Advent always starts with the first of the four Sundays before the 25th of December (Christmas), so in 2014 it will start on 30 November.
As of June 2014 we are in year A of the Sunday cycle, and year II of the weekday lectionary, and will be in them until the First Sunday of Advent, on 30 November 2014 when we will start year B of the Sunday cycle, and year I of the weekday cycle.
Advent - 2014 I was released on: USA: 2014 (limited)
Advent - 2014 II was released on: USA: 12 May 2014
Yes, there was an Armenian Catholic Church which was still there, and in tact, as of March 2014.
The current Pope of the Catholic Church is Pope Francis, as of this date (May 2014), he replace Pope Benedict XVI last year in March.
There are many saints recognized in the Catholic Church. However, as of 2014 there is not a saint with the name Hali.
Roman is an epithet first commonly used in England after the protestant revolt to describe the Catholic Church. It is never used by the Catholic Church. The Bishop is Arcbishop Patrick Pinder.
Protestant churches are just that: protestant, not Catholic. There are currently (2014) over 40,000 denominations in the United States, so different from each other that there is no way to compare them, except in that all of them are not Catholic.
No, Chris St. Clair is not a saint in the Roman Catholic Church. He is a weatherman who currently as of 2014 works on the Weather Channel.
There is only one pope of the Catholic Church. Each country does not have a pope. Currently (2014) that is Pope Francis.
Pope John Paul II was canonized two years after his death in 2005. He was declared a saint by the Catholic Church in 2014.
The current pope, Benedict XVI, was born Joseph Aloisius Ratzinger, but, as Pope, he is the Vicar of Our Blessed Lord. It is God who actually "runs" the Catholic Church through His Vicar.