A Catholic Rosary Altar Society is a spiritual association whose members vow to say the fifteen mysteries of the Rosary once every week. The primary purpose of the society is to 'praise and honor the Blessed Virgin Mary and to secure her patronage by reciting the Rosary..., and to promote and aid the parish spiritually by performing any activities for the care and well being of the Church, Rectory, and Pastor.' The Society was founded in the fifteenth century by Dominican Friar, Ala del la Roche.
Yes.
for a catholic wedding you use arras which are the dimes, lazo used for unity; uniting the two, cojines which are cushions for you to use while kneeling at the altar, and using the bible and rosary in place of your bo uquet while at the altar and using the bouquet for the processional and recessional.
It is a cloth placed on an altar.
There is no such bead on a Catholic rosary. The Catholic Church demands that the ashes of the deceased be respected, as the body would be respected, and buried.
Roman Catholic AnswerThe link below has the prayers of the Rosary in Latin and in English.
No, but there is nothing wrong with a non Catholic owning a Catholic rosary provided it is not abused. A rosary, despite some popular misconceptions, is not a piece of jewelry nor an ornament to hang from a rear view mirror.
No, but the altar top should be stone of some sort, and a permanent altar should be unmovable.
Not real sure what you are asking. How can you be a "believer" without being Catholic? A rosary is not normally worn, except by some brothers, sisters, and nuns who have the rosary hanging from their belt as part of their religious habit.
It is the month of the Rosary.
Roman Catholic AnswerThe altar (and the priest when he is at the altar) are contained in the sanctuary of the Church.
The Rosary is a string of prayers so since you say "at a catholic rosary" I assume you mean this is a public event where the Rosary is said. There will probably be one person (probably a priest) leading the prayers and everyone else joining in for the last few lines of each prayer, like a chant. It could also be in latin.
while it is a traditionally catholic prayer it emerged before there were denominations, sometime in the 1200's. because of the universal nature of the petition for liberation I would say that it is not Catholic only.