There are four essential elements to the practice of Catholicism according to the Gospels: 1. Humility or faith and trust in God which is the foundation of all true relationships with God. 2. Communication with God through prayer and self-denial. 3. Observance of The Law which is to be found in Scripture and in the hearts of those who love the truth. 4. The offering of sacrifice to God and partaking of the sacrificial offering (various animal and bird offerings in the Old Testament, the Lamb of God in the New Testament, the sacrifice of the Mass in the Catholic Church). If you make a reasonable effort to practice these things you are doing well. You are only converting from one confusion to another. Who knows you better than yourself? If you know thyself and live thyself, then your life is set. The question is unclear. If you convert to Catholicism, you still make all the decisions in your life. The Church is there to guide you morally, so some things will be frowned upon, as with any religion.
You would not have to convert but you would have to agree that any children be raised as Catholics.
No. You would be Greek Orthodox then.
Roman Catholic AnswerYes, you need to discuss this with your priest. If you marriage that you are in is valid, you should have no problems.
You have to convert from your current religion to Catholicism. Then you need to become baptized in the Catholic church.
start going to a catholic church if your devoted get baptised and abandoned your old religion
According to the Catholic Church, that is not alright and is a sacrilege. The Catholic Church would want you to research Catholicism and fully believe in it, or not convert.
There is no specific symbol for a Catholic convert. However, the symbol of the Catholic Church is the crucifix, which represents the sacrifice of Jesus Christ. A convert to Catholicism may choose to wear a crucifix or display one in their home as a symbol of their faith.
No, they are Anglican. Kate was born a Catholic but had to convert to the Church of England to marry William.
You contact your local Catholic parish and enroll in the RCIA program. After sufficient study, you will be accepted into the church at a special ceremony.
He would not leave the Catholic Church to convert to the Church of England
I take it that you mean if a member of the Church of Ireland receive Communion in the Catholic Church. Well the Church of Ireland is an branch of the Anglican Church and thereby not in union with the Bishop of Rome, so no, a member of the Church of Ireland cannot receive Communion in the Catholic Church. To receive Communion in the Catholic Church, you are to be Catholic united to Rome and accept the doctrine of transubstantiation in the Eucharist. Now if you are a member of the Catholic Church in the country of Ireland, yes you are allowed to because you are Catholic in that sense, but again, an Anglican member of the Church of Ireland cannot receive Communion unless they convert to Catholicism and accept all teachings taught by the Magisterium concerning the Eucharist..Catholic Answer.It's just Catholic, not Roman Catholic. Roman is an epithet first commonly used in England after the protestant revolt to describe the Catholic Church. It is never used by the official Catholic Church. Short answer: No, the Church of Ireland is a protestant Church, and is most definitely not in "Communion" with the Catholic Church. The only way that an Anglican (member of the Church of Ireland) may receive Holy Communion in a Catholic Church is to convert. Pope Benedict issued a Motu Proprio several years ago, which allows Anglicans to convert to the Catholic Church and retain their own usages in the Latin Rite, it is call the Anglican usage, see link below.
i have no idea, but u should tottally convert to Muslim