Yes, if the other spouse has passed away or the couple has received an annulment of the original marriage.
A Roman Catholic can have a Roman Catholic wedding if he or she received an annullment for their marriage or their spouse died.
Yes. Marriages can be witnessed by the Church in any Liturgical season.
Yes, as long as she does not choose a Catholic Church. She will have to find a church that will perform an interdenominational wedding of divorced persons. The Catholic Church will not.
Assuming no divorce has taken place, which would require an annulment, yes, if you have changed from Orthodox to Catholic it would be possible to renew your wedding vows in a Catholic Church. There would be no need for a full blown wedding, however, as the Catholic Church does accept the sacraments of the Orthodox Church as valid.
No, Roman Catholics are required to be married in a Catholic Church, by a Catholic priest.
Regardless of who they are marrying, Catholics are obligated by their religion to be married in a Catholic Church by a Catholic priest.
As a Catholic, you cannot be validly married anywhere else besides a Roman Catholic church. If you get permission from your Episcopalian Bishop, the Episcopal Church will recognize your marriage in a Roman Catholic church.
Roman Catholic nuns are "married" to Jesus. They may not be married to a living person.
A divorced man/ woman cannot get married in the catholic church again. The sacrament of matrimony can be received only once in the Roman Catholic Church.
Roman Catholic AnswerA Catholic woman who is not married and is of age.
Here is the complete order of the marriage Mass: Catholic Wedding Help.
Roman Catholic AnswerThe best person to ask would be your priest or the secretary at your local Catholic Church.