Government-Anti-Christian tensions highlighted in China
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Pastor Dale Morgan
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May 14, 2011, 4:06:40 PM5/14/11
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Faith Under
Fire.......
Government-Anti-Christian tensions highlighted in China
By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN, Associated Press
BEIJING — Leaders of underground Chinese Protestant churches
condemned the government's persecution of a fellow congregation,
while Catholics voted under the watchful eye of security forces
for a new government-approved bishop, reports said.
The developments illustrate growing tensions between Communist
authorities and increasingly assertive Christian groups whose
memberships are growing rapidly.
While China's Constitution guarantees freedom of religion,
Christians are required to worship in churches run by
state-controlled groups. However, tens of millions of Christians
are believed to worship in unregistered "house" churches which
receive varying degrees of harassment.
In Beijing, underground Protestant church leaders issued a
petition to the National People's Congress, China's rubber-stamp
legislature, calling for an end to persecution of Shouwang Church
and its 1,000 members who have been blocked from their worship
place in Beijing in recent weeks.
Members who have sought to hold worship services have been briefly
detained or confined to their homes.
Asked about the authorities' actions, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman
Jiang Yu on Thursday avoided details, but said church members had
been "gathering illegally many times and in order to keep social
order, public security departments have adopted relevant
measures."
The petition, drafted by senior underground church leaders Xie
Moshan and Li Tianen and signed by 17 church leaders from six
cities, is a strong indication of nationwide support for
Shouwang's plight.
"With the incessant growth of the number of urban Christians and
the continued expansion of the church, the conflict between state
and church of this sort is likely to continue to break out," said
the petition, dated Tuesday. It demanded that a law be passed to
protect religious freedom.
The expansion and growing influence of house churches has
unsettled China's rulers, always suspicious of any independent
social group that could challenge Communist authority.
In southern Guangdong province, many security officers accompanied
priests and lay people to cast votes Wednesday for Huang
Bingzhang, 43, as the new bishop of Shantou, said ucanews.com, a
news service that covers the Catholic church in Asia.
Huang, the only candidate, received 66 of the 72 votes, its said.
Huang is a member of the National People's Congress and head of
the government-controlled Guangdong provincial Catholic Patriotic
Association.
Calls to the local religious affairs bureau rang unanswered
Friday.
Local authorities had sought to appoint Huang for several years,
but had been thwarted by opposition from local Catholics,
ucanews.com said. The website is run by the Union of Catholic
Asian News, based in Bangkok.
The Vatican-appointed bishop of Shantou, Zhuang Jianjian, has
never been recognized by Beijing and has been under house arrest
for over a month, it said.
China and the Vatican have no formal relations and even informal
contacts have recently been testy. That is largely due to
Beijing's insistence that it has a right to assign bishops through
carefully orchestrated elections in defiance of the pope's
authority to make such appointments.
An accommodation in which most new bishops received tacit approval
from the Vatican appeared to break down last year. Chinese
officials responded to criticism by accusing the Vatican of
seeking to undermine the independence of the Chinese church and
interfering in the rights of Chinese Catholics to practice their
faith.
China says about 6 million Catholics worship in 6,300 official
congregations across the country, although millions more are
believed to worship outside the official church. China says almost
half of the country's 97 dioceses lack bishops and that it intends
to move quickly to fill them — with or without Vatican approval.
In a further sign of that determination, Li Zhigang — a priest
with close government ties — was elected bishop of the
southwestern diocese of Chengdu on Tuesday, ucanews.com said.