Yes.
Most religions have a canon or central belief and from these core beliefs they develop a value framework.
The Catholic Church has an extensive moral framework with definite Catholic values.
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Catholic AnswerIn part Three (Life in Christ), article 4, of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, it explains the morality of Human Acts. Most of the Catechism in one way or another is covering the morals and values of the Catholic Church. The Catholic Church is the Mystical Body of Christ, it is the completion of the Jewish religion, and it is the basis for all western civilization, which, it built. All morals and values in one way or another, in the West can be traced back to the Catholic Church. Anything that is good in Islam or Protestantism can be traced back to the Catholic Church, of which they are both heresies, Islam in the 7th century, and protestantism in the 16th century.No.AnswerIf you mean 'catholic' with a small 'c', then yes. the word 'catholic' simply means 'universal' and so the Protestant Church is part of the universal Christian Church worldwide. If you mean 'Catholic' with a large 'C' - this usually refers to the Roman Catholic Church and, though the Protestant Church is part of the catholic (universal) church, it is not part of the Catholic (Roman Cattholic) church as this is a separate denomination.
There is no "Roman" Catholic Church: Roman is an epithet first commonly used in England after the protestant revolt to describe the Catholic Church. It is rarely used by the Catholic Church. The Chaldean Catholic Church is part of the Catholic Church.
The Melkite Greek Catholic Church is an Eastern Catholic Church in full communion with the Holy See as part of the worldwide Catholic Church.
The correct name of the popularly called Catholic Church is The Holy Roman Church. The word "Catholic" is not a part of its official name.
the Armenian Apostholic church never splitted from the Catholic Church. there was a major separation of churches back in 451 AD (see: Council of Chalcidon), and the Armenian church is from one part of that separation, whereas the catholic - from another part.
No, the Maronites have always been a part of the Catholic Church.
No. Its Christian. Catholic is part of the Roman Catholic Church, wich is based on Christianity
To the best of my knowledge, the Catholic Church has no seas of its own. For the most part, they are all in the public domain.
For a Catholic, acceptance of all that the Church proposes for belief in faith and morals is required. One of the tenants of Catholicism is that the Church was founded by Christ himself and that Christ will not let His Church teach error. With all this in mind, for a Catholic, reason alone is sufficient to tell one that raising children Catholic is the only option.For a non-Catholic married to a Catholic, the Church asks the non-Catholic to make a promise in part so the non-Catholic fully understands what the Catholic is bound under Canon Law to do. The Catholic "promises to try one's best to do all in his or her power" to have the children baptized and reared in the Catholic faith. The promise on the part of the non-Catholic is in part a disclosure of what is to come later on down the road.Roman Catholic AnswerYou promise to raise your children as Catholic if you are marrying a non-Catholic for the simple reason that the Catholic Church is the only one that was established by Our Blessed Lord, and one of the primary purposes of marriage is having children and raising them for the Lord. It would not make any sense to throw away your salvation and that of any future children because you fell "in love" with some non-Catholic person.
The Church is manifested to the world by its teachings and people coming to Church.
There are no other 'religions' in the Catholic Church. However, within the Catholic Church there are a number of rites, including the Latin (Roman) rite, the Maronites, and several Eastern rites but all are Catholic. They are not different religions.
No, Martin Luther King was a Baptist, a church which split off from the Church of England. It, as well as the Church of England, is considered as a Protestant denomination and not a part of the Catholic Church.