Hebrew is an adjective referring to the Jewish language of Israel or (rarely) the Jewish people.
Catholic is an adjective referring to a particular variant of the Christian religion, the one run by the Pope with headquarters in Rome. It can also be an adjective used to describe anything that is universal or pertains to all kinds of people.
The Hebrew Old Testament is written in Hebrew. The original Catholic Old Testament was translated from the Greek Septuagint (a Greek translation of the Hebrew Scripture made in the 3rd century B.C.) to Latin, and together with the Latin New Testament was called the Vulgate. Today the Catholic Old Testament is still in Latin, but there are venacular translations available everywhere.
There is no difference, Catholics are Christians, if you are asking about the difference between a particular protestant wedding and a Christian Catholic wedding, then you should ask that.
The Gregorian Calendar is solar and the Hebrew Calendar is lunisolar.
The difference between CSI Christians and Roman Catholic Christians is the Holy Rosary, prayer through Mary and baptism.
There is nothing wrong with a Catholic learning Hebrew.
Notsrim (× ×•×¦×¨×™×) is the Hebrew word for Christians, but Noserim doesn't appear to be a Hebrew word.
One difference is that Protestant clergy can marry, Catholic clergy cannot and are required to remain celibate.
They are one and the same.
.Catholic AnswerNot a blessed thing for the simple reason that Catholic and Christian are the same thing.
Southern Baptists are Protestants.
If you're talking about translations of the word History:Modern Hebrew = הִיסטוֹרִיָה (historiya).Biblical Hebrew = תוֹלְדוֹת (toldot)Greek = ιστορία (istoría)
a catholic chapel is just a place to pray on your own and its much smaller. But a catholic church is where you pray wit the priest.