The government’s talking points have also trickled down to priests in the city’s churches.
“It’s not only about opening up doors to the outside but how we can strengthen the church from the inside,” said the Rev. Kazmer Karpati, a priest at a Franciscan church in central Budapest, who said his order had benefited from the largess of the state. He was happy Mr. Orban was meeting the pope, so that “the two better understand each other.”
Some Hungarian clerics worked hard to ensure that the meeting happened and that the pope stayed as long as possible.
Asked about his role in extending the pope’s trip so Francis could meet local authorities, Cardinal Peter Erdo, Hungary’s most powerful prelate, said in an email that “the fact that the Holy Father, despite his brief time, could meet the representatives from the political world,” as well as leaders of other faiths, is a “great sign of his friendship.”
Msgr. Norbert Nemeth, an adviser to the Hungarian Embassy to the Holy See, said he worked with the Vatican on preparing the pope’s trip.