Nyírascád is a religious anomaly in Hungary.
Of Nyírascáds 4,400 residents, 2,500 are Greek Catholic,
900 are Roman Catholic, 700 are Calvinist, 90 are Baptist and there are a small
number of Jehovahs Witnesses and some atheists. In contrast, in all of
Hungary, 52 percent of the population is Roman Catholic, 16 percent Calvinist,
3 percent Lutheran and 3 percent Greek Catholic, with the other 26 percent
either practicing other religions or unaffiliated. Most of the countrys Greek
Catholics are in northeastern Hungary, which explains their high numbers in
Nyírascád.
In the year 1000 Stephen, a Christian convert, became
Hungarys first king. He declared as official the faith as observed in Rome,
but allowed those who followed the Greek rites of Byzantium to hold on to
their faith. Most of Hungarys Byzantine Christians were wiped out in the
13th-century Mongol invasion of Europe. But soon afterward, Byzantine
Christians from the Carpathian Mountains (Ruthenians and Romanians) settled in
the region. Since then, northeastern Hungary has been the historical and
spiritual center for the countrys 282,000 Greek Catholics.
While Greek Catholics, since the 17th century, may be the
dominant faith community in Nyírascád, others also have a strong presence. The
oldest religious structure in the region, dating to the 13th century, became a
Calvinist church in 1534.
Nearby Debrecen was the center of the Hungarian Reformation.
There was once a significant Jewish presence. In 1941, Nyírascád had 198 Jewish
residents, but today it has none. (More than 560,000 of the countrys 825,000
Jews were killed in the Holocaust.) The villages synagogue is now a Baptist
church.
As Greek Catholics became an accepted part of Hungarian
society, they lobbied for the use of the Hungarian language in the liturgy. In
1900, a group of Greek Catholic Hungarians presented Pope Leo XIII with a
petition asking him to approve the use of Hungarian and also to create a
distinct eparchy for them. Twelve years later, Pope Pius X established the
Eparchy of Hajdúdorog for the 162 Greek Catholic parishes that spoke Hungarian.
But he limited the use of Hungarian to nonliturgical functions, requiring the
clergy to use Greek. This was never enforced.
The Eparchy of Hajdúdorog, which originally encompassed
eastern Hungary and Budapest, saw its jurisdiction expanded in 1980 to include
all the countrys Greek Catholics. A small number of Greek Catholic Hungarians
have immigrated to North America. Their few parishes are a part of the
Ruthenian Byzantine Metropolia in the United States and the Ukrainian eparchies
in Canada.