Individuals who are sick may be anointed at any time, especially if there is danger of death, please call your local parish to arrange anointing. Occasionally a priest will have a special Mass to which he has added anointing, but this is an individual thing, there is no Church-wide scheduled service for this, again, you would have to speak to your local parish to find out if they do this, and if so, when.
The Mass is the central service of the Catholic Church. Nearly all services, such as weddings and funerals, are incorporated into a Mass.
Nothing replaced the mass as it was and always will be the central manner of worship of the Catholic Church.
The family can ask for a Catholic Mass on behave of the deceased. Just because he was divorced does not mean he did not keep his catholic faith.
Yes, if done with permission of the pastor. A deacon, however, can not say Mass, hear confessions or anoint the sick. He can lead prayer services (such as Stations of the Cross, novenas, etc.) and can baptize and marry couples.
John Joseph Ryan has written: 'St Paul Church, Cambridge, Mass' -- subject(s): Catholic Church, Catholic Church. Archdiocese of Boston (Mass.), History, St. Paul's Church (Cambridge, Mass.)
The Anglican Church is not called the Anglican Catholic Church, and the Catholic Church is not formally known as the Roman Catholic Church even though the Vatican is indeed located in Rome. Your question therefore would more accurately read, can an Anglican priest say Mass at a Catholic Church. The answer is, the Catholic religion does not allow Anglican priests to officiate at their rituals. The Anglican Church, despite being extremely similar to the Catholic Church in most respects, is nonetheless regarded by Catholicism as a heretical schism.
Under normal conditions a Roman Catholic cannot substitute a Coptic Mass, which is an Orthodox Church, for his Sunday obligation to assist at a Catholic Mass unless there is no Catholic Church in the area. However, a Catholic may attend a Coptic wedding or funeral in the same way he may attend a Protestant funeral or wedding.
Mass is specifically a Catholic rite. In the Episcopal Church, they call a similar ritual the Eucharist.
A Catholic has an obligation to attend Mass at a Catholic Church at least every Sunday and Holy Day of Obligation. Baptists are welcome to attend Mass with Catholics, but may not receive the Eucharist. If, in addition to Mass, a Catholic would like to visit a Baptist Church, he or she may do so provided it does not harm his or her faith.
It is the Mass for Christ, read in the Catholic church.
The Catechism of the Catholic Church refers to the Eucharist celebrated in Mass as the "source and summit of the Christian life" (1324).
The Catholic Church burns incense at certain special Masses but has never burned opium.