First start to learn your religions carefully.Then if you found out that it has a wrong teaching,you can transfer to Taoism.The church does not insist to stay.The church gives a free will to all believers.
Answer 2:I am Christian (Anglican Catholic) and have been for all my life, 63 years. I started studying Taoism when I was about twenty. I am both Christian and Taoist, and see absolutely no conflict. I have known other people who have very much the same belief system as my own. I don't think it is necessary to convert. You can stay Catholic and add Taoism to your beliefs.
I might suggest that there are a lot of other things Catholics are allowed to believe that are not part of the basic Catholic religion. For example, you might look at Geddes Macgregor's book Reincarnation in Christianity. He was a Catholic theologian who saw no conflict between the two belief systems. Though this does not address Taoism and Catholicism, it does illustrate the latitude allowed in belief systems.
By the way, when The Bible was translated into Chinese, the word "logos," which was in the first sentence of the Gospel According to John, was translated as Tao. So, if you translated from Chinese to English, it would be, "In the beginning was the Tao..."
start going to a catholic church if your devoted get baptised and abandoned your old religion
China
catholic Christianity, christian science, Chinese folk religion, Confucianism.
They wanted religious freedom, which they weren't getting from the Catholic church in England.
If you mean can any Catholic found a religious Order, then the answer is normally no - you need at least the permission of the local Bishop, and preferably the permission of the Vatican, if you want to start an Order that is outside your diocese.
No, he did not start the Catholic Church.
I suppose you mean Taoism. I've seen it spelled Daoism. If so, the answer is China.
The Encyclopedia Britannica lists their start as 1535: Ursuline, Roman Catholic religious order of women founded at Brescia, Italy, in 1535, by St. Angela Merici, as the first institute for women dedicated exclusively to the education of girls.
Joan founded no religious order.
In the 16th century, religious differences led to violence and wars primarily due to conflicts between Catholics and Protestants. The Protestant Reformation challenged the authority of the Catholic Church, causing tension and persecution of religious minorities. This ultimately resulted in a series of wars, such as the French Wars of Religion and the Thirty Years' War, fueled by religious and political divisions.
I'm not trying to start a religious movement, here.
In the Holy Roman empire