Spiritualism in the popular context involves spirtual ( Time Travel) in the unapproved occult context of communications with the dead. the proceses are varied and often spark of stage magic ( Houdini was adamantly opposed to spiritualism and spent a good deal of time and money combatting it). On the other hand Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was the virtual CROWN PRINCE of the spiritualist realm. such variants as seances, code numbers for phone calls with the deceased, etc go on and on. audio and audio-visual hallucinations find their way into the pot- the mixed up spiritualist cauldron, proceed at your own risk- John the apostle warns- But Try the Spirits if they be of God ! ( not Miller High Life, of course!)
An Orthodox Christian, who holds The Bible as his authority, obeys the command to abstain from Spiritualism, (enquiring of the dead etc.) and a Spiritualist doesn't.
None.
LaVeyans tend to be more athestic than spiritualist satanists.
There is no difference, Catholics are Christians, if you are asking about the difference between a particular protestant wedding and a Christian Catholic wedding, then you should ask that.
It is a bench in a christian church.
As the difference between being belonging to the majority and to the minority. Refer to the related questions below.
i love christian
Southern Baptists are Christians.
The difference between christian medical college and a technical school is at a christian medical college, it is for christians and people trying to be doctors. Technical school is for people who want to do something that involves technology.
As they say there is a big difference between a preaching Christian and a practicing Christian.
Spiritual Satanists are more spiritual. They believe in Satan as an actual being, usually he's their God of choice. Whereas LaVeyan Satanists are pretty much athiests.
The difference between the Christian God and the Japanese god is that the Christian God is the only God. There is no Japanese god. The Christian God is real and the Japanese God is fake.
Baptists are a sect of Christianity, not a separate religion.