Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Hong Kong’s Catholics cancel prayer for fear of offending China
Hong Kong’s Catholics cancel prayer for fear of offending China
Oct 30, 2025 10:58 AM

China’s draconian “national security law” has not just stifled the free speech of pro-democracy politicians, teachers, and journalists, it has now shut down a prayer campaign called by Roman Catholic hierarchy. Catholic bishops in Hong Kong canceled publication of a prayer for fear of offending officials in the Chinese Communist Party.

This summer, the Federation of Asian Bishops’ Conferences asked its members to pray for the increasingly oppressive situation in Hong Kong. China’s violation of the “one country, two systems” es as “freedom of religion or belief in mainland China is suffering the most severe restrictions experienced since the Cultural Revolution,” wrote Cardinal Charles Maung Bo of Myanmar, the conference’s president. He offered a litany of problems with the new legislation, which UN observers have since described as overly vague:

I am concerned that the law poses a threat to basic freedoms and human rights in Hong Kong. This legislation potentially undermines freedom of expression, freedom of assembly, media freedom and academic freedom. Arguably, freedom of religion or belief is put at risk. … Even if freedom of worship in Hong Kong is not directly or immediately affected, the new security law and its broad criminalization of “subversion”, “secession” and “colluding with foreign political forces” could result, for example, in the monitoring of religious preaching, the criminalization of candlelit prayer vigils, and the harassment of places of worship that offer sanctuary or sustenance to protesters.

As it turns out, Bo knows Beijing. Through fear and intimidation, the law has triggered an act of self-censorship.

In response to Cardinal Bo’s call to prayer, the Hong Kong diocese’s Justice and Peace Commission planned to buy an advertisement in Jimmy Lai’s newspaper, Apple Daily, on Sunday, September 6. It would contain the following prayer:

Lord, You reward Your faithful servants with prosperity, but for servants not of Your mind, Your justice e and You will deliver Your people from oppression and slavery. As the city of Hong Kong is under threats of abusive control, we pray for Your mercy. Amongst adversaries and oppression, we believe Your Word and grace shall bring back the confidence and hope of Your people.

Hong Kong’s Catholic hierarchy feared this wording might break the national security law. The call to deliver God’s people from “oppression” could be viewed as imprecatory prayer against the Chinese Communists. Hence, the bishops insisted mit an act of omission.

Critics points out that the national security law’s broad and expansive terminology could criminalize virtually any prayer, however benign. Benedict Rogers, the founder of Hong Kong Watch, wrote that he often listened to “Holy Mother”by Eric Clapton and Luciano Pavarotti. However, under the new law, the line, “‘Holy Mother, where are you?’ might be misinterpreted by Beijing’s puppet chief executive Carrie Lam, who has regularly asserted her ‘motherhood’ of Hong Kong status, as a question about her whereabouts or as a threat to Xi Jinping’s self-appointed near-divinity.”

This undermines the views of Cardinal John Tong Hon, the bishop of Hong Kong, who assured the faithful that the national security law “will not negatively impact on religious freedom.” In fact, the law has already begun reshaping Catholic culture, especially the education of young people. The diocese wrote a letter instructing teachers in Catholic schools to “enhance students’ awareness of national security and lawabidingness and enable them to recognize and respect” Chinese Communist anthems and institutions.

“Our church leaders are succumbing under political pressure, and our children’s education is at risk,” said the Catholics Concerned about the Hong Kong National Security Law Group. The directive to obedience short-circuits “students’ search for the truth for the sake of” being “politically correct.” By encouraging students to identify with the Marxist government, the group said, ecclesiastical officials “hold a candle for the devil.”

If that sounds too Manichean for some ears, it accurately summarizes the battle lines as the CCP sees them. “It must be understood that, to the [Chinese Communist] Party, the Church is an existential threat – it is an petitor with its own organizational structure and hierarchy,” a senior cleric in mainland China told the Catholic News Agency. Beijing’s secularizing policy of “Sinicization” of all Christian churches has “nothing to do with cultural harmony and everything to do with co-opting the Church and sanitizing it into an agent of the state.”

Margaret Thatcher thought she had foreclosed Beijing’s possibility of exporting this system to Hong Kong when she negotiated the transfer of the financial hub from the UK to China. However, as Hong Kong has e less economically important to the overall Chinese GDP, the CCP has flouted these conditions. The national security law, which took effect June 30, has been denounced by government officials in the UN, France, Germany, even Canada – but the leader of the world’s largest Christian church aimed his criticism elsewhere.

Just days after this prayer cancellation took place, Pope Francis told transatlantic political and business leaders to create an economic system that shows “solidarity in wealth and in the sharing of resources,” one “that refuses to sacrifice human dignity to the idols of finance, that does not give rise to violence and inequality, and that uses financial resources not to dominate but to serve.” Presumably, he’s criticizing a theoretical version of free-market capitalism, a straw man that has e a papal target as frequent as it is painless.

