No. The church can ask the Bishop to reconsider his or her choice of appointment, but ultimately it is the decision of the Bishop to appoint a pastor to a given church. That is the nature of the Episcopal polity.
The Presbyterian Church in the USA does - I can't speak for other denominations. ELCA Lutherans would be okay with that.
Pastors are typically found in Christian denominations, such as Protestant, Catholic, or Orthodox branches. They play a leadership role in guiding and serving congregations within these religious traditions.
All Church Pastors must be ordained into their positions through an official appointment process, and educational requirements for Church Pastors vary with the needs of the congregation. Some denominations require their Church Pastors to hold graduate-level degrees from schools of Theology aligned with the denomination. Churches in well-populated urban areas are more likely to have formal educational requirements than churches in rural areas.
The two scriptural offices of the church are Pastors and Deacons.
The bishop appoints pastors as well as assistant pastors.
If you are a kid: parents, friends, siblings, church members, pastors, teachers If you are an adult: friends, siblings, church members, children, pastors
A Biblical church will have a married man leading it.
Yes the Church should appoint officers to fulfill the needs of the church. Such as, Pastors, Deacons and treasury
yes.
Prophets, church, pastors
No priest in the Catholic Church, even pastors, are allowed to marry.
The church is a non-profit business. Pastors are the head of their congregation and run the primary business meetings with the help of the church's board of directors.