Cardinal Erdő announces that a pilgrimage of Hungarians to the Vatican will take place in April 2024
The cardinal said the pope welcomed that his visit to Hungary had made a lasting impact on Hungarian society and education.
The cardinal said the pope welcomed that his visit to Hungary had made a lasting impact on Hungarian society and education.
Kornél Fábry was until now director of the Pastoral Institute of the Hungarian Episcopal Conference.
The foreign minister said Hungarian schools are “under pressure by various civil groups trying to capture them under the name of godless ideologies".
“Making peace requires sacrifices … but peace and harmony yield more benefits than what we give up through restricting our unbridled ambitions,” Cardinal Erdő said.
Hungary and personally PM Orbán have provided valuable support for oppressed and persecuted Christians all over the world.
The Catholic Church has announced they will remain open amid the second wave of the Coronavirus. The Reformed Church has decided to close churches and asks for attendance online.
Miklós Soltész, State Secretary at the Prime Minister’s Office, said the government had contributed 42 million HUF (EUR 129,000) to the Atia church reconstruction project after it was struck by lightning and burnt down in 2016.
The first Hungarian Mass was held on January 27th and will continue once a month moving forward
Pope Francis will visit the Roman Catholic pilgrimage site in Csíksomlyó/Șumuleu in Transylvania during his upcoming trip to Romania
“Europe’s future lies in recapturing its Christian roots which still constitute the most important community-building power that any town or country can have," PM Orbán said