Meet the conclave: Cardinal Péter Erdő
7 Articles
7 Articles
Meet the conclave: Cardinal Péter Erdő
When Péter Erdő was growing up in Budapest in the 1950s, Catholicism was barely tolerated by Hungary’s communist regime. But despite official discouragement, the Erdő family prayed at home and went to church together. His father taught the family’s six children catechesis.Caption: Cardinal Péter Erdő, pictured in Westminster Cathedral in London, England, in 2016. © Mazur/cbcew.org.uk.Later, Erdő realized that his father, a jurist, and his mother…
The archbishop of Budapest, whose faith has been forged by the experience of living under the communist regime, likes the (minoritarian) conservative wing of the College of Cardinals. The cardinal, created cardinal by John Paul II, despite the clear difference of opinions has always avoided the controversy with Francis
In an act full of emotion and faith, the bishop of Santiago del Estero presented himself as a cardinal at the Vatican.
Cardinal Péter Erdő, Primate, Archbishop of Esztergom-Budapest, spoke in Rome about the tasks facing the Church
Péter Erdő: The new pope and the church must fulfill their mission in a dramatic period - The cardinal also prayed for the new head of the church.
Riadas of tourists are confused in the Via della Conciliazione with the groups of nuns who for dozens line the way to the Basilica of St. Peter. There are Filipinos, Spanish or Latin American. In the metro of Ottaviano, already outside the narrow limits of Vatican City, some nuns enjoy an ice cream. With the thermometers exceeding 25 degrees and the sun wreaking havoc, it looks like a stamp of early summer. Next to the parishioners, a gang of gi…
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