You would need to check with your pastor, it depends on whether the baptism was valid, I do not know specifics abou the "United Church."
Catholics do not 'take' communion, they 'receive' communion. Yes, you must be a baptized Catholic to receive communion in a Catholic Church. Also, you must have undergone instruction and received your First Holy Communion.
You may never "take" Holy Communion in a Catholic Church. You MAYonlyreceive Holy Communion after you have been baptized, and in the Latin Rite, made your First Confession.
No. In order to be able to partake of the Holy Sacrament of Communion, you must be baptized and christmated(confirmed) in the Church in which you plan to receive the first communion. However, you are unable to be baptized in both churches, as the church in which the child has been baptized for the second baptism, becomes the Church in which they stand in and can only stay in that church, unless they convert to the other church, and lost the "right" to take communion in the church they converted form.
As long as the child is validly baptized, and meets the other requirements, he may make his first Holy Communion.
Any baptized Catholic who has received his/her First Holy Communion can receive communion under both species.
Nobody can take Holy Communion in a Catholic Church, you may only receive Holy Communion from the priest, and then only if you have been baptized in the Catholic Church and previously made your first Confession and First Holy Communion. Bottom line? An Anglican may not take communion in a Catholic Church.
Of course, as long as he has received a valid baptism.
Only if you have converted to Catholicism, been catechized, baptized, and received First Holy Communion in a Catholic Church.
The Catholic church only recognizes one baptism, therefore, if you were baptized protestant, you do not get baptized again if you convert to Catholicism. You will, however, have to go through classes before being able to receive your first communion. If you do this as an adult, you attend RCIA (Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults) and you will receive your communion and confirmation in the same mass.
Attending a Catechism class at your local parish for however long they request (usually 1-2 years); then Baptism (if you aren't Baptized), Confirmation, and First Holy Communion at Easter Vigil.
in a church
They are baptized when they're babies (usually). In about the third grade, they go through The First Holy Communion. Which marks the first time they take communion during church (mass). Then there is confirmation, usually occurring in the eighth grade or shortly after.