It depends on the Parish. Some have no EMHC's or lectors, and no Parish council; and some have a very large Parish council, a hundred EMHC's, and a thousand lector's. It all depends on what the Priest wants.
There are churches named Saint Ambrose all over the world. You need to ask the pastor of the particular parish you are interested in.
Unlike the Roman Catholic or most Orthodox Churches, Protestant churches allow their ministers to marry. Therefore, within the Methodist Church, ministers are free to marry whom they like.
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.
The clergy of the Roman Catholic Church are called Priests. The priest who heads a parish is also called a Pastor. The catholic church has extraordinary ministers such as the Extraordinary Minister of the Eucharist. These are lay people who assist with giving communion.
In Catholic & Orthodox Churches, clergy can be priests, monks, bishops, etc. In most Protestant denominations, they are ministers.
No, Prime Ministers are leaders of countries.
No. recently because of the growth of congregations in catholic churches lay ministers have been allowed to administer the eucharist, but still only a priest can do the blessing and elevation.
Martin Luther King, along with his son, Martin Luther King, Jr. were both Baptist ministers. To the best of my knowledge they had nothing to do with the Catholic Church.
They both sprang from the Catholic Church but didn't accept the Pope as infallible. They allowed their ministers to marry.
All churches have catechisms. In the catholic, there is called a Cathechisms in the Catholic church.
National Ministers Day is about Churches celabrating all the Ministers in the Nation and how all the Ministers teached us all about God, Jesus and the Holy Spirit!!
I cannot speak for all denominations, but many Protestant denominations allow women priests or ministers. The three that most people would know about are 1. The United Reformed Church (including Presbyterian and Congregationalist) that has had women ministers for decades. 2. The Methodist Church that also has had women ministers for decades. 3. The Anglican Church (which includes the Episcopalians in the USA) that also allows women priests, and, in some Anglican churches, women bishops too. The founder Church of the Anglican communion of Churches, the Church of England, has had women priests since the 1990s, and is currently exploring the consecration of women bishops. There are many other churches that have women leaders (eg the Salvation Army) although they are not regarded as 'ordained' in the same sense as the above three churches.