The 'Hungarian Greek Catholic Church' is a
Byzantine Rite ''
sui juris''
particular Church of the
Catholic Church that uses
Hungarian in the liturgy.
History
Some see
Hungary's Greek Catholics, originally concentrated in what is now northeastern Hungary, as chiefly of Hungarian ethnic origin. It is also supposed that, soon after the devastation of the 13th-century
Mongol invasion of Europe, Christians from the
Carpathian Mountains (Ruthenians and Romanians) settled in that region. Serbs fleeing the Turkish advance arrived later in what was then Hungary, but most stayed in the area that is now part of Serbia. Later still, when the Turks were driven back from
Vienna in 1683 and from
Buda and central Hungary in 1686,
Ruthenians and
Slovaks settled in the abandoned lands of Hungary. They were cared for by the
Ruthenian Byzantine Rite Eparchy of
Mukacheve (Hungarian: Munkács). In the 18th century many
Hungarian Protestants were converted to Catholicism, adopting the Byzantine Rite rather than the Latin.
Perhaps largely because of this last element, Byzantine Hungarians began to use the
Hungarian language in their liturgy. A translation of the Liturgy of Saint
John Chrysostom for private study was published in 1795. A book containing the parts of the liturgy that the people sing appeared in 1862. Representatives of 58 Hungarian-speaking parishes met in 1868 and set up an organization to promote the liturgical use of the Hungarian language and the establishment of a separate eparchy. 1882 saw the publication, without formal ecclesiastical approval, of a Hungarian translation of the Liturgy of Saint John Chrysostom for actual use, which was soon followed by Hungarian translations of other liturgical texts. Finally, on
8 June 1912,
Pope Pius X established the Eparchy of
Hajdúdorog for the 162 Hungarian-speaking Greek Catholic parishes. He limited the use of Hungarian to non-liturgical functions, requiring the clergy to use
Greek in the liturgy, but granted an interval of three years for the change of language to be effected. Because of the outbreak of the
First World War, this interval was prolonged indefinitely, and use of Hungarian has continued.
The change of national frontiers after the First World War led to the reduction of the territory of the Eparchy of Hajdúdorog from the 168 parishes to which it had grown to only 90. Within Hungary there were also 21 parishes of the Eparchy of
Prešov and one of the Eparchy of Mukačevo. On
4 June 1924, these were brought together as the new Exarchate of
Miskolc, at first - because at that time they still used Church Slavonic in the liturgy - classified as
Ruthenian,but now considered part of the Hungarian Greek Catholic Church.
The territory of the eparchy at first corresponded to that of the
Latin Archdiocese of
Eger (eastern Hungary) and
Budapest. But its jurisdiction was extended on
17 July 1980 to the whole of Hungary.
A small number of Hungarian Greek Catholics have emigrated to
North America, where their few parishes are aggregated, in the
United States of America, to the
Ruthenian Byzantine Metropolia, and, in
Canada, to the
Ukrainian eparchies.
Internal Links
★
Byzantine Discalced Carmelites
Sources
★ ''Oriente Cattolico'' (Vatican City: The Sacred Congregation for the Eastern Churches, 1974)
★ ''
Annuario Pontificio''
External links
★
Eastern Catholic Pastoral Association of Southern California on the Hungarian Byzantine Catholic Church
★
Catholic Churches