The Catholic term 'blessed sacrament' refers to the body and blood of Christ. More specifically, referring to the Wafer and Wine that is often used in church.
.Roman Catholic AnswerSince "Real Presence" is the term used to describe what the Council of Trent was saying "in the sacrament of the most Holy Eucharist is contained truly, really, and substantially the body and blood, together with the soul and divinity of our Lord Jesus Christ, and consequently the whole Christ" (Denzinger 1636, 1640), yes, the Real Presence only refers to the Blessed Sacrament.
The one referred to as the 'Blessed Sacrament' is usually the Eucharist or Holy Communion also called the 'Lord's Supper.' The Blessed Sacrament is another name for the Eucharist, which is the Body and Blood, Soul and Divinity of Christ, given to the Church at the Last Supper and at every Mass.
The term for the prayers said for a dying person is "Last Rites" or "Sacrament of the Anointing of the Sick." It is a Catholic sacrament performed at the time of death that includes prayers, anointing with oil, and the reception of the Eucharist.
Sacramento means "holy sacrement" in Spanish. In either 1799 or 1808, the Spanish explorer Gabriel Moraga discovered and named the Sacramento Valley and the Sacramento River after the Spanish term for 'sacrament;' specifically, after "the Most Holy Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ", referring to the Roman Catholic sacrament of the Eucharist.
It refers to the Catholic church's reaction to reverse (or counter) the Protestant Reformation.
No there wasn't. The term "Blessed Mother Mary" comes from the Catholic faith. And though Mary was blessed above all women, in that she carried the Baby Jesus, she was not important in any other way to our salvation. We cannot pray to her for she was as we are, a person in need of the Lord as well.
The Catholic Religion teaches that once a Catholic always a Catholic whether practicing or not!Roman Catholic AnswerA Catholic who does not believe in all the beliefs of the Roman Catholic Church is traditionally known as heresy, so the proper term for a Catholic who refuses to believe in all the truths taught by the Church that Our Blessed Lord established is a heretic. The modern term for this is "cafeteria Catholic", but the meaning is the same. A Catholic who refuses to be known as a Christian because they do not believe all the things that the Catholic Church teaches is known as an apostate. Our Blessed Lord did not tell us that following Him was going to be easy, or pleasant, but He told us that He would pray to for us to have the strength to do what we are not normally inclined to do.
The letters erovasps unscramble to Passover, but that is the Jewish term for the feast that Jesus was celebrating when He instituted the Most Blessed Eucharist, not a Christian term.
The main term for a Catholic is a Christian. A Catholic is a Christian who belongs to the one Church actually founded by Our Blessed Lord, Jesus Christ, in the first century on the Apostle Peter as its "rock" - see Matthew 16:17-19.
Chrismation.
Thanksgiving is the literal definition of the term "eucharist". However if you are referring to the sacrament, then "eucharist" may be called "The Blessed Sacrament", "The Lord's Supper", "Communion", "Holy Communion", "The Mass".
"Santissima" is an Italian term that means "most holy" or "most blessed." It is often used in relation to the Virgin Mary or other saints in the Catholic Church.