Catholics do not TAKE Holy Communion, they may only RECEIVE it from a priest or a licensed Eucharistic Minister.
Only Christians and Catholics do.
Catholics do not take communion, they receive communion.
Sundays. Some churches do it every Sunday, some don't.
.Catholic AnswerCertainly not, first of all, one may never TAKE Holy Communion. One may only RECEIVE Holy Communion, and that only in a Catholic Church and IF one has been to Confession recently. Given those conditions, yes, one may receive Holy Communion at another Catholic Church; certainly not at any heretical sect nor at one of our separated brethren. The former, the various protestant denominations are not actually "Churches" having no valid priesthood, no valid sacraments, etc. To participate in one of their services is to apostatize and to declare that you are no longer a Catholic. The later, the Orthodox Churches, the old Catholic Churches, Polish National Churches, and chapels run by St. Pius X priests are all in schism and are not in inter-communion with the Catholic Church.
They are a place of worship and in the Roman Catholic Church, it is normally the place for doing the Sacrifice (Holy Communion).
There are no requirements or restrictions on what clothing a deaconess should wear for Holy Communion. Many churches have their ministers wear white attire for the distribution of Communion.
A Roman Catholic will never receive communion in other churches.
Communion is usually held during a church service. Some churches have communion one day a month. Others have it only on special times. Ask your church when you will have one.
You may never "take" Holy Communion in a Catholic Church. You MAYonlyreceive Holy Communion after you have been baptized, and in the Latin Rite, made your First Confession.
Nobody can take Holy Communion in a Catholic Church, you may only receive Holy Communion from the priest, and then only if you have been baptized in the Catholic Church and previously made your first Confession and First Holy Communion. Bottom line? An Anglican may not take communion in a Catholic Church.
Some churches offer communion during Ash Wednesday mass and some churches do not. Some people feel that the ashes should be the centerpiece of the mass and not the Eucharist (communion). It is a choice of preference.
Some churches have enough money to purchase it from outside. Many of those purchase it from certain convents where nuns make the wafers. Other churches with less funding have volunteers prepare unleavened bread for communion.