After the establishment of the
People's Republic of China in 1949, the
Chinese Communist Party sought for ways to bring religions in alignment with
its ideology. While all religions were seen as superstitious, Christianity had the added challenge of being foreign. Efforts were made by Chinese Protestants in May 1950 in a meeting with Premier
Zhou Enlai. This resulted in the penning of the "
Christian Manifesto" that condemned foreign imperialism and argued for building a Chinese Protestant church apart from foreign control. This was based in part on earlier Protestant missiological strategy of creating an indigenous church based on the so-called "
three-self principles": self-government, self-support, and self-propagation. In December 1950, Chinese Catholics followed suit, with Father Wang Liangzuo in north
Sichuan province, penning the "Guangyuan Manifesto" and signed by some 500 Catholics. It declared: Other Catholic manifestos followed, such as the "Chongqing Manifesto" published in January 1951 with over 700 signatures. Similar to the Protestant "Christian Manifesto", the Catholic manifestos spoke of the need for a "three-self" or "three-autonomies" (as it was translated into English), even though this was previously only part of the Protestant missiological literature and not discussed among Catholic missionaries. Premier Zhou Enlai met with Chinese Catholics and spoke of his appreciation for the sacrifices of the Catholic Church and its missionaries, and the need to remain united with Rome on spiritual matters. But he also encouraged the development of the "three-self".
Pope Pius XII issued
Cupimus Imprimis (1952) and
Ad Sinarum Gentes (1954) praising Chinese Catholics for their loyalty and underscoring the importance of martyrdom.
Ad Sinarum Gentes additionally spoke out against the "three-self", arguing that independence would make a church no longer "Catholic". In July 1957, 241 Chinese Catholics from all parts of China, including laity, priests, and bishops, convened a meeting in Beijing with officials from the CCP and the
Religious Affairs Bureau. They approved the creation of the CCPA with Archbishop
Ignatius Pi Shushi of Shenyang elected as president. By early 1958, the first Catholic bishops were illicitly appointed without reference to Rome or the Pope. In June 1958, Pope Pius XII issued
Ad Apostolorum Principis, refusing to recognize any consecrations performed without prior Vatican approval. The question of consecrating bishops would be a major sticking point in Sino-Vatican relations ever since. With the rise of the
Anti-Rightist Campaign and the
Cultural Revolution, all public religious activities came to an end and organizations like the CCPA were shut down. However, as
Deng Xiaoping's reforms enabled a restoration of religions in the 1980s, the CCPA once again became the official state-sanctioned organization for Catholicism in China. A sizable population of Chinese Catholics remain as part of the so-called "
underground church", seen as "Vatican loyalists", and who boycott masses said by CCPA priests. The CCPA does not recognize the proclamation of the
dogma of the
Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary by Pope Pius XII in 1950, canonizations from 1949 onward (e.g. the canonization of
Pope Pius X), Vatican declarations on even well-established devotional piety (e.g. on the
Sacred Heart of Jesus or on Mary as Queen), and the
Second Vatican Council (1962–1965). In practice, however, the Catholic Church in China uses Chinese translations of the documents of the Second Vatican Council, of the
1983 Code of Canon Law, of the 1992
Catechism of the Catholic Church (revised in 1997) and of the 1970
Roman Missal. These had at first to be imported from
Taiwan and
Hong Kong, but have been printed locally for some years. In 1980, the CCP
Central Committee approved a request by the
United Front Work Department to create a national conference for the religious groups. The CCPA was one of five such religious groups, which also included the
Islamic Association of China, the
Chinese Taoist Association, the
Three-Self Patriotic Movement, and the
Buddhist Association of China. With some of the CCPA's roles given to these new bodies, it was envisioned that the CCPA would be a connection between church and government, with the
Chinese Catholic Bishops' Conference representing the bishops and the Chinese Church Administrative Committee would handle the internal affairs of the church, and in turn by led by the Chinese Catholic Representatives Conference. In 1981, the CCPA sent a delegation to an international event for the first time, with a group of three bishops, including
Michael Fu Tieshan, attending an ecumenical meeting organized by the
Canadian Council of Churches. In 2018, the CCPA's parent organization, the State Administration for Religious Affairs, was absorbed into the United Front Work Department during a series of
institutional reforms. ==Appointment of bishops==