Of course not, being Catholic means that you are serious about following Jesus Christ in the only Church that He founded.
Yes, being baptized in the Catholic faith typically means that you are considered a Catholic for life.
No. Tasmanian Devils eat carrion, which means the dead bodies of animals, as well as live prey which is small, such as up to the size of a wallaby. They would not and could not eat a human being.
it means you pray and are like catholic
I believe it means devils.
The term 'Catholic' means universal. Catholic church is universal because the fullness of salvation is revealed in catholic church. it subsist in Catholic church through the person of Jesus Christ. The church is body of Christ and we all are members.
No, it means "digestion".
No. Tasmanian devils do not wave their tails as a means of communication. This trait is more characteristic of felines.
dont know- something to do with the church! It doesn't necessarily have anything to do with the church. It means "all-embracing". Having a catholic taste in music means you like all music. Some people have a catholic taste in wine, women and song without being in the least religious.
Means u have been to jail
No, calling something a moral agent means that it is capable of making moral decisions and being held morally responsible for its actions. Suffering is a separate aspect of being sentient or having the ability to feel pain.
A person that attends Mass, is not yet a Catholic, but is thinking of becoming one is called a Catechumen which means a learner, a person being instructed preparatory to receiving baptism and being admitted into the Church.
Sedevacantism is the belief that the See of Rome is vacant - that is, they believe that the Pope is not really the Pope. Being Catholic means being in communion with the bishop of Rome, the pope. So if you reject that the pope is the pope, you are not Catholic. Sedevacantists are not members of the Catholic Church, though they would claim to be the only true members. The ritual and theology may be catholic in some sense, or reflective of a particular period in Catholic history, but in itself that does not make a person or a group Catholic.