I sure hope you mean "pray"; and yes, you can practice prayer as St. Paul suggests, "without ceasing."
No, this is a Catholic ritual.
I am a catholic and we pray in Church to show our respect to God
since it is possible that the baptism practised by the methodist church could be accepted by the catholic church.In the case of the person who ready to accept the catholic faith is ready to accept the catholic faith,the catholic church in this case which is to be handled by a catholic priest will celebrate the rite of acceptance for this methodist person involved into the catholic faith,possibly during the celebration of the mass in a catholic church.
They pray to both.
The Roman Catholic church, The church of england, The methodist church
Roman Catholic.
the "holy catholic [i.e., universal] church" - there is no reference to Roman
You can pray anytime, and anywhere. Special Indulgences are offered if you pray in a Catholic Church.
The " catholic " in the creed has a lower case C..... therefore this is the universal church, not the actual Catholic Church. So catholic = Universal Church Catholic = The Catholic Church ( The one with the Pope )
In addition to Catholicism, Confirmation is also a sacrament in Eastern Orthodoxy, Anglicanism, and Lutheranism. Each tradition has its own theological understanding and practice of Confirmation, but the general purpose is to confirm and strengthen the individual's faith.
a catholic chapel is just a place to pray on your own and its much smaller. But a catholic church is where you pray wit the priest.
Brigham Young never belonged to the Catholic Church. He was a Methodist before converting to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.