It is in the Book of Blessing of the Roman Ritual published in 1989. It is in Appendix I
Find a local parish and ask the pastor there where you can sign up for RCIA (Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults).
Do you mean a Pastor who is eligible to be married or one who is legally qualified to perform a marriage? catholic-soulmates blogspot com
There is no problem having your child baptized even if you were not a baptized as a Catholic as long as you intended to raise the child as a Catholic. You might wish to check with your pastor and see what can be done to 'bring you up to speed' with the sacraments and get confirmed, however.
I have encountered the following 7. Others may well exist (in fact they probably do...) The Armenian Catholic Church [mostly made up of ethnic Armenians outside of Armenia, particularly in Syria/Lebanon etc] The Ukrainian Catholic Church (sometimes called Ukrainian Greek Catholic) [big in the Ukraine, particularly the Western Ukraine. Present in other countries too] The Syriac Catholic Church [big in Syria, present in Palestine/Jordan/Lebanon too] The Greek Catholic Church [Very big in the Middle East in general. The Greek Catholic Patriarch of Antioch was one of the senior churchmen who offered prayers over the coffin of Pope John Paul II at his funeral. I think this is the largest group of Catholics in the Arab world] The Maronite Catholic Church [Mostly originating in Lebanon, with significant communities in Syria, Cyprus, and overseas. They arose out of the Monothelite doctrine in the 400s AD, but later joined with Rome.] The Nestorian Catholic Church (also called Chaldean, or the Church of the East) [Big in Iraq, Pope John Paul II called this church 'the Martyrs' Church', because they've survived through such problems over their history] The Coptic Catholic Church [I understand this church to be really small. Indigenous to Egypt, there are quite a lot of Coptic Orthodox, but very few Coptic Catholics.]
Yes. The Maronite Christians are Eastern Christians always been in union with the Pope, although they do not use the Roman liturgical rite of Roman Catholics. They originated in Lebanon, and their liturgy is conducted in the liturgical Syriac language.
The best thing to do would be to either ask your parents, who would certainly know since they were there; or, ask the pastor of the Catholic parish that you grew up in. If you did not grow up in the Catholic Church, then simply consult the Catholic churches in your area.
It depends on what your religion is. If you're catholic, then say nothing to the matter. Try to fall in love with someone else and try to drive your attraction to your pastor out of your mind. If you're eastern orthodox or protestant, then I guess you can find out if the pastor is married/engaged or not. If he's not, get to know him and see if he'll date you.
Do you mean a white pastor? There are lots of them...
you go on line to WWW. rite aid .com
Find your local parish and take the RCIA (Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults) class. It might be a shorter process for an Orthodox Christian than for a Protestant Christian.
At rite aid.
The website for the church is below. Perhaps you can find the name of the pastor there.