The Roman Catholic Church
A Roman Catholic is a Christian who considers themselves a member of the Roman Catholic Church which accepts the pope as its leader.
The current Pope.
Pope
Pope Urban
A Roman Catholic is a Christian who considers themselves a member of the Roman Catholic Church which accepts the pope as its leader.
The pope for Roman Catholics (Catholics who attend mass in the Latin rite), as well as for Catholics of the Byzantine Catholic Church, the Ethiopian Catholic Church, the Greek Catholic Church, the Maronite Catholic Church, the Assyrian Catholic Church, and many more, none of which celebrate the Roman rite, but all of which are in union with the Pope.
The pope is the head of the Catholic Church. There is only one Catholic Church and it is not a sect. To be a Catholic Church, a church must be in union with the pope. If they are not in union with the pope, they are not Catholic.
Vatican City, inside Rome, is a sovereign nation, and is home of the Catholic Church. There is no "Roman" Catholic Church, that is a popular mistake.
The Roman Catholic Church is named after the city of Rome, where it was originally based and where the Pope, the leader of the Church, resides. The term "Catholic" means universal, indicating that the Church is meant for all people worldwide.
Yes, he is the leader of the Roman Catholic Church.
because he is the leader of the Roman Catholic church. He has the final word. theoretically whatever he decides on must be done .