catholic Register, the man assigned to keep guard over
Bishop Kung was none other than Bishop Jin. Kung's once-faithful
collaborator had become his official jailer.
As our discussion continues, Bishop Jin's resentment for those who
remained loyal to Rome is clear. Asked why underground Catholics
don't come above ground and worship with the Patriotic Association,
he frowns: "Some in the underground Church are stubborn. If they
emerge, they will lose prestige. Then they are not winners. They are
losers."
He
becomes more animated. "They have a lot of support, from the U.S.
and Taiwan. If they emerge, they lose control. Every underground
priest has jurisdiction over all of China. They can go around and
collect money.... The underground priests take the Mass stipend and
put it in their pockets. After normalization, they would not be so
free. They would have to remain inside their diocese. They prefer to
remain an underground Church, because that way they enjoy lots of
advantages. They have more freedom, more money, more prestige. They
can say 'We are loyal to the pope!'"
When
I observe that they're also beaten and thrown out of windows by
Chinese State Security, the bishop falls silent.
His
demeanor isn't nearly as harsh as his words, and it's hard to tell
what he's saying for the benefit of those
listening in on our conversation. Nevertheless, he seems to have
little charity for the Catholics suffering in the underground.
Indeed, Jin maintains that there is religious freedom in China.
"During the Cultural Revolution, at that time there was no freedom
at all. Now we have permission to practice our faith. I have
reopened eight churches, and I have two seminaries, with 159
seminarians." Father Francis chimes in, "We can do anything we want.
We can say Mass. We just can't do anything political."
Bishop Jin recalls a meeting with then-Secretary of State Madeline
Albright, in which she asked him and other religious leaders if
their religious freedom was in any way limited. "All the others said
no. But I said yes, it is limited: One, I can't go to Rome. And two,
I can't run a Catholic university."
Listening to him as he talks about his seminary-the quality of its
instruction in morals and dogma-or how he recently blessed a ship in
the Shanghai harbor, one would think that Catholics worshiped freely
in China and that the underground Church is suffering needlessly.
But Bishop Jin's lack of empathy toward the members of the
underground Church is, in some ways, understandable: They're doing
what he wasn't brave enough to do.
They're strong where he was weak. They fight on while he gave in.
His is the resentment of the failed martyr.
As we talk, it's difficult to reconcile the man before me with the
words he's uttering. He looks like the stereotypical sweet, elderly
priest. But his words are bitter-full of disdain for his suffering
brothers and sisters who remained loyal to Rome. It's as if he must
denigrate them-painting them as greedy and stubborn and proud-to
justify the choices he made. For if they are not greedy and stubborn
and proud-if they really are martyrs suffering for the faith-then
what is he?
Bishop Jin's separation from the tree of St. Peter has led him into
heresy on doctrinal issues even beyond papal primacy-he supports
birth control, for example. In an interview with the Minneapolis
Star Tribune last year, he declared, "Without family planning, there
would be an explosion of the population in China. I am against
abortion. Abortion is infanticide. I am for taking precautions."
Such a statement by an American bishop would lead to sanction and
correction. But Bishop Jin need not worry about correction by his
Patriotic Association-or by Rome.
Yet
in our meeting, Bishop Jin insists that he and all Chinese bishops
are loyal to the pope in faith and morals. "In their hearts, all the
bishops are loyal to the pope. Not all can say it. Some bishops are
more afraid. But inside they are very loyal."
All
are loyal, I ask?
"You
are born in the U.S. You are free. We live in...." He stops. After a
moment, he begins again. "The young people are not afraid," he says,
pointing to Father Francis. "But I am still quite cautious. There is
a Chinese proverb: 'The young calf has no fear of the tiger.' But
old people are afraid of the tiger."
I
couldn't shake the feeling he was telling me more about himself than
the Church: He is weak. He is old. He is afraid.
The Coming Spiritual Explosion?
Not
all old people are afraid of the tiger. Bishop Fan is in his 80s,
and he has not given in. Many of the priests and bishops of the
underground Church-those being arrested, tortured, and killed-are
even older than he, yet they remain loyal. So, too, do the majority
of Chinese Catholics, who shun the Patriotic Association and worship
underground at great risk.
Ironically, it's not the persecuted Church, but the Chinese
Communists who are afraid-fearful of frail, octogenarian priests
like Bishop Fan. But why? Catholics are a tiny minority in this
nation of more than one billion, and Bishop Fan and his geriatric
colleagues hardly seem a threat to Communist authorities.
Nevertheless, their fears are valid. China is spiritual dry brush-a
small spark could set off a giant spiritual brushfire. When the
Communists took power, Mao Tse-tung supplanted the ancient Confucian
moral and spiritual framework of the nation with a new moral code:
Marxism-Leninism. Then, in the 1980s, China abandoned the mission of
Marxism for the pursuit of the almighty dollar. Today, after decades
of "capitalism with Chinese characteristics," no one believes in
Marxism anymore. But thanks to decades of communism, the moral and
spiritual foundation of the country has been destroyed. Hence the
rapid spread of the Falun Gong spiritual movement, and the violent
efforts of the Communist authorities to crush it, along with all
religious groups independent of Party control.
