To my knowledge - which is not much (although I'm a Catholic myself), it's heaven, purgatory and hell. Not sure what exactly purgatory is, but basically it's a waiting room where you wait to go to heaven and prayers are your ticket in. According to popular belief (mostly from movies and novels), purgatory is sometimes worse than hell. Hope this helps.
Catholics believe in a Trinitarian God, One God but Three Persons. The Muslims believe in One God and One Person. To them, Jesus is not God and the Holy Spirit does not exist.
Muslim believe in monotheism (one and only one God. Catholics believe in monotheism as well, but believe that there are three Persons in that One God. (Father, Son, and Holy Spirit).Muslims believe in Muhammad as God prophet and messenger. Catholics don't believe in Muhammad prophecy.Muslims believe that Jesus is one of God greatest prophets but is not God or son of God. Catholics believe that Jesus is God, the Son of God.Muslims believe in the Bible, Christians holy book, as God holy book. Catholics don't believe in Quran, Muslims holy book, as God holy book.
Anubis is god of Embalming (Mummification); psychopomp (conductor of souls); he places their heart on the Scales of Justice during the Judging of the Heart, and he feeds the souls of wicked people to Ammit.
They are both religions. They believe in a different God. No, they believe in the same God but do not consider him as having three distinct persons - Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Jesus is considered as only a prophet by the Muslims and not the Son of God.
John Redford has written: 'Did Jesus Exist?' 'The play of wit and science' 'What Is Catholicism?' 'Theology' 'Fortprint Limited, three year strategic business plan' 'The play of wit and science (c. 1550)' 'What Catholics Believe..' 'We believe'
Slaves, hopeless souls, and cake.
Catholics Muslims Jews
pick three places on your keyboard
Catholics worship the Blessed Trinity, one God in Three Persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Alejandro Lora
When rounded to three places (thousandths) the answer is: 0.143
The current post-Vatican II regulation is that Catholics must not eat for one hour before receiving Holy Communion. Traditional Catholics do not eat for three hours.