Ah, I'm not following the question. The basis of the Catholic Church cannot change, as the entire of revelation was given by Our Blessed Lord, and then revelation was closed with the death of the last apostle around the end of the first century.
The Church, does indeed, further understand revelation and grows in Her understanding of it, but does not "change" in that way. She can also change the outward ceremonies (to an extent) surrounding the Sacraments, but not their essence, or the things necessary for them. For instance, She can "change" the language in which the Mass is celebrated, but NOT change the essentials: a priest, a wheat Host, grape wine, natural water, and the words of consecration.
No, Catherine changed no doctrines of the Catholic Church.
Roman Catholic AnswerYou are operating with a mistaken assumption. The Catholic Church wrote the Bible, the Catholic Church decided which books were canonical (included in the Bible), and the Catholic Church has conserved the Bible through the centuries. The only ones who changed any Scriptures in the Bible are the protestants, who, after fifteen centuries of a Bible preserved by the Catholic Church came along and threw books out of the Bible, and changed the meanings of books they would not throw out.
pope charles 5
The crusades were going on and they changed a lot.
Please note that the question has been changed to "home of the Catholic Church" as there is no "Roman Catholic Church. Roman is an epithet first commonly used in England after the protestant revolt to describe the Catholic Church. It is rarely used by the Catholic Church. . As has been said many times - Heaven. But, while on this earth The Church has its home in Rome where St. Peter's successor resides.
Henry the vlll changed the church from Catholic to protestant.
It was changed to match the original Latin better
"Excommunication" The Pope can "excommunicate" a person from the Catholic Church. e.g. Henry VIII was excommunicated from the Catholic Church, because he changed the Church in England to Protestant.
he changed the Catholic Church into the Anglican Ecclesia
Assuming no divorce has taken place, which would require an annulment, yes, if you have changed from Orthodox to Catholic it would be possible to renew your wedding vows in a Catholic Church. There would be no need for a full blown wedding, however, as the Catholic Church does accept the sacraments of the Orthodox Church as valid.
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protestant ...after the protestant reformation...but catholic before it....I think Henry changed it because his wife would bear him no male children and he wanted a divorce but the catholic church did not allow it. so he changed the religion and they were alot of bad thing going on too...