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Pope Leo prays for Chinese Catholics to be in communion with Rome

Pope Leo prays for Chinese Catholics to be in communion with Rome

Pope Leo asked on Sunday for prayers for China's Catholics to be in communion with the Holy See, as he made his first public remarks about one of the thorniest foreign policy issues facing his new pontificate.
History's first American pope recalled that on Saturday the Catholic Church marked a special feast day to pray for the church in China.
Pope Benedict XVI had initiated the feast day as part of his efforts to unify China's estimated 12 million Catholics who were divided between an official, state-controlled church that did not recognise papal authority, and an underground church that remained loyal to Rome through decades of persecution.
Leo noted that on the feast day 'in the churches and shrines in China and throughout the world, prayers have been raised to God as a sign of the solicitude and affection for Chinese Catholics and their communion with the universal church'.
Speaking from his studio window during his noontime blessing,
Leo XIV prayed that Catholics in
China and elsewhere 'obtain the grace to be strong and joyful witnesses of the Gospel, even in the midst of trials, to always promote peace and harmony'.
Pope Francis took Benedict's unifying efforts further by approving a controversial deal in 2018 over bishop nominations.
The details of the deal were never released, but it affords the state-controlled church a say in its church leaders, though Francis insisted he retained veto power over the ultimate choice.

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