Confirmation is the young adult/adult's decision to believe what the Catholic Church teaches and follow it. Upon making their Confirmation, the candidate will be considered an adult in the Catholic Church and be expected to live out their faith. The Holy Spirit gives gifts upon the reception of the Sacrament to help you to do this. If you do not believe what the Church teaches, do not receive the Sacrament of Confirmation. Wait until you are ready to take the faith seriously, and in the meantime, learn as much as you can about what the Church teaches and talk out any questions you have with your parish priest, an RCIA teacher (there is probably a program at your local parish), another catechist, or someone at your parish who is very active in the parish and knows a lot about the Church. If your questions cannot be answered by one person, ask them to look it up for you, ask another person, or look it up yourself in the Catechism of the Catholic Church. The Catechism has many references to Bible verses and writings of the early apostles and Fathers of the Church.
Confirmation, along with Baptism and the Most Holy Eucharist, are the three sacraments of initiation. With your confirmation, you complete your entry into the Catholic Church and become a full, adult, member of the Church, commissioned by Our Blessed Lord, Jesus Christ, and the Holy Spirit, to carry your faith as an evangelist to everyone that you meet.
Yes this is grammatically correct.If you mean it to be a question then it would be "Are you looking forward to Monday?"If you mean to refer to yourself then it would be "I am looking forward to Monday."
Most likely it would be I'm looking forward to hearing from you"
Use "looking forward to" when expressing interest or excitement about something that will happen in the future. Do not use "looking forward for."
It's "looking forward to tomorrow" if you mean 'I anticipate tomorrow'. In contrast, 'looking forward for tomorrow' means something very different. That would imply that someone were looking in a forward direction for the purposes of something happening the next day.
No, you would replace the 'of' with 'to'. So it would be: 'you are looking forward to having a white coffee on Saturday morning'.
Plural We are looking forward to meeting... You are looking forward toi meeting... They are looking forward to meeting..
Yes, it is correct to say "looking forward to seeing you" as it conveys anticipation and excitement for an upcoming meeting or encounter. It is a common and polite way to express your eagerness to meet someone.
You can say, 'I am looking forward to being there." or "I look forward to being there."
"Looking forward to your marriage" is grammatically correct.
No. The expression "looking forward" takes the preposition "to." Also, instead of consideration, reply or positive reply will be more suitable in the sentence.
Say we are looking forward to working with you it sounds more right
Definately looking forward TO.