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Pope hopes deal with China on bishop appointments will be renewed soon
- Opponents of the secret agreement which comes up for renewal in October include former Hong Kong archbishop Joseph Zen
- Pope Francis compares the accord with the Vatican’s Cold War efforts to keep the church alive in Eastern Europe
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Pope Francis is hopeful the Vatican’s secret and contested agreement with China on the appointment of bishops can be renewed in October, saying the church “takes the long view”.
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The 85-year-old pontiff acknowledged that the agreement is not ideal, but defended it as the statecraft of working with the little available and trying to improve it.
“Diplomacy is like that. When you face a blocked situation, you have to find the possible way, not the ideal way, out of it,” Francis said.
“Diplomacy is the art of the possible and of doing things to make the possible become a reality.”
The deal, which was first struck in 2018 and comes up for renewal every two years, was a bid to ease a long-standing divide across mainland China between an underground flock loyal to the Pope and a state-backed official church.
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Both sides now recognise the Pope as supreme leader of the Catholic Church.
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