Actually, the Church did not become associated with Halloween, Halloween is the descendant of people who were celebrated the vigil of All Saints Day, or in old English, All Hallow's Eve. Thus our modern Halloween comes from a Church celebration.
I'm afraid to say that you do not become a catholic by getting married in a Church. To become a catholic you need to be baptized in a Catholic church.
You become a member of the Catholic Church when you are baptized. Also, you become an adult/full member of the Catholic Church when you receive the sacrament of Confirmation.
The witches and black cats become associated with Halloween as a way of joining in celebration to honor their master, The Devil, Satan known as the beast.
Not as far as the Catholic Church is concerned.
No, the Catholic Church is not Masonic. In fact, Catholics are not suppose to become Masons.
Kate Middleton is not Catholic. She is a member of the Anglican Church (The Church of England).
Yes, everyone is welcome in the Catholic Church
maybe by the Harry Potter movies as they are wizards and witches a normal Halloween costume.
.Catholic AnswerWhen it was brought into existence by Our Blessed Lord when He said, "this is my Church" during the last year of His life on earth.
Roman Catholic AnswerThe Catholic Church remained the Catholic Church. It cannot "become" anything else, as Jesus sent the Holy Spirit to guide it until the end of time. It will remain His Body, it will remain One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic. The Orthodox Church became schismatic (they are in schism from the Catholic Church).
No. Only men are allowed to become Priests in the Catholic Church. Women however can become Nuns. It's just Catholic, not Roman Catholic. Roman is an epithet first commonly used in England after the protestant revolt to describe the Catholic Church. It is never used by the official Catholic Church.
It's just the Catholic Church, not the Roman Catholic Church. Roman is an epithet first commonly used in England after the protestant revolt to describe the Catholic Church. It is rarely used by the Catholic Church.