Mission World - June 2020

China suspends all Church activities

Photo: canva.com

Photo: canva.com

All public Church activities in China, including Marian pilgrimages, have been suspended announced the two bodies that run the state-controlled Catholic Church in the communist country.

The Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association and its Bishops' forum, the Bishops' Conference of the Catholic Church in China, jointly announced the further delay to activities. It aims to avoid gatherings as part of measures to check the COVID-19 pandemic, they said.

The announcement suspended all church activities and traditional Marian pilgrimages throughout May. The notice also delayed the opening of seminaries and religious institutes that train church personnel.

Some Catholics suspect the communist regime is using the pandemic as a cover to suppress religion as the move comes amid administrative claims of dissipating COVID-19.

Chinese cities and towns report normal life has returned and China has opened most businesses, including markets and tourist places that attract thousands, such as the Great Wall of China, which was shut for two months, Christian leaders note.

China had banned all public gatherings, including public religious worship, since January when the COVID-19 pandemic began to spread. 

However, the state-controlled church’s notice said that although the pandemic had been effectively controlled in China, it remains a serious threat in several other countries. Pilgrimages can significantly increase the risk of importing the virus, it said. 

The notice asked all dioceses and parishes to suspend all pilgrimage programs. It also advised clergy to explain and counsel Catholics on the need to suspend Marian pilgrimages traditionally conducted during the month of May. The state church asked Catholics to celebrate "the month of the Blessed Virgin Mary" by engaging in personal prayer.

Joseph Wu, a parishioner of Shanghai Diocese, said cancelling the pilgrimages was the right decision because in a cosmopolitan city like Shanghai the spread of the virus could spell disaster.

He said most people who come to China land in Shanghai, putting a lot of pressure on the local community to prevent the disease.

However, he said, if there was no threat from the pandemic, he would have made the pilgrimage to Sheshan as he does every year.

Fr Peter, a priest in a diocese adjacent to Shanghai, explained to his parishioners that the calendar date is not essential to a pilgrimage. "It has the same significance at other times too as long as we do it with faith."

A bishop of a northern diocese said the government should not be blamed for putting restrictions because "it is a serious pandemic. It really can't be ignored."

UCA News, www.ucanews.com, April 30, 2020.

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