Nothing prevents it as long as you meet membership requirements for the Presbyterian church. Your Southern Baptist friends may not be pleased, but it is your choice.
Andrew Jackson was a Presbyterian. He was born into a Presbyterian and raised as a Presbyterian.But he did not officially join the Presbyterian Church until after his he left the chair as president
After the war against Mexico and his resignation from the army in 1851.
No. If you join a new Baptist church they will ask the previous church for a letter of transfer. This way you are taken off the roles of the church you no longer attend.
I am a Baptist, and it is alright if you join..the only reason you get baptized is if you haven't shown people that you are saved is the only reason we get baptized also to "cleanse" yourself
no A more detailed answer is, a person is whatever denomination they choose to be, or whatever denomination the parents decide. The way you become a Baptist is to join a Baptist church, or to be the child of parents who are members of a Baptist church. The same applies to any denomination, although each church sets its own requirements for joining.
The non-Catholic would need to have his marriage annulled by the church before they are free to marry, as the catholic church recognizes the validity of the Presbyterian marriage. If annulment is approved, he does not need to join the Catholic Church, but must be willing to consent to her oath to bring up any children as catholic
In most cases no, a Church of Christ member would not need to get baptized again when joining a Baptist church, as long as you were baptized after belief and not as an infant. Baptists believe that baptism is for believers and babies are too young to be believers.
Two were active members of the Methodist Church. Three others attended Methodist Services with some frequency but did not join. One other professed to be a Methodist but attended his wife's Presbyterian Church.
You do not need any purification to join a church. You will be purified in the church.
An Independent Baptist church is just that-- independent.They hold to the fundamentals of faith: the virgin birth, deity AND humanity of Christ, the trinity, inspired KING JAMES VERSION of the Bible for English speaking people, etc. They are independent by not being a part of an association or convention. Although we do like to fellowship of those with a like mind as us, we are not a part of anything formal fellowships. Not all Independent Baptist churches are the same. Most hold to conservative beliefs and music and dress, where others do not. I am an Independent Baptist, and at my church most of the the women wear skirts and wear modest clothing (we do not condemn those who do not, but it is our conviction) but some do not have convictions or preach against wearing pants. We only use the Red Book Church Hymnal for congregation singing and use traditional Gospel music, but some use contemporary music. It varies on what region of the country you are in and just the individual church you attend. Hope that helped!
Kenneth Faried's father is Baptist and his mother and her partner are Muslim. For a while he attended church with his father, but through his own choice he eventually decided to join the religion of Islam with his mother.
Andre was born a Catholic. He did not 'join' the Church.