Every church is different and each church places the Stations of the Cross in a manner that is best suited to the design of the church building.
The stations of the cross
The correct name of the popularly called Catholic Church is The Holy Roman Church. The word "Catholic" is not a part of its official name.
Roman Catholic AnswerYes, any Baptism done with the correct formula and intention, by anybody, is valid, and thus accepted by the Church.
It is used to carry out church business such as mass, stations of the cross and all other services normally associated with and carried out in a church, however a church is normally called chapel.
If you want to use one word, I suggest non-attender, meaning that a person is not a churchgoer. In the Catholic Church, someone who no longer goes to church is referred to as a lapsed Catholic.
Albanian Byzantine Catholic Church Armenian Catholic Church Bulgarian Greek Catholic Church Chaldean Catholic Church Coptic Catholic Church Patriarchate Ethiopian Catholic Church Byzantine Church of Croatia, Serbia and Montenegro Greek Byzantine Catholic Church Hungarian Byzantine Catholic Church Italo-Albanian Byzantine Catholic Church Macedonian Catholic Church Maronite Catholic Church Melkite Greek-Catholic Church Romanian Greek-Catholic Church Ruthenian Byzantine Catholic Church Slovak Byzantine Catholic Church Syriac Catholic Church Patriarchate Syro-Malabar Catholic Church Syro-Malankara Catholic Church Ukrainian Greek-Catholic Church
Are you sure your spelling is correct? There is no such term in the Catholic Church as a "transit Bishop".
The Stations of The Cross are archetypal. At any given moment, each of us is a character in the Stations. The Victim; The Soldiers; The Lawyers (rabbis); the Victim's Mother; Random Helpers; and Many Onlookers. If possible, "making the stations" could be done every day. In fact,The Holy Rosary includes primary stations Catholic Laity usually make the stations during Lent. But the Stations are absolutely relevant to everyday life.
The word sought may be "cathedral" (a church).
There is a Lutheran Church and a Catholic Church but no Lutheran Catholic Church.
If the question refers to the location of, or description of, a church, or its denomination, then the response, 'The church is ... ' is correct. If the questions is about a church as a specific entity, the word 'church' should be capitalized. For example:'Where is the church?': 'The church is two blocks away.''Where is the Catholic church?': 'The Catholic church is in the next street.''What is the church built of?': 'The church is built of stone.''How old is the Christian Church?': 'The Church is over two thousand years old.'A devout believer in a particular religion, asked 'Why does your Church exist?' might respons simply, 'The Church is.'