The Catholic church believes in just wars and has indeed waged holy ones called crusades against many non-Catholics who it despised and considered "infidels".
The Roman Catholic Church believes in peace and harmony and will not harm any other Christian or any other religion.
Yes
No certain way, real Christians don't see Christianity as a religion.
yes at leat in any real catholic church
It should have the seal of the church stamped onto it; the same church of the baptism record
Roman Catholic AnswerI'm not real sure what you mean by this question. Banned from what? The only individual I know that has been banned by the Catholic Church is Satan and the other devils. When a Church is consecrated there is an elaborate ceremony in which the building is exorcised and blessed.
Yes! Actually, some people go to church every Sunday and aren't real Christians. Those who read their Bible's and have a relationship with Christ are real Christians, not those who are religious. Church is not a building. Church is everyone on earth who knows Jesus personally. So in that sense, you cannot be a Christian without also being part of the Church.
They depends on whether you meant to capitalize Orthodox or not. The Orthodox Church is not Catholic, they split from the Catholic Church officially in the 12th century. If you orthodox as believing in the Church doctrines, then that is the only kind of parishioner that is a real Catholic. Anyone who is not orthodox in his belief, is by definition, heterodox, otherwise known as a protestant, even if they still maintain nominal membership in the Catholic Church.
They got into real estate on the ground floor.
a lot a lot
Either McDonalds, or the Catholic Church.
This is talking about people who go to church because they think it is a good thing to do. They have no real commitment to God or His word. Maybe they think that going to church makes them Christians.
The belief that miracles can occur provide many Christians with all the proof they desire that God is real and Jesus is his son. This is a key reason the Catholic Church continues to pronounce the performance of two miracles by each of its putative saints.