Assuming you mean in a Protestant church, the answer is yes.
In general, in Protestant churches the answer is Yes. The requirements of a local church or of its denomination may restrict who can deliver a sermon, which may involve using a pulpit, but ordinarily have nothing to say about who stands where.
A pulpit is a raised box found in a church from which the preachers speaks to the congregation. See the related links for pictures.
A Pulpit is where theParson gives the Sermon.
A pulpit is commonly found in Christian churches, specifically in branches like Catholicism, Protestantism, and Eastern Orthodoxy. It is a raised platform where clergy stand to deliver sermons or readings during religious services.
The preacher delivers a sermon from the pulpit.
Pulpit is a good rhyme.
Martin Luther
The place where a Protestant pastor or minister preaches from is usually called a "pulpit." It is a term applied from the mid-1500s and based on the Latin word "pulpitum" which refers to a raised structure for speaking.
yes the leaves on the jack in pulpit is edible
In some modern English Versions like the 21st Century King James Version (KJ21), Nehemiah 8:4 'platform of wood' is translated as 'pulpit.' This was the only occurrence for the term found.
yes the leaves on the jack in pulpit is edible
In a church. A pulpit is where the minister gives his sermon.