This
fear is why China looks warily at the Vatican's determined
entreaties to normalize relations. On one hand, the idea intrigues
them. In exchange for recognition, Beijing would require that the
Vatican break off official relations with Taiwan (something Rome has
indicated it would do)-a major diplomatic victory. On the other
hand, Beijing would have to recognize the legitimacy of underground
Catholics and allow the pope to travel to China. A papal Mass in the
heart of Beijing? One can see why the Communist authorities are
hesitant.
In
1999, reports surfaced that normalization talks between Rome and
Beijing were far along. But the Chinese side abruptly shut them down
with the announcement that a dozen new Patriotic bishops would be
consecrated without papal approval on January 6, 2000-the same day
Pope John Paul II was scheduled to consecrate twelve new bishops in
Rome.
The
consecration ploy backfired. All but three of the Patriotic priests
balked, many of them disappearing in order to avoid the illicit
consecrations. One hundred thirty Patriotic Association seminarians
in Beijing refused to attend the illicit consecration, issuing a
statement declaring that the "so-called ordination is against the
principles of the faith and against the Catholic Church." Beijing
authorities had to scramble to find two more priests to fill in, so
as to have a respectable number.
As
the summer of 2000 was drawing to an end and talks were again
progressing, the Patriotic Association announced another illicit
ordination: Rev. Matthew Cao was to be consecrated as bishop of
Hangzhou. This time the Vatican issued a stern warning that both the
bishop being ordained and those performing the ordination would be
automatically excommunicated. The ordination went ahead as scheduled
on June 25, with Bishops Fu Teishan of Beijing, Yu of Haimen, and Wu
of Nanching officiating.
In
October, China reacted with fury as Pope John Paul II canonized 120
Chinese martyrs. The ceremony took place on October 1-the feast of
St. Thérèse of Lisieux (patroness of missions) but also China's
national day. An invective-filled campaign against the canonization
ensued. Rallies and symposia were held across the country exposing
the "crimes" of the martyrs (such as raping Chinese women). Many
Patriotic bishops participated in the protests. At a rally in
Tiananmen Square, Beijing Bishop Fu Tieshan fumed that the
canonization of "those so-called saints" was a "clear insult and
humiliation."
But
despite these repeated setbacks, the Vatican refuses to give up. In
the fall of 2001, the Far Eastern Economic Review reported that soon
"a series of carefully choreographed statements and meetings...will
end decades of hostility" between Rome and Beijing. According to the
report, in early October, Catholic scholars would gather in Beijing
for a conference marking the 400th anniversary of the arrival of
Italian missionary Rev. Matteo Ricci in China. Then, later that same
month, Bishop Fu (the excommunicated head of the Patriotic
Association) was to arrive in Rome for a ceremony celebrating the
Ricci anniversary, where the pope would "offer some form of apology
for historical wrongdoing by the Catholic Church in China."
Bishop Fu never showed up. But the pope did deliver a carefully
worded statement promising that "the Catholic Church seeks no
privilege from China and its leaders, but solely the resumption of
dialogue in order to build a relationship based on mutual respect."
Furthermore, he apologized for the fact that "the work of members of
the Church in China was not always without error."
It
was an extraordinary olive branch extended toward Beijing. So far,
however, Beijing hasn't reciprocated.
Reconciling Judas
While it patiently woos Beijing, the Vatican works quietly to
reconcile the wayward priests and bishops of the Patriotic
Association with the universal Church. In his biography of John Paul
II, Witness to Hope, George Weigel recounts how in 1987, Jaime
Cardinal Sin of Manila became the first leader of the universal
Church to visit China since the Communist Revolution. "[H]e found
clergy and laity from the Patriotic Catholic Association [sic]
pressing slips of paper into his hand, asking Sin to tell the Pope
they loved him and were praying for him." In the years since, the
Vatican has reportedly received a number of communications from
Patriotic bishops repenting and professing their loyalty to the
pope. Some have been recognized by the Holy Father, though their
names and number are a closely held secret. Last year, for the first
time, an official bishop was reportedly consecrated with prior papal
approval.
In
Taiwan (where Chinese Catholics worship freely), Paul Cardinal Shan
compares the situation in China to the English Reformation in the
16th century. At that time, a schism over papal authority led to a
permanent breach between Rome and the English Church that has lasted
more than five centuries. The Vatican desperately wants to prevent a
similar permanent breach between Rome and the Church in China.
