Home
follow us on facebookfollow us on youtubefollow us on twitter
My Accounts
  • Topics
    • Apologetics
    • Marriage
    • Bible
    • Mary
    • Canon Law
    • Morality
    • Church
    • Non-Catholic
    • Culture
    • Papacy
    • Eschatology
    • Prayer and Devotion
    • Eucharist
    • Priesthood
    • Evangelization
    • Pro-Life
    • Heresy
    • Sacrament
    • History
    • Saints
    • Jesus
    • Seasons and Feasts
    • Liturgy
    • Trinity
  • Blog
  • Library
    • Magazine
    • Quick Questions
    • Tracts
    • Documents
    • Catholic Encyclopedia
    • Chastity.com
  • Video
  • Radio
    • Radio Calendar
    • Browse Shows
    • Listen Live (6-8p ET)
  • Speakers
  • Forums
  • Shop
  • Donate
    • Donate Now
    • Legacy Society
    • President's Club & Founders Circle
  • About
    • Mission & Vision
    • Projects
    • Activities
    • Staff Profiles
    • People & Profiles
    • Jobs
    • Book Submissions
    • Magazine Submissions
    • Permissions
    • Cruises
    • Contact Us

Quick Questions

3 results
Why do some communicants approach the priest with a rosary in their hands?
Michelle Arnold
Why is the monstrance sometimes held with bare hands and at other time with covered hands?
Fr. Vincent Serpa O.P.
My rosary group would like to have eucharistic exposition while we pray the rosary. Is this permissible?
Peggy Frye
  • quick questions home
  • browse quick questions

filter by Category

Prayer and Devotion

filter by Keyword

Eucharist

filter by Author

Peggy Frye
Michelle Arnold
Fr. Vincent Serpa O.P.

“Thanks for producing the best show on the radio (Catholic or otherwise)!  My husband and I finally joined the Radio Club and look forward to supporting y'all quarterly from now on.”

~ Adalee
 

Q&A Newsletter

Not Peace But a Sword
Books and Audio in Digital Format
Ignatius Press

"The [secular] sense of right and wrong is so delicate, so fitful, so easily puzzled, obscured, perverted, so subtle in its argumentative methods, so impressionable by education, so biased by pride and passion, so unsteady in its course, that in the struggle for existence amid the various exercises and triumphs of the human intellect, the sense is at once the highest of all teachers yet the least luminous."

~ John Henry Newman, "Letter to the Duke of Norfolk", from the article on Morality by G. H. Joyce.
 
Copyright © 1996-2013 Catholic Answers