However, if the pontiff opposes economic systems that produce “violence and inequality,” then he cannot possibly support the PRC’s “socialism with Chinese characteristics.” Beijing refused to print an uncensored version of Thomas Piketty’s newest book, Capital and Ideology, because it records that Chinese e inequality has increased by 152% since economic liberalization began in the late 1970s. While flourishing economies inevitably produce economic inequality, socialism produces stagnant, two-tiered societies where politicians reward the subservient and the well-connected. China’s kleptocratic economic policy and all-pervasive surveillance bine the worst features of ruthless “capitalism” with the most innovative tools munist repression.

The answers for China are not economic, because humanity is not primarily driven by economics. Each person is created in the image and likeness of God, which endows every individual with unalienable rights. As the island’s most famous Catholic dissident, Jimmy Lai, said, “Without assimilating into Western values, there won’t be peace in international trade, politics and diplomacy.”

Without Western values, Hong Kong doesn’t have a prayer.

(Photo: Cardinal John Tong Hon. Photo credit: T1NH0. CC BY-SA 3.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Radio Free Acton: Jeffrey Tucker on Capitalism and Love
Jeffrey Tucker speaks at the 2015 Acton Lecture Series It’s always good to e old friends to the Acton Building. Last week it was our pleasure to e Jeffrey Tucker, author, speaker, and the founder and Chief Liberty Officer of Liberty.meto Grand Rapids in order to deliver the first Acton Lecture Series lecture of 2015, entitled “Capitalism is About Love.” (We’ll be posting audio and video of his address later this week.) Jeffrey took some time to join me in...
Communion and Consumerism
“Consumption serves, sustains and munity—above all the munity,” says Rev. Gregory Jensen in this week’s Acton Commentary. Consumption is not an end in itself but has a purpose. We are, Schmemann says, called by God “to propagate and have dominion over the earth”; that is to say, consumption serves human flourishing. The first chapters of Genesis portray creation as “one all-embracing banquet table,” foreshadowing a central theme in the New Testament. In the Kingdom of God we will “eat and...
Video: Jeffrey Tucker Explains Why Capitalism Is About Love
The 2015 Acton Lecture Series got off to a rousing start last week with the arrival of Jeffrey Tucker, Chief Liberty Officer of Liberty.me, to deliver the first lecture of this year’s series, entitled “Capitalism Is About Love.” If you go by the conventional wisdom, that seems to be a counterintuitive statement.Jeffrey Tucker explains how the two are actually bound up together. You can watch the lecture via the video player below, and if you haven’t had a chance to...
The Government Is Hungry: Detroit and ‘The Grapes of Wrath’
Detroit home owners are being put out of their homes, but it’s not because of bankers. Then by who? It’s the Detroit city government seeking to collect back real estate taxes. There are always tax foreclosures, but foreclosures are growing from 20,000 in 2012 to an expected 62,000 in 2015. Who is putting poor people on the streets in Detroit? The government. There is a twist here based on the fact that Detroit homes have an old (and therefore way...
Get Useless: Stewardship in the Economy of Wonder
“This is useless. This is gratuitous. This is wonder.” –Evan Koons When we consider the full realm of Christian stewardship, our minds immediately turn to areas like business, finance, ministry, the arts, education, and so on — the placeswhere we “get things done.” But while each of these is indeed an important area of focus, for the Christian, stewardship also involves creating the space to stop and simply behold our God. Yes, we are called to be active and diligent...
Does Slave Redemption Increase Slavery?
Thousands of girls and women in Iraq and Syria have been captured by the Islamic State and sold into sex slavery. But one Iraqi man is trying to save them by buying sex slaves in order to free and reunite them with their families. As the Christian Post reports, “an Iraqi man, who remains nameless, disguises himself as a human trafficking dealer in order to ‘infiltrate’ the Islamic State and get the militants to sell him sex slaves. But in...
When is a Ban not a Ban? When it’s a Target
When is a ban not a ban? One answer might be when it is based on moral suasion rather than legal coercion. (I would also accept: When it’s a Target.) In this piece over at the Federalist, Georgi Boorman takes up the prudence of a petition to get Target to remove smutty material and paraphernalia related to Fifty Shades from its shelves. Boorman rightly points to the limitations of this kind of cultural posturing. Perhaps this petition illustrates more of...
Why a Christian Anthropology Matters for Liberty and Love
Dorothy Sayers, playwright, novelist and Christian scholar, wrote an important work in the 1930s entitled,Are Women Human?In her essay,shepresents the biblical case for gender equality in a humorous and insightful way, grounding mutuality in theological anthropology. From the Genesis narratives to the new earth of Revelation, she affirms this thesis: We are all human beings, made in the image of God with a job to do. And we do our jobs as a man or a woman. This theological vision...
C.S. Lewis on Mere Liberty and the Evils of Statism
David J. Theroux, founder and president of The Independent Institute and the C.S. Lewis Society of California, discusses the writings of C.S. Lewis and Lewis’s views on liberty, natural law and statism. ...
How ‘Downton Abbey’ Shows Income Inequality Doesn’t Matter
After what seemed to be an interminably long wait, Downton Abbey, a British period drama on PBS, recently returned to America. Many of us who have been hooked on the show for four seasons tune in each Sunday night to watch the new twists in the saga of the Earl and Countess of Grantham, their household, and their servants. But as with most pop culture artifacts, this series about Victorian England is having a subversive effect on the views of...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved