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While reaffirming its willingness to improve relations, the Vatican said ordinary Catholics in China and Chengde in particular were most harmed by the decision. The ordination "humiliates them because the Chinese civil authorities wish to impose on them a pastor who is not in full communion either with the Holy Father or with the other bishops throughout the world," the Vatican said. The move by China, the statement continued, "offends the Holy Father, the church in China and the universal church and further complicates the present pastoral difficulties" involved in tending to a flock in both an official and unofficial church. The Vatican blasted the government for allowing the Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association, and in particular Bainian "to adopt attitudes that gravely damage the Catholic Church."
[Associated
Press;
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