Brazilian music is known for that.
The first place to go is to arrange to meet with a Catholic priest. He will explain the process for you. It should be a relatively simple procedure compared to a Protestant conversion to the Catholic Church.
A chorale is a hymn or song typically sung in a Protestant church service, especially in a Lutheran tradition. It usually has a simple and harmonious melody that is easy to sing by the congregation.
AnswerNo they were not grounded on the Bible being literally true (which it's not). They were based on protesting (hence Protestant) the Catholic Church's practices, corruption, etc. Whatever they disagreed with. A simple Wikipedia search would have sufficed with this question.
One example of non-liturgical Latin poems set to simple melodies are the "Carmina Burana" composed by Carl Orff in the 20th century. These poems were taken from a collection of medieval texts and set to music in a more contemporary style. They are often performed with a focus on rhythmic intensity and dramatic delivery.
It's innabilility to decide what it "wants to be when it grows up"? Is it conservative/liberal/protestant/catholic/Armenian/calvanist? The Anglican church need not deal with issues such as womens ordination/homosexual marriage blessings until it can answer simple questions IN UNITY as to where their source of authority is.
The established church of colonial Georgia was the Church of England, a protestant denomination. Back in England, Catholicism and Protestantism had a history of feuds, a nasty split that began when Martin Luther denounced the Catholic Church for the corruption that plagued it at the time. It makes sense, then, that a predominantly protestant colony like Georgia would discourage Catholics from living there, what with the history between the two religions still so fresh.
The difference between Protestant and Catholic Church decoration is great and varied and I should liken it to the difference between a donut and a French Gateaux. One is simple and the other is quite complex; each one reflecting the Theology that prevails in the institution. This is reflected in all aspects of the building; so, the richer the Tradition more elaborate the building.
This is a phrase from a book about the Churches in revolutionary times, obviously written from a protestant perspective. It says "How many ways can you think of to remember the differences between Catholic and protestant beliefs? Here is a simple memory jogger to help you: "pure protestants and complicated Catholics" which shows that the protestant wanted to make the Church simple and the Catholics wanted to keep all the ornaments and decorations." Which is a gross fallacy, first of all, it assumes that all the things the protestants threw out were not given to us from God, and that they weren't necessary. When it comes to decorations, there are many Catholics that are far more simple in their "decoration and ornaments" than protestants - look at the Carthusians or the Cisterians.
Simple he likes clay but don't ship it give it to him and he likes the blue mist flower+ores. :) Hope i helped
Yes, it is as simple as that!
.Catholic AnswerTwo problems, but the answer is a simple no to both of them. The Catholic Church, whose headquarters is in the Vatican, which is in Rome is the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church, as enumerated in the Nicene Creed. However, there is a "Catholic Apostolic Churches" which is a protestant sect started by an Anglican which has nothing to do with the Catholic Church. In the first case, the Catholic Church, headquartered in Rome, the answer is NO, they are not "Roman." In the second case, of the protestants using that name, they aren't Roman either.