Yes, because he confirmed his beliefs in a non-Catholic faith and must confirm them in the Catholic Church.
John James Maximilian Oertel has written: 'The reasons of John James Maximilian Oertel, late a Lutheran minister, for becoming a Catholic' -- subject(s): Catholic converts
There are only 3 requirements for being a confirmation sponsor: 1) You must be a practicing Catholic and already have been Confirmed. 2) You cannot be the parent of the person you sponsor. 3) After becoming a person's sponsor, you cannot marry them. If you fulfill all of these, you can most definitely be a sponsor.
No, John Adams was not a Catholic. He was a Congregationalist, becoming a Unitarian later in life.
The Episcopal church is becoming more and more liberal....some Presbyterian churches are headed that direction. The ELCA Lutheran church is becoming more liberal also.
Hopefully they dont mind. Depends on the parents, obviously.
Yes, a Protestant pastor can transition to becoming a Catholic deacon through a process called the Pastoral Provision, which allows for the ordination of former Protestant clergy as Catholic deacons.
The Wikipedia article on Wernher von Braun states that he was confirmed as a Lutheran as a child. That would put this event at about twelve to fourteen years of age, or in the range 1924-1926. Depending on your definition of "becoming a Christian", that's probably your answer. Could've been later or earlier, though.
Baptism can be for other Christian faiths, not just Catholic. So if you are becoming a Christian, you are baptised.
The link I will place below may help with answering this.
J. Killgallon has written: 'Becoming a catholic'
The confirmed facts about climate change are that the average temperatures around the world are increasing and severe weather is becoming more common. The extent and causes of the change are disputed.
He was the first president who recognized himself as a Roman Catholic.