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Guest
This is an unbelievable development.
Do you have any suggestion?This is an unbelievable development.
That is precisely what drove this decision. You say that this is disturbing, but so is having two Catholic Churches. You may understand the difference between the bishops the state supports and the ones they do not, but most of this distinction of shepherds is lost on the sheep.There are not two Churches. There is one Church.
There are NOT two Catholic Churches in China.goout:![]()
That is precisely what drove this decision. You say that this is disturbing, but so is having two Catholic Churches.There are not two Churches. There is one Church.
Yes, for want of word that is correct. The Patriotic Church, which they refine it to become the Open Church, the so-called middle ground between the Patriotic and underground Church, is the one that the Communist government recognizes. The one and the same (Patriotic Church).I don’t know. You may well live there and know better, but my reading of the article, and other information I have read on this, has that there are two sets of hierarchy, one licit, one illicit. In your experience, is this wrong, or do the people of China understand the difference?
I thought that there was the underground Catholic Church not approved by the Chinese government and the Chinese Patriotic Catholic Church which is approved by the Chinese government? Doesn’t that make two Churches?There are not two Churches. There is one Church.
Past the age limit. Vatican has mandatory retirement age for Bishops.88-year-old Bishop Zhuang received a letter dated 26 October asking him to resign
Vatican is just enforcing its own rules that apply to every bishop in every country.And now, the Vatican itself is selling him out to the communists.
They managed to write an article with at least 1 typo that I’m quoting…More to the point, whoever the Bishops in China are the Vatican appoints them in secrecy out of obvious necessity. And the Chinese faithful and religious know about this. Saint John Paul II himself was involved in a seminary in communist occupied Poland, and during nazi occupation, and to the best of my knowledge both ordinations and formation where conducted under secrecy.Faced with the Vatican’s decision in favour of unlawful bishops,
You are right about the Nazi occupation, but not about the Communist regime. Karol Wojtyla was publicly ordained in 1946 a priest an allowed to go to Rome to study. He came back a s priest in Poland. The Catholic Church had a policy of Ostpolitik with eastern Europe and Russia that allowed them to continue to publicly minister to the Catholic faithful.They managed to write an article with at least 1 typo that I’m quoting…More to the point, whoever the Bishops in China are the Vatican appoints them in secrecy out of obvious necessity. And the Chinese faithful and religious know about this. Saint John Paul II himself was involved in a seminary in communist occupied Poland, and during nazi occupation, and to the best of my knowledge both ordinations and formation where conducted under secrecy.Faced with the Vatican’s decision in favour of unlawful bishops,
directly to Fátima.the fall of communism in Eastern Europe.
I wasn’t only talking about the great Karol Wojtyla!but not about the Communist regime
Fr Simoni was freed in 1981 but had to continue preaching clandestinely until the communist regime fell in 1990.
http://www.catholicherald.co.uk/new...-a-priest-who-spent-28-years-in-labour-camps/Fr Simoni recalled his arrest, after celebrating Christmas Mass on December 24, 1963 and being placed in isolation. He told of being condemned to death, but the sanction was commuted to 28 years of forced labour.