Yes, if you have gone through the annulment process. The Catholic Church view marriges in other types of churces as valid marriges, unless one or both of the spouses was Catholic. If this is not the case, the annulment process is much longer and more complicated.
If you wish to be married in the Catholic Church and your first marriage was in the church, you will need to apply for an annulment (Catholic divorce) before you can remarry in the church. If you wish to marry in the protestant church, they do not have any laws that I know of that would prevent you from marrying in their church. If you have a civil marriage and no church marriage, then you can get married in the Catholic Church since civil marriages are not recognized as a holy sacrament and the covenant with God did not take place.
Only one as far as I know: Joseph Goebbels. His sin? Marrying a Protestant.
because the catholic church wouldn't let Henry viii divorce Catherine of aragon so he left the church and made a new one
protestant ...after the protestant reformation...but catholic before it....I think Henry changed it because his wife would bear him no male children and he wanted a divorce but the catholic church did not allow it. so he changed the religion and they were alot of bad thing going on too...
No. The Protestant Church began as a division away from Roman Catholic Church in the 14th century. The central ideas of the churches are similar, but the Protestant Church has altered the original Catholic Bible and disagrees with some Catholic ideas, such as confession.
The cross in a Catholic Church is usually a crucifix, whereas the cross in a Protestant church is just a plain cross.
AnswerYes, provided the Catholic Church grants an annulment of the marriage after the divorce becomes final.
Henry VIII broke from the Catholic church to divorce his first wife Katherine of Aragon.
Regardless of who they are marrying, Catholics are obligated by their religion to be married in a Catholic Church by a Catholic priest.
yes as long as your not the bride or groomANSWER: MAYBE. If a Catholic priest is a celebrant along w/the protestant minister, then Yes. If not, then actually no. . .b/c the Catholic is committing a grave sin by marrying a non-catholic in a non-catholic church w/out the consent/participation/BLESSING of his/her OWN church -- the Catholic Church. Need to talk w/a catholic priest and or diocese.
The Protestant church separated from the Catholic church during the Renaissance.
No.AnswerIf you mean 'catholic' with a small 'c', then yes. the word 'catholic' simply means 'universal' and so the Protestant Church is part of the universal Christian Church worldwide. If you mean 'Catholic' with a large 'C' - this usually refers to the Roman Catholic Church and, though the Protestant Church is part of the catholic (universal) church, it is not part of the Catholic (Roman Cattholic) church as this is a separate denomination.