Holy Communion, you answered it yourself ;)
Yes, after confirmation.
The Catholic Church is the 'communion of holy people.'
2 and they are holy communion & baptism
The communion service is pretty common to all Christian denominations, although the details will vary... What specifically did you want to know?
In the Catholic Church, the next is traditionally Confirmation.
Quite simply, the bread and wine received at a Pentecostal church would not be Holy Communion.
I know .
.Catholic AnswerOf course not, an Anglican is a protestant, a Catholic Church is Catholic. An Anglican may receive Holy Communion in a Catholic Church after completing RCIA classes and being brought into the Church at the Easter Vigil, but if they wish to remain an Anglican, they are, by that very fact, proclaiming that they are not in communion with the Catholic Church, so to receive Holy Communion in a Catholic Church would be a lie and dangerous to their spiritual well-being. Aside from all that, Catholics to not "take" Holy Communion, they "receive" Holy Communion.
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.
Go to your local Catholic Church and ask them this question. I do know that once a month a mass is said with communion so you could attend that mass and have communion with the body of the church.
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.
The Church of England is a widespread church ranging from quite Catholic styles of worship through to Pentecostal-style evangelical services. The beliefs are enshrined in the 39 Articles of Faith - statements of belief that are scripture-based as opposed to coming from the Pope and from church authorities. The C of E celebrates the Holy Communion in a similar way to the Catholic mass - in fact the actual words of the service are very similar but most members of the C of E refuse to believe in the transubstantiation of the bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ, rather believing the act of taking the sacrament as a memorial.