Retired bishop becomes assistant parish priest

Bishop Sebastianappan Singaroyan, who resigned as the head of Salem diocese for health reasons, has moved to a parish to work as an assistant pastor.

Pope Francis on March 9 accepted the resignation of the 68-year-old bishop and appointed a diocesan administrator.

Bishop Singaroyan, who resigned seven years before the statutory age of retirement for a bishop, says he wants to serve his people as an assistant pastor.

He left the bishop’s house on March 11 after 19 years as the prelate of the diocese in Tamil Nadu State. He now lives in Karpur Annai Velankanni substation church on the outskirts of Salem city. He went there riding his motorbike.

“The staff at Bishop’s House gave him farewell with tears,” says a Facebook post.

Bishop Singaroyan was known for his simple ways. When he was the bishop he used to travel by bicycle to nearby communities and by motorbike to far distances.

Cardinal Re claims Cardinal Zen is at odds with John Paul II, Benedict XVI on China

The newly-appointed Dean of the College of Cardinals purportedly sent a letter to cardinals on February 26 claiming that the China-Vatican deal deal represents the minds of St John Paul II and of Benedict XVI, and that Cardinal Zen is mistaken in his opposition to the deal.

An Italian text of the letter from Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, dated on Feb. 26, was published on Feb. 29 by La Nuova Bussola Quotidiana.

“I desire first of all to emphasize that, in their approach to the situation of the Catholic Church in China, there is a profound symphony of the thought and of the action of the last three Pontificates, which — out of respect for the truth — have favoured dialogue between the two parties and not contrariety,” Cardinal Re wrote.

“Cardinal Zen has affirmed several times that it would be better to have no Accord then than a ‘bad Accord.’ The three last Popes did not share this position and supported and accompanied the drafting of the Accord that, at the present moment, seemed to be the only one possible,” he stated.

Cardinal Joseph Zen Zekiun, Bishop Emeritus of Hong Kong, has been an outspoken opponent of the 2018 agreement between the Vatican and the People’s Republic of China regarding episcopal appointments. The Church in mainland China has been divided for some 60 years between the underground Church, which is persecuted and whose episcopal appointments are frequently not acknowledged by Chinese authorities, and the Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association, a government-sanctioned organization.

Korean Christians seek action against virus-spreading sect

Mainstream Christian groups in South Korea have sought action against a neo-Christian sect accused of spreading the coronavirus that has claimed the lives of 54 people in the country.

When the virus began to spread in mid-February, authorities traced the infection to people who attended crowded prayer programs of a sect called Shincheonji Church of Jesus in the Daegu area.

Two mainstream Church groups — the National Council of Churches in Korea and the United Christian Churches of Korea — have asked the government to investigate leaders of the Shincheonji Church.

“The government should clarify facts about the spread of the infectious disease, arrest Shincheonji leader Lee Manhee and other leaders and investigate their actions,” they said in a joint statement on March 6.

The Protestant groups alleged that the secretive doomsday cult had been intentionally withdrawing information about its 200,000 followers, resulting in the spread of the infection.

According to South Korea’s Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, Shincheonji followers accounted for almost 60 percent of 7,513 cases in the country, most centered in Daegu, the base of the controversial sect.

The death toll had reached 54 on March 10, the government body said.

The Protestant groups said the Shincheonji sect is trying to buy more time to manipulate its list of followers.

“The majority of Shincheonji believers are not only the victims of this incident but also the victims of faith, which is a cult and fundamentally fake,” the groups said.

Sri Lankan cardinal prepared to launch protests

Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith says he is ready to launch street protests if Sri Lanka’s government does not bring the culprits behind last year’s Easter bombings to book.

He said the administration has not taken action regarding the Easter Sunday suicide bombings that killed about 300 people, including 40 foreign nationals, and injured at least 500.

“The most senior person in the government should have been brought to the Criminal Investigation Department and question-ed if he had been aware in advance of the Easter bomb blasts,” said Cardinal Ranjith on March 8 at Tewatta Church.

“There are reports that police officers investigating the Easter Sunday suicide bomb blasts are currently being transferred.”

The cardinal said the government should publish all the interim committee reports on the bomb blasts.

Pakistan’s PM fails to defend rights of minorities

When Imran Khan took office as Prime Minister of Pakistan in August 2018, persecuted Christians in the Muslim-majority nation expected a policy change for the better.

However, the 67-year-old former cricket captain did not live up to their expectations. On the contrary, violence against Christians continued uninterrupted, allegedly with the tacit support of the establishment.

