Ferenc Gyurcsány, who, according to his own words, is preparing to become a priest and is so well aware of the church's doctrines that he is regularly confirmed, declared the other day: his party must go with Jesus. Aiming at the South-Eastern political community, he added that they are Jesus, and Orbán is Barabás, the traitor, and the Barabás cannot be allowed to pass.

"We are in a historic struggle. The people call out Barabas. I think that you have to go with Jesus," said Ferenc Gyurcsány, the president of the Democratic Coalition, on the Spirit FM program a few days ago.

Aiming at the South-Eastern political community, he added that they are Jesus, and Orbán is Barabás, the traitor, and the Barabás cannot be allowed to pass. The statement of the leader of the DK is also interesting because he previously expressed himself in the opposite way on religious issues.

Moreover, Ferenc Gyurcsány himself outlined the anti-religious ideology of the left. In one point of his party program announced in 2014, the leader of the DK promised that if they get into government,

the Vatican contract with the Catholic Church is terminated, all ecclesiastical privileges and religious support paid to the churches are terminated.

It is worth noting that the Vatican Treaty - contrary to the lies of left-liberal propaganda - is not an agreement granting some kind of secret privileges, Article I. 2, for example, reads as follows:

The church receives the same level of financial support for the public education institutions it maintains (kindergartens, primary and secondary schools, student dormitories) as the state and local governments that operate similar institutions.

However, Gyurcsány is not only planning to cancel the contract that ensures the equality of rights between believers and non-believers, but he would also withdraw the religious support provided to historical churches, which would practically put their basic functioning in jeopardy.

Moreover, according to the leader of the strongest party of the left, in Hungary, religious beliefs should be the most sacred private matter. It is only incidental that during his prime ministership, Gyurcsány went to the Vatican to scold Hungarian priests, called the sight of praying children blasphemy, and with his party would have abolished the secrecy of confession. In 2006, speaking about his youthful attraction to the priestly profession, he said that he was not only a first-communionist, but also "made a vow for a while", once again casting doubt on his awareness of religious life.

Gergely Karácsony also tried to comply with the previously outlined Gyurcsány ideology, according to whom, for example, it "fits in" if someone knocks into the holy water tank.

"The XXI building in a park in the 20th century is like peeing into the holy water tank in a church, so it fits in after all, it just destroys what we are there for," said the mayor last year on Klubrádio.

But Jobbik also joined the ranks of left-wing parties that insult religion. What's more, it tries to integrate as soon as possible and as easily as possible - at least this is what can be inferred from the fact that the party published a "meme" insulting Christians on Facebook.

Not only politicians, but also some left-liberal artists and journalists follow the Gyurcsány ideology. Cartoonist Gábor Pápai has been making jokes about everything Christian and Hungarian for decades. For most, Müller's "work" depicting Jesus Christ and Cecilia blew the fuse, which is difficult to interpret in any other way as an open blasphemy of Christianity.

The scope of the profession is well demonstrated by the fact that the blasphemous drawing was chosen as the best caricature of 2020 by the caricaturist department of the Hungarian Journalists' Association, and what is even more absurd:

together with Péter Niedermüller from DK, Gábor Pápai also received an anti-racist award from the Association of Hungarian Resistance and Anti-Fascists.

Péter Szegő used a method similar to that of the popes to defame Christians. The publicist of Népszava was angered by the cross on Cecília Müller's necklace.

It may seem completely irrelevant, in any case, if I were the prime minister, I would ask the Ciliké of the Nation to take the cross off his neck during his public appearances. Secularization as such - wrote Szegő on Facebook, who later deleted the post.

The interview with Ferenc Gyurcsány can be viewed here:

Source: Hungarian Nation

Civilians Info:

I can already see Pilate agonizing over whether he should condemn Gyurcsány or Orbán. Well, let's ask the crowd, dear Pilate! For example, the crowd that gathered and listened to a brave young man who demanded free elections and sent home the Russian soldiers who ensured the power of the oppressors. Or the crowd whose protestors stood up for a young prime minister with cockades on their chests and brought another person with them, then formed civil society circles and did not expand until this middle-aged, now mature politician was re-elected as prime minister by two-thirds. Or the crowd that warned the West with a half-million march during the first Peace March to get their hands off Orbán!

Or rather, the crowd that went to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the revolution and was beaten with swords by mounted policemen, beaten and shot with rubber bullets (only in the head and eyes so that they would hurt and remember!) in the footsteps of another prime minister, his wife's grandfather, Antal Apró, whose communist cronies exterminated the religious institutions in Hungary and terror and gunfire were used against the protesters? Or the crowd that doesn't even go out to Gyurcsány's movements today, no matter how they unite from the extreme right to the extreme left, no matter how they would consort with the devil against Orbán, no matter how they promise a communist-globalist heaven.

I see. it includes Pilate in the Credo! Just make your head hurt. Maybe I helped him.

Source and image: Hungarian Nation