Pope Now Sees 'He Was Misled' About Hungary, Claims Bishop
- 24 Apr 2023 6:38 AM
- Hungary Matters
Talking to Zoltán Kovács in The Bold Truth About Hungary podcast, the state secretary for international relations and communications, the bishop said the pope was returning the Hungary to visit its Christians and Catholics. This, he added, was encouraging to Hungarian Christians representing and protecting Christian values, which, he added, were also European values.
Kovács noted that Hungary had drawn criticism for talking about Christianity and stating that European values were based on Christian values and foundations.
The European Union’s founders also insisted that Europe’s very existence owed itself to Christianity, he added. The bishop said that people in western Europe, proud of having attained the highest level of democracy, had turned their societies into “nihilistic dictatorship”, and abandoned common sense.
Kovács said the pope’s visit from April 28 to 30 would present an opportunity to reflect on elements of the worldview of the Catholic Church and its head.
The pontiff will meet the President of the Republic, the Prime Minister, high-ranking Hungarian state officials and representatives of the Hungarian Catholic Church and other churches in Hungary, before visiting various institutions caring for the poor, refugees and members of Hungarian minorities.
After Sunday’s papal mass, Francis will visit Pázmány Péter Catholic University.
Referring to the synod of October 2021 which discussed how to adapt the church to the 21st century, the bishop said the church must always renew itself, and this process that Pope Francis launched allowed the free expression of opinions. But, he added, this did not mean the teachings of the Church could change regarding its most fundamental tenets, which were “given by Jesus”.
Hungarians Looking Forward to Welcoming Pope "With Great Love", Tweets President
After his visit to Hungary in 2021, Pope Francis felt that he wanted to spend more time with the Hungarians, Matteo Bruni, the spokesman of the Holy Sea, said on Friday at a briefing in the Vatican, giving an outline of the pontiff’s upcoming visit to the country on April 28-30.
Bruno noted that the Pope had participated at the closing mass of the 52nd International Eucharistic Congress (INEC) in September 2021 in Budapest, and on his way back to the Vatican, he told the journalists accompanying him that he would be happy to return to Hungary “to devote more time to the Hungarians”.
“The current visit to Hungary is the fulfilment of that promise,” Bruni said. He said that the upcoming visit would be Pope Francis’ 41st foreign visit since his investiture in 2013, with 60 countries covered so far.
The pope’s schedule includes six speeches, all to be delivered in Italian. As regards the planned topics of the speeches and homilies, Bruni said that during his 2021 visit, the pope had already spoken about the priests who sacrificed their lives and followers who were persecuted for practicing their faith during the communist dictatorship.
The spokesman noted that the pope had declared Cardinal József Mindszenty, the Archbishop of Esztergom and Primate of Hungary, venerable in 2019. Bruni said that topics to be covered during the visit would include the deportation of Jews during the second world war and a mention of those who had participated in saving lives, including apostolic nuncio Angelo Rotta and Giorgio Perlasca.
He said that coinciding with an extraordinary liturgical period in the weeks after Easter, the trip would be designed to convey the message about the future, hope, openness, and trust for Christians in the current difficult times.
“We will be just few hundred kilometres from Ukraine,” Bruni said, adding that “Pope Francis might also raise his voice for peace in his speeches”.
Katalin Novák, the President of the Republic, said on Twitter on Sunday that Hungarians were looking forward to welcoming Pope Francis “with great love and prayers”.
The president was responding to a message by the pontiff thanking Hungary for preparations for his visit. Novák thanked the pope for his “kind words”, and expressed hope that they could pray together in Hungary “for peace, families and for the renewal of faith, hope and love.”
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