The difference between the catholic, Pentecostal and Baptist beliefs is that the catholic church focuses on Mary and the Pope, while the Pentecostals take the whole Bible literally and believe that all of The Bible is relevant for today's world while the Baptist pick and choose which parts of the Bible they wish to apply to modern day life.
The people of Mississippi are no different from people of other states in their religious beliefs. They practice the same religions as people from all of the other states, such as Baptist, Catholic, Pentecostal, Presbyterian, Episcopalian, Jewish, Muslim, etc.
Diffrent sets of Beliefs Christian, United, Baptist, Protestant, Roman Catholic, Catholic, ect
Certainly - many Pentecostal churches are fine Christian churches. Some of their practices and beliefs might be different from my Presbyterian church, but I wouldn't have a problem attending one.
Apostolic- believes the Oneness, while most of the Mainline Pentecostal are trinitarian
Catholics have to go to the priest, and the priest