This Thursday, Pope John Paul II travels to Slovakia
Published:
11 September 2003 y., Thursday
This Thursday, Pope John Paul II travels to Slovakia. It's his 102nd foreign trip as pope and his third to Slovakia; in four days, the ailing 83-year old Pontiff intends to visit as many cities in the small Central European republic and celebrate three masses before hundreds of thousands of believers. The visit will focus on the role of the church in an expanding European Union.
The Catholic Church is doing well in Slovakia. According to the 2001 census, 84 percent of Slovakia's 5.4 million population believe in God; a large majority of no less than 69 percent of them are Catholics. An additional four percent belong to the Unitarian Greek Orthodox Church, which recognises the authority of the Pope in Rome, although believers worship according to the Byzantine rites.
Since the collapse of communism in 1989, churches in Slovakia are crowded; more churches are being built; a growing number of parents are sending their children to catechism classes; and the number of young candidates for priesthood is increasing. The Catholic Church is more than ever the dominant moral authority in the country in discussions on abortion, euthanasia, and the role of the family.
Šaltinis:
polandnews.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Getting on their glad rags, pensioners in the India capital New Delhi stepped out on to the to strut their stuff.
more »
Attempt to reach agreement over the working time directive - which limits workers to 48 hours including overtime - broke down late Monday night (27 April) as MEPs and EU Ministers failed to agree.
more »
She has only been on the job for 100 days, but First Lady Michelle Obama has managed to dazzle the public.
more »
Across Europe the amount of time new mums can have off after the birth of their child varies from 14 to 52 weeks.
more »
The note was written by prisoners at the Nazis' Auschwitz death camp during World War Two and stuffed into a bottle.
more »
Spectators at a Kentucky race course were left shocked after an horrific crash involving a rider-less horse.
more »
As a family in Mexico mourned the death of the latest suspected victim of the swine flu, the deadly virus pushed its way into New Zealand and Israel.
more »
For the seventh time in a row spring will not be only a season of blossoming flowers but also a time when students all over the world can get to know more about the European Union.
more »
Traditional Hungarian herdsmen don the clothes of an age gone by as they mark the start of the summer season by parading their flocks.
more »
The jobless rate is rising faster among the young, underscoring the need for a new long-term strategy to address their plight.
more »