But
it's a delicate balancing act. If the Vatican acknowledges Patriotic
bishops within the official structures of the Patriotic Association,
then what did Cardinal Kung, Bishop Fan, and the thousands of
priests, bishops, and lay martyrs suffer for all those years?
Couldn't they have given in and avoided so many decades of pain and
persecution? And why should millions of loyal Catholics continue to
suffer in the underground today, if they can join the Patriotic
Associaton and still be Catholics in good standing?
In
1988, the Vatican issued an advisory to its bishops throughout the
world on dealing with Patriotic Association priests and bishops. It
urged that they be approached with "fraternal charity" but also
"doctrinal clarity" and made clear that on "delicate points" of the
liturgical celebrations "all 'communicatio in sacris' is to be
avoided. The 'patriotic' bishops and priests are not to be invited
or even allowed to celebrate religious functions in public, either
in the churches or in the oratories of the various religious
institutes." This directive has never been rescinded. Indeed, when
Cardinal McCarrick visited China in 1998, he said, "I was not able
to celebrate Mass in any of these (Patriotic) churches, in that they
are not in communion with the Holy See. I celebrated Mass every day
of my 18 days in China in my hotel room."
Moreover, Pope John Paul II has repeatedly declared, as he did in a
1994 letter to Chinese Catholics and at the 1995 World Youth Day
celebrations in Manila, that "a Catholic who wishes to remain such
and be recognized as such cannot reject the principle of communion
with the successor of Peter." In December 1994, the underground
bishops, at great personal risk, issued a pastoral letter in which
they declared "those bishops and clerics belonging to this new
church [the Patriotic Association]...are no longer members of the
Catholic Church. No member of the clergy of the Universal Church is
permitted to be in sacramental communion with them."
Yet
many Catholics in the United States openly reject Rome's careful
distinctions and the express wishes of the legitimate Chinese
bishops, embracing Patriotic Association priests, bishops, and
seminarians as if they were in full communion with the Church. Many
religious communities and Catholic charitable organizations raise
funds for them and send members to China to work in Patriotic
Association churches. According to the magazine 30 Days, some
$4.7_million has been donated to the Patriotic Association by
Catholic religious communities like the Maryknoll Missionaries. The
Jesuits helped finance a $1.2 million retreat center in Shanghai for
Bishop Jin. Meanwhile, the loyal underground bishops-who are unable
to travel, network, and solicit funds-receive nothing.
None
of this fazed Cardinal Kung. "In China, we have no well-furnished
libraries for our unofficial seminaries," he told an interviewer in
1998, a year before his death. "But material means are not the only
way to nourish the faith. The faith of our seminarians and laity
grows through the good example of their aged priests and bishops.
Their faith grows through daily prayer and sacrifice. This is why we
have an ever-increasing number of vocations in China."
The
underground Church's main source of support and contact with the
outside world is the Cardinal Kung Foundation, in Stamford,
Connecticut. Led by Joseph Kung, the late cardinal's dedicated
nephew, the foundation keeps track of the missing, killed, and
arrested; reports incidents of oppression; and supports the
underground dioceses and seminarians. But the financial support for
the Patriotic Association from groups like the Jesuits and
Maryknolls far exceeds what the tiny Cardinal Kung Foundation can do
for the loyal, suffering majority.
In
many ways, the crisis in China mirrors the situation of the Church
during the Roman persecution of the first and second centuries. At
that time, Roman authorities also made examples of the bishops-they
were imprisoned, crucified, burned at the stake, or torn apart by
animals. To avoid this, all the bishops had to do was pay homage to
the emperor.
Saints like Ignatius of Antioch refused to submit, and suffered a
martyr's death in the Coliseum. Others buckled and, like the
Patriotic bishops of today, renounced their faith to save their
lives. Many of them repented and tried to return to the universal
Church (they were known as the Lapsi). A great controversy ensued
about whether to readmit them. Some argued that the Lapsi should
never be readmitted; others that they should be brought back but
denied the sacraments. Finally, after much debate, the Church
welcomed them home-but only gradually, and after a long period of
penance.
This
episode may provide a model for the reconciliation of China's
Catholics.
Undying Hope
Bishop Fan and Bishop Jin met last year to discuss the choice of a
successor ("We are both very old," Bishop Fan says with a wry
smile). A sign of hope for future unity? Yes and no. They couldn't
agree on a candidate.
Yet none of these difficulties seems to faze Bishop Fan. When asked
about the possibility of normalization between Rome and Beijing, he
doesn't go into a long discourse on "winners" and "losers." Instead,
he answers simply and plainly: "I will do whatever the Holy Father
tells me to do."
As I
get up to leave his small, guarded apartment, the old and gentle
bishop blesses me, pressing a prayer card into my hand. "Pray for
the Church in China," he says. "Pray."
M.A. Thiessen is a writer living in
Washington, D.C. The Cardinal Kung Foundation can be reached at
www.cardinalkungfoundation.org.
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