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#26619 08/24/01 05:21 PM
Joined: Nov 2001
Posts: 341
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Joined: Nov 2001
Posts: 341
This article is from Zenit.org.

The emphasis at the end is mine.

Code: ZE01080807

Date: 2001-08-08

Papal Letter Marks a Hungarian Milestone


VATICAN CITY, AUG. 8, 2001 (Zenit.org).- Without prayer a Christian runs the risk of living a mediocre and superstitious faith, John Paul II states in a letter marking the 1,000th anniversary of Catholicism in Hungary.

In his apostolic letter, addressed to Archbishop Laszlo Paskai of Esztergom-Budapest, primate of Hungary, the Pope highlights the example of King Stephen, a man of prayers.

He explains that the first Hungarian king, who died in 1038, found in the Christian faith "a living fountain" that enabled him to exercise his role of monarch as a "service" to his people.

King Stephen�s lesson for us today, the Pope states, is the need to foster the "spirit of prayer." Without prayer, Christians risk a bland and superstitious faith, especially "in face of the numerous tests that today�s world poses to faith," the Pope writes.

Last summer, Bartholomew I, the ecumenical patriarch of Constantinople, and the patriarchate�s Holy Synod, decided to recognize Stephen of Hungary as a saint of the Orthodox Church.

With Best Wishes to all!
Stefan-Ivan

#26620 08/24/01 08:57 PM
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This was known from last summer, already. It is an indication of nothing more than the reality that this saint lived his life in the undivided church, and is therefore just as much a part of the Orthodox patrimony as St. Patrick, St Gregory the Illuminator, etc.


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