The "flock" donates and part of this money goes to pay the salary of the ministers/pastors.
No. Baptist ministers do not undergo Holy Orders, because the process is not regarded as a Sacrament in the Baptist church. Pastors are chosen directly by the church they wish to serve at.
The tithes are used, for the pastors salary, the upkeep of the church and paying the electric bills etc.
priests, ministers, pastors
It should be spenton the pastors salary, mentaining the church and for mission work.
There are several types of ordained ministers. In the Catholic faith, ordained ministers can be bishops, priests and deacons. In the Protestant faith, ordained ministers are generally pastors of churches. There are also other ordained ministers within Protestant churches, including youth ministers, assistant ministers and others to minister to the needs of the various groups within the church.
Popes, priests, ministers, and pastors
The pentocostals and the Anglicans have in recent year allowed women to be ministers and pastors.
These are the ordained church leaders in the protestant Churches. In the Methodist Church, for example, ordained clergy are called ministers, whilst in the Baptist Church they tend to be called pastors. In the Anglican Church, however, the ordained leaders are names the same as the Roman Catholic Church - deacons, priests and bishops.
Yes, though not many. There are several lady miinisters, and several female ordained ministers who are typically not pastors, or are missionairies. There are a few UPC female pastors, though.
Women have already been pastors and ministers since at least the 1980s. I don't know what you mean by "in these last days"...the world will continue for billions of years, long after we are all dead.
Lay pastors can perform communion in some denominations, particularly in non-denominational or more liberal congregations that allow it. However, in many traditional denominations, communion is typically reserved for ordained ministers. It's essential for lay pastors to be aware of their specific church's policies and theological beliefs regarding the sacrament. Ultimately, the authority to perform communion varies by denomination and local church governance.
Any one whom God has called to preach the gospel (salvation by grace through faith in the finished work of Jesus Christ on the cross of Calvary) is a preacher/minister. A preacher/minister who has accepted a full/part time position as the spiritual leader of a church is a pastor. All pastors are preachers/ministers, but not all preachers/ministers are pastors.