"The Catholic Church" with no other qualifier usually refers to the body of the Christian faithful, thus it would have no building. In the Catholic Church, there are particular Churches, each diocese is a particular Church headed up by a Bishop, his church is known as a Cathedral, and each Cathedral has its own name. The Bishop of Rome, the Pope, is obviously the most famous Bishop, and his Cathedral Church is know as St. John Lateran. The most famous Catholic building would obviously be St. Peters Basilica in the Vatican. But there is no "one" building that is the Catholic Church.
.Catholic AnswerThe Church was, and is, the Catholic Church.
In terms of religion, it is the Catholic Church. In terms of a building Saint Patrick's Catholic Cathedral in Armagh would be the main church.
The correct name of the popularly called Catholic Church is The Holy Roman Church. The word "Catholic" is not a part of its official name.
They worship in a Catholic Church.
The first church was in Jerusalem: the community of disciples at Pentecost. The oldest church building site to be discovered by archaeologists is in Rihab, Jordan, and dates from between 35 and 70 AD. The first church to use the word 'Catholic' as part of its name was the church at Antioch, about the year 100.
St. Paul Catholic Church
It is called Ste. Anne's Catholic Church.
i don't know what was the name of the church for example i go to a church named living waters in olean new york but its not catholic church.Roman Catholic AnswerThe Church has always been known as the Catholic Church, since the first century.
Iglesia is Spanish for church. It can mean a particular building or it can refer, as it does in English, to the universal Catholic (capital C) Church.
The HACIENDA was a plantation owned by the Spaniards or the Catholic Church.
Roman Catholicism PriestsRoman Catholic parish priests live in a building called the rectory. This is owned by the church and is often attached to the church building.
The Greek Orthodox Church left the Catholic Church in the eleventh century.