no yes
In some churches, when you join the church or when you declare your beliefs publicly or are baptised, the church will present you with a certificate of baptism to commemorate or mark the occasion. In the past, these certificates were maintained at local parishes as a means of identification similar to the birth certificate is used today.
The baptism will be in the church records where the baptism was done.
No, that statement is not true. The signing of a birth certificate does not determine any financial compensation from the government. Birth certificates serve as legal documents to establish identity and record vital information about a person's birth.
Also Certificate Of Marriage, Birth Certificate, Baptism Certificate,Social Sec Card, others are like library ID and school ID's.passport, driver's license, state photo id
The authorized birth certificate may refer to the Original birth certificate rather than the Copy of the Birth Certificate.
It is not legal
Whose? Your own? Yes they give you a copy of the certificate when you are baptized.
Why would you want to sign a birth certificate?
No. Birth and Adoption certificate are different
In the US, Canada and some other countries, if a birth certificate exists, it would be found through the county courthouse, the state or provincial office of vital records, or state or provincial archives. In other countries, and from other centuries, you may find a birth record is not a certificate but a line entry in a ledger. Ledgers including records less than 100 years old may be in local Civil Records offices, while older records may have been moved to regional or national archival collections. It all depends on the particular country and when the birth took place. Churches often have records of baptism, which can serve as birth records.
baptism
Yes