Well, the biger difference is that the catholics follow mostly their religion and the other cristians follow just The Bible and god not a religion. And the similarity is that they both obey the same god.
yes because the catholic church was once unirversal, then many trad. stated to branch out different christian faiths.
In total, around 75% of the world's Christians are Catholic. If you add on the Orthodox and Armenian Communions, whose differences with Catholicism are mainly to do with 11th century politics, the total comes to over 85%.
Non-Catholic Christians are either from the Orthodox Church or from one of the numerous Protestant denominations.
The Orthodox Churches and the Catholic Church were once united. The Orthodox Churches separated from the Catholic Church over political and doctrinal differences.
No way he is serbian and serbians are orthodox Christians.
I assume you mean Roman Catholic. If so, then: No, Greece is largely Greek Orthodox. As an anglo-catholic I believe that Orthodox Christians are members of a valid branch of the one, holy catholic and apostolic church. But they are not roman catholic.
In Croatians are Catholic Christians, Serbs are Orthodox Christians, Bosnian are mostly muslims, Macedonians are Christians like Bulgarians and Romanians, in Greek we have Orthodox and Catholics Christians, Montenegrians are Christians and Slovenians there are Christians and there is muslims. I think so ;)
Worldwide roughly 60% of Christians are Catholic, roughly 20% are Protestant and roughly 20% are Orthodox.
Roman Catholic AnswerYes, all Catholics, including the Orthodox, observe all seven Sacraments.
Only Catholic and Orthodox Churches use statues and pictures of Jesus or of the saints to help them pray. Protestant Churches do not, considering the use of icons akin to idolatory.
We Serbs are Orthodox Christians. I am a Serbian so i should know and I do. Serbia has many major religious groups in it, Islam, Orthodox Christians, Roman Catholic are all very large.
The three major religious groups in Bosnia are Bosniaks (Muslims), Serbs (Orthodox Christians), and Croats (Catholics). Bosniaks adhere to Islam, Serbs are Orthodox Christian, and Croats are predominantly Catholic. These religious differences have historical and cultural significance in addition to shaping individual identities and communal relations in Bosnia.
Coptic Christians are divided into Orthodox Coptics, Catholic Coptics, and protestant Coptics, the first two would have a Catholic Mass, the protestant Coptics have lost the power to celebrate the Eucharist.