The latest victim in the long chain of violence was a 22-year-old Christian youth from Punjab province. Saleem Masih was beaten black and blue for cleaning himself in a well owned by a Muslim. He died of his injuries three days later on Feb. 28.

Rights activists like Sabir Michael say religious minorities in Pakistan have become an easy target for Islamic fundamentalists because of their poverty in all areas – social, economic, cultural and political.

AsiaBibi: ‘Freed Because of Jesus’

Asia Bibi is a Pakistani Catholic woman who was sentenced to death in 2010 for blasphemy against Islam. After more than eight years in prison, she was acquitted by the Supreme Court of Pakistan in 2018.

“I was accused because of the name of Jesus and I knew I would be freed because of Jesus,” Bibi said at a Paris press conference.

Bibi said that during her time on death row, her faith “was always strong because I knew that God was with me, God never leaves you alone, he always accompanies you.”

Together with French journalist Anne-Isabelle Tollet, Bibi has written her autobiography, Enfin Libre (Free at Last). The English edition is due out in September.

“My parents told me that and I knew that something would happen one day,” she said.

During her incarceration, even when she was sentenced to death by hanging, Bibi said she prayed to God for His help to overcome her ordeal.

“If you trust in God, your faith becomes stronger,” she said.

“I knew I was going to be released because I was accused because of the name of Jesus and I would be freed because of Jesus,” Bibi said. A mother of five, Bibi especially thanked all the people who prayed for her during her years in prison, especially Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI.

Pakistani Christian man killed by Muslim landowner for “dirtying well”

A Pakistani Christian man has been tortured to death for washing himself at a well belonging to a Muslim landowner, according to an organisation dedicated to highlighting and opposing persecution of Christians in Pakistan.

Saleem Masih, 22, was a labourer from Baguyana village, Kasur District, near Lahore. On 25 February, after unloading a farm vehicle, Masih washed himself in a nearby well. When the owner of the well, Sher Dogar, discovered he was a Christian, he began to beat Masih with a stick, shouting anti-Christian slurs.

Masih was dragged to a cattle farm and beaten with sticks and iron rods; with his hands tied and feet chained, his captors rolled a thick iron rod over his whole body, causing multiple fractures in his ribs and left arm. After being tortured in this manner for hours, Masih fell unconscious from the pain.

The following morning, the local police gave Masih’s location to his family, who found the unconscious Masih, severely injured, lying where he had been tortured. The police, who had been called to the farm by Dogar, encouraged the family not to take the issue further. Dogar asserted that Masih had committed a crime by dirtying his well water and so he had been justly punished. Masih died from his wounds at Lahore’s General Hospital on 28 February.

Kasur district is known for violent persecution of Christians by Muslims. In 2014 Sajjad Mesih and his wife Shama, a Christian couple in their 30s, were burned alive in a brick kiln by a Muslim mob for allegedly desecrating pages of the Qu’ran. Shama was expecting her fifth child.

There are around four million Christians in Pakistan, 2% of the total population of 200 million.

Chinese campaigns to control Christianity worsened in 2019: Watchdog

The Chinese government’s campaign to develop “religion with Chinese characteristics” has increased persecution of the country’s Christians, the human rights watchdog China Aid has said.

A 53-page report released on Feb. 28 by the Texas-based NGO accuses Chinese officials of destroying churches, imposing strict regulations on religion, and encouraging both non-religious people and officially recognized churches to inform on illegal house churches.

Government policies “encourage reports of illegal religious activities, mainly targeting house churches,” it said.

Covid-19: Religious leaders in India urge precautions

Two Catholic prelates and a Hindu religious leader were among those calling for precautions in the wake of growing scare over coronavirus or COVID-19.

Cardinal Oswald Gracias, president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of India, has asked his people to take five precautionary steps during religious services until April 12, the Easter Sunday, to check the spread of the virus.

Archbishop Kuriakose Bharanikulangara of Faridabad Syro-Malabar Church has issued 10-point guidelines for his people spread over five states to follow during the epidemic scare.

Meanwhile, Mata Amritanandamai, a Hindu religious leader popularly known as the hugging saint, has stopped meeting followers in her ashram in Vallikavu in Kerala’s Kollam.

Don Bosco Church holds ‘Differently Abled Day’

Don Bosco Church organized a programme for the disabled persons in and around the city which was named ‘Differently Abled Day’ at the parish located at Lingarajapuram, Bengaluru, recently. ‘We care so we share’ was chosen as the theme of the day. The jointly-initiated mission had focused on the empowerment of persons with disabilities for inclusive, equitable and sustainable development. They also pledged to leave no one behind.