No, of course there are no satanic symbols in the Catholic Church. Why? Because the Catholic Church is the Mystical Body of Christ (see St. Paul) and is guided by the Holy Spirit and guaranteed by God until the end of the world.
No, there are no satanic symbols in the Catholic Church, such an idea is preposterous.
I will assume you are talking about the inverted cross?? This is the symbol of St Peter who asked to be crucified inverted as he thought himself unworthy to be killed like Christ. Of course St Peter is (supposedly) the first pope of the Catholic church hence his symbol everywhere.
I don't think so.
There are no satanic churches located in Kitchener, or anywhere else in the world; besides the Church of Satan, which is located in New York, U.S.
welli think that she is a satanic and so a lisbian
You can only get married in a Catholic Church when the union is not contrary to the teachings of the Catholic Church.
The " catholic " in the creed has a lower case C..... therefore this is the universal church, not the actual Catholic Church. So catholic = Universal Church Catholic = The Catholic Church ( The one with the Pope )
In a Catholic church, the priest can not actually stop a person from taking communion during the mass, so really any one can go up and take communion. Now people in the Episcopal church and Catholic church both believe in Transubstantiation. This is the idea that the bread and wine are turned into the body and blood of Christ by God when the priest prays to God to do so. That is the main reason why the Catholic church does not want other Christians to receive communion if they are attending a Catholic church because most Protestant sects only see the bread and wine as symbols, and do not believe in Transubstantiation. But since Episcopals believe in it, they should be able to take communion in a Catholic church without that problem.
The Catholic Church was the only church in the Middle Ages and the pope ruled the church and monarchies of Europe.
Aidan of Lindisfarne is honored in the Catholic Church, and also in the Anglican Communion, the Episcopal Church, the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Lutheran Church, so it is possible that a church named after him could be Catholic or of another denomination.
Unfortunately, the Church has little control over the name Catholic and it is hijacked all the time by groups that are NOT in union with Rome and, therefore, not truly Catholic. A few examples: The American Catholic Church, The American Charismatic Catholic Church, the Polish National Catholic Church. Calling oneself something does not make it so.
The Ukrainian Catholic Church is in union with the Holy Father and the Roman Catholic Church, so there should be no problem at all with a child baptized in that rite of the Church attending a Roman Catholic school.
No. A Catholic man can only remarry - if he is in fact eligible to do so - in a Catholic church via a Catholic ceremony presided over by a Catholic priest.
The English Catholic Church is just that, a Catholic Church in union with the pope in Rome. It is no different from any Catholic Church elsewhere in the world except that the language used is English. While the Church of England (Anglican Church) claims to be "Catholic" they are not in union with the pope in Rome so are considered as a Protestant denomination and not Catholic.