The conclave (election) is held in the Sistine Chapel.
All bishops, including archbishops, cardinals and the pope are today's "apostles." That is why the Catholic Church is called "apostolic." The apostles were the original bishops. Over time the apostles appointed new bishops who continued the process even until today.
It is called a Church.
Marriage is one of the seven sacraments in the Church, and as such, must legally take place in a Church.
It is a sect of the christian religion. There are many Catholic churches that only practice catholic religion. A church, sociologically speaking, is a place of worship. Or a place where a religion is congregated, practiced, physically takes place.
If the marriage was conducted by a Catholic priest or deacon, yes. However, the Church generally prefers a marriage take place in Church.
AnswerThe most-unlikely place to find Protestants would be in the Vatican, the headquarters of the Roman Catholic church. This is because the Romn catholic church was responsible for their separation from the Roman catholic church and subsequent formation in the first place.
If you mean by worship salah or salat or praying, then it is mosque or any dry clean place (home, office, ... ) or in open air places (parks, stadium, ...)
The sanctuary is the part of the church which contains the altar.
No, according to the teachings of the Catholic Church, Catholics are not allowed to scatter their ashes. The Church requires that ashes be buried in a sacred place, such as a cemetery or church.
Yes, the Catholic Church recognizes marriages that take place outside of the church as long as they meet certain criteria, such as being between a man and a woman, being freely entered into, and not being prohibited by church law.
It may be a chapel, church, cathedral or basilica.
Yes and no. It all depends on which sense you're defining the word. In its vaguest sense, yes; But it is also used to describe the meeting that takes place with the pope in the catholic church. I have provided both definitions. * a confidential or secret meeting * The set of apartments within which the cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church are continuously secluded while engaged in choosing a pope; The group of Roman Catholic cardinals locked in a conclave until they elect a new pope; the body of cardinals; A private meeting; a close or secret assembly * A closed meeting of the College of Cardinals, ordinarily held at the Vatican, to elect a new Pope. The word "conclave" comes from the Latin, "with a key."