The Orthodox church will on Sunday take the unprecedented step of canonizing someone already revered as a saint by Roman Catholics, amid ceremonies marking Hungary's millennium as a nation state.
Published:
22 August 2000 y., Tuesday
Constantinople Patriarch Bartolomaios I will formally announce the decision of the Orthodox bishops to canonize Stephen I -- Hungary's founding monarch -- as an Orthodox saint, Cardinal Istvan Paskai told reporters this week.
Stephen I, the ruler of Hungary between 997-1038, was canonized by the Catholic Church in 1081. During his lifetime he campaigned to convert and settle nomadic Hungarian tribes and asked to be crowned by Pope Sylvester III, setting up a Christian state here in the year 1000.
Religious fervor is expected to grip Hungary from Sunday, when nationwide celebrations begin to mark the 1,000th anniversary of the foundation of their nation.
Precious relics -- fragments of the skull of Saint Stephen I (969-1038 AD) and his right hand -- arrived earlier this week on loan from a monastery in Dubrovnik, Croatia, where they have been kept for at least the past 450 years.
And after a break of 62 years, a Papal legate will attend the celebrations. Cardinal Angelo Sodano, representing Pope John Paul II, will read out a message from the pope to the Hungarian people.
Some 67 percent of Hungary's population of 10 million are Catholics, with only a minority in the Orthodox church. There was a rejuvenation of all religions when multi-party democracy was restored in Hungary in 1990, following 43 years of persecution under the Soviet satellite regime.
St. Stephen's relics will be carried in a procession through the streets of Budapest on Sunday and into the parliament building where the monarch's crown is on display.
Šaltinis:
Central Europe Online
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Until recently, the French assumed they had solved the issue of gays and marriage in a most civilized manner
more »
The book is expected to sell millions of copies worldwide
more »
An architect specializing in hypermarket design has angered some clerics in Poland, an almost exclusively Roman Catholic country, but won support from others with an idea to put chapels in shopping malls
more »
Panel overturns parliamentary vote against impeached leader
more »
Thousands of demonstrators gathered on the streets of Lodz on Monday to protest against the shooting deaths of two people
more »
In many countries, "e-government" is more political rhetoric than hard reality
more »
Prague city centre looks like a mini-european union this Friday
more »
Protests against European economic summit draw about 3,000 in Poland
more »
The Czech government took a first step towards legalising prostitution on Wednesday when cabinet approved a proposal to license sex trade workers
more »
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld yesterday said the Pentagon was not considering a return of the military draft
more »