The only 'seafood' not acceptable would be whale, seal or sea lion meat as they are all warm blooded animals. All other fish, shrimp or shellfish are acceptable.
Roman Catholic AnswerCatholics abstain from meat on Fridays to honor the day on which Our Blessed Lord offered His life on the cross for our salvation.
Roman Catholics may not eat meat during a day of fast (Ash Wednesday, the Fridays of Lent, etc.) Otherwise, Catholics have no dietary restrictions.
Eat meat on fridays
On Fridays, we fast; we do not eat meat. Apart from this, we can eat anything we please.
Roman Catholic AnswerThat would be ill-informed Roman Catholics, disaffected Roman Catholics, and liberal Roman Catholics. The Church still requires one to abstain from meat on Fridays. In certain countries (the United States is one) you may give up something other than meat, for a good reason, although as this as been so much abused, and misunderstood, some bishops are returning to the Vatican's recommendation to not eat meat on Fridays. For a complete discussion of this please read Pope Paul VI's apostolic constitution on fasting and abstinence at the link below:
Yes, though they cannot eat meat on Fridays during Lent, eggs are allowed to be consumed by Roman Catholics on these days
Roman Catholic AnswerUkranian Catholics ARE Roman Catholics, so NO, they Mass if not like Roman Catholics it is Roman Catholic.
The main religion is Christianity (Roman Catholic and Protestant). The main effect on food is that many Roman Catholics do not eat meat on Fridays and some other days).
Roman Catholics normally refer to themselves are Catholics or Roman Catholics. Sometimes they use a name associated with a religious if more clarity is desired.
Roman Catholic AnswerCatholics abstain from meat on Fridays to honor the day on which Our Blessed Lord offered His life on the cross for our salvation.
Most are Roman-Catholics Most are Roman-Catholics
None. Roman Catholics are Christian.