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Excommunication is a formal process within certain Christian denominations where a person is expelled from the church and denied participation in its sacraments and services. It is typically imposed as a form of discipline for serious offenses or heresy.
Yes, unless he joins another church. Also, if the parting was not amicable, it may not be wise to retain membership in that particular congregation for the sake of stability and peace.
Name only Christians in order to participate in politics; many did not make a true confession
excommunicate.
The Puritans implemented the Halfway Covenant to address declining church membership and promote religious participation among second-generation colonists. It allowed partial church membership for those who hadn't experienced a conversion experience, encouraging more people to stay connected to the church and maintain a sense of community and religious identity.
Excommunication
No. Although it does mention not to forsake assembling together and some interpret that to relate to church membership.
The Black Christian Church, or the African-American Church.
Horace Brock has written: 'The green book' -- subject(s): Episcopal Church, Membership, Church membership
membership in a church?
participation in all of the formal religious acts of the church [[A+]]
Membership in a church, of course. What's actually required for that varies from church to church. In Christian churches, it's fairly common for it to require baptism and possibly some kind of instruction in and at least a profession of agreement with the core beliefs of the church.