WHAT?! No, a pastor of ANY church cannot ask someone to move out of town and any good, Christian pastor would never do that! The only thing a pastor may do is if he feels that a member of a church has committed a bad sin and will not confess, the pastor can have the church vote on it and the person may be asked to leave the church, but NO PASTOR can kick someone out of town and if that is what's happening, than that pastor is not a good, Christian pastor and he should be reported to the head of the district for whatever denomination his church is.
Depending upon the bylaws established by the church. A pastor could as a member to leave a church.
Church, not as the main pastor, only as an associate pastor. Non-profit organizations,, christian org's that preach the Gospel (I like this the most) A.J.
Only if the defendant agreed to be personally liable for the loan.
I think you can alch it and get profit.
You can find credit counseling services in a telephone book, talking with friends who may know of these services, your local library, your church pastor and perhaps your family doctor.
NEED A GRANT FOR NON PROFIT ORGANIZATION/CHURCH
He was called a minister ,pastor or a profit
Devidend
You can call yourself anything you want. What you can't do is profit on a title that requires a license. You'll have to check your own state laws but in some the title "reverend" would require a license while "pastor" might not. In my state, I can pastor a church without being ordained by a denomination... so check your local and state laws.
Yes, a non-profit organization can operate under the umbrella of a church organization because most churches operates as a non-profit organization.
The Roman Catholic Church
yes
The Church supports free enterprise and profits as long as the "profit motive" is not disordered. The Catechism of the Catholic Church in section 2424 teaches that the profit, in and of itself, is not a bad thing; however, when it becomes an object that enslaves a man and leads to the idolizing of money, then it is a problem.