Roman Catholic Diocese of Shanghai

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Diocese of Shanghai

Dioecesis Sciamhaevensis

天主教上海教区
Cathedral in Xujiahui.jpg
St. Ignatius Cathedral
Location
CountryChina
Ecclesiastical provinceNanjing
MetropolitanNanjing
Coordinates31°11′28″N 121°26′08″E / 31.19120°N 121.43542°E / 31.19120; 121.43542Coordinates: 31°11′28″N 121°26′08″E / 31.19120°N 121.43542°E / 31.19120; 121.43542
Statistics
Area10,000 km2 (3,900 sq mi)
Population
- Total

Statistics Missing [1]
Information
DenominationRoman Catholic
RiteLatin Rite
CathedralSt. Ignatius Cathedral, Shanghai
Patron saintOur Mother of Sheshan
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
BishopThaddeus Ma Daqin
Metropolitan ArchbishopFrancis Lu Xin-ping
She Shan Cathedral.

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Shanghai (Latin: Dioecesis Sciamhaevensis; Chinese: 天主教上海教区) is an ecclesiastical territory or diocese of the Roman Catholic Church in the Municipality of Shanghai, China. It was erected on December 13, 1933 as the Apostolic Vicariate of Shanghai by Pope Pius XI, and was later elevated to the rank of a diocese on April 11, 1946 by Pope Pius XII. The diocese is a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Nanking.

Churches[]

The diocese's motherchurch and thus seat of its bishop is St. Ignatius Cathedral; it also houses a minor basilica in Sheshan.

Bishops[]

Seat of the bishop in Xujiahui.

In 1950, Pope Pius XII appointed the Bishop of Suzhou, Ignatius Kung Pin-Mei, bishop of Shanghai. In 1955, he was arrested and given a life sentence in 1960. In the same year, the Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association (CPCA) appointed , S.J. as Bishop of Shanghai to replace Kung, thereby being the first illicitly consecrated bishop of this diocese. In 1985, his Jesuit confrere, Aloysius Jin Luxian, S.J., was illicitly ordained as the Auxiliary Bishop of Shanghai, and became the Bishop of Shanghai upon the death of Zhang in 1988. In the meantime, Bishop Kung was released from prison and placed under house arrest in 1985 and then sent to the United States in 1988, where he would die in 2000. Bishop Kung was made a cardinal in pectore in 1979 and officially informed of his cardinalate in 1991.

Upon the death of Cardinal Kung, the Holy See recognized 82-year-old Joseph Fan Zhongliang, S.J. of the underground Church as the legitimate successor in 2000. Shortly thereafter, Bishop Jin reconciled with the Holy See and was thus recognized as the coadjutor bishop of Shanghai. In the 2000s, Bishop Jin increasingly worked with Bishop Fan in administering the diocese, despite the fact that the CPCA did not recognize the latter's authority. In 2005, Bishop Jin revealed that Fan had been suffering from Alzheimers and both the Holy See and the CPCA agreed to the consecration of as the Auxiliary Bishop of Shanghai in hopes that this mutually agreed upon bishop would succeed both Fan and Jin to heal the rift between the Holy See and the CPCA. However, in 2010 Auxiliary Bishop Xing asked for personal reasons not to be the successor in this diocese.

In 2012, both the Holy See and the CPCA agreed upon the consecration of 44-year-old Thaddeus Ma Daqin. There was a disagreement of his status, with the Holy See appointing him as the auxiliary bishop (given that Jin was technically still the coadjutor) while the CPCA appointed him as the coadjutor bishop. Despite this technical disagreement, it appeared that both had the intention of Ma becoming the next Bishop of Shanghai. In a surprising move, Ma announced during his ordination Mass that he would be resigning from his posts within the CPCA effective immediately. The next day, government officials placed him under house arrest at the Sheshan Seminary and the CPCA stripped him of his title as coadjutor bishop in December 2012. Upon the death of Jin Luxian in April 2013, the CPCA officially recognized a sede vacante in Shanghai while the Holy See maintains that Auxiliary Bishop Ma should be administering the diocese.[2] Soon afterwards, government officials transferred Ma to Beijing[citation needed].

List of ordinaries of Shanghai[]

See source:[3]

See also[]

  • Xu Guangqi
  • St. Ignatius Cathedral of Shanghai
  • Christianity in China
  • Roman Catholicism in China
  • List of Roman Catholic dioceses in China
  • List of Roman Catholic dioceses (structured_view)-Episcopal Conference of China

References[]

  1. ^ "Diocese of Shanghai [Shanghai]". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
  2. ^ Hon, Savio (27 April 2013), "Archbishop Savio Hon: I pray for Mgr Jin Luxian and I hope to go to his funeral", AsiaNews
  3. ^ "Diocese of Shanghai 上海, China". gcatholic.org. Retrieved 16 April 2015.
  4. ^ Hon, Savio (18 March 2014), "Bishop Fan Zhongliang: Better broken jade than intact tile", AsiaNews.it

External links[]

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