In the Roman Catholic Church, attending Mass on Sundays and holy days of obligation is required for all Catholics. The Church encourages regular attendance, ideally weekly, to nurture one's faith and community connection. While it is important to attend Mass regularly, individual circumstances may affect the ability to do so, but participation in the Eucharist is considered essential for spiritual growth.
You must obtain and subtract the mass of the beaker.
The mass of reactants must be equal to the mass of products.
The mass of reactants must be equal to the mass of products.
Two measurements are needed - you must find its mass and its volume. Density is mass divided by volume.
If mass stays the same and density decreases, then the volume must increase. This is because density is mass divided by volume, so if density decreases while mass remains constant, the volume must increase to maintain the same mass.
no. you must go to mass.
We're required to go once a week and that has to be either on Sunday or on Saturday afternoon/evening. Mass is offered every day, in most places, so of course we can go more often if we want. There are also Holy Days of Obligation, too, that require us to go to mass, but they don't happen regularly. Christmas is one of these. If Christmas doesn't happen on a Sunday, we go to mass anyway.
On Sundays and on various holy days of obligation throughout the year.
You must be thinking of the Latin Ite missa est from the old Tridentine formula. I believe this means Go, you are dismissed. Go the mass has begun is not said at the end of the vernacular mass, either.
you must have mass
Never. A star must be about 10 times the mass of the sun or more to go supernova.
Once a year
Three things are necessary for a sin to be mortal: It must be grave matter (it must be seriously wrong: murder, missing Mass on Sunday, etc.) One must know that it will offend God. One must choose one's own will anyway. "Look, God, I know that I should get up and go to Mass, I know that you want me to, but I want to lay in bed/go to the beach/whatever so I'm not going to Mass."
Balanced. The mass of the reactants must be equal to the mass of the products (the law of conservation of mass)
You are supposed to go every week on Sunday; however, the actual attendance of Catholics depends on what region they live in.
well the electrons must be researched and the atomic number and since the protons are equal to the electrons you dont have to go crazy looking for it.i dont know how to find the atomic mass though
Absolutely not. The Mass is not the priest's mass, it is the Church's. He must stay faithful to the rubrics set out in the text. There are other reasons why he must never deviate from the missal, and the internet is full of resources explaining them. If the priest were to go as far as to change the words used in the Canon of the Mass, where the Eucharist is consecrated, the mass would in fact be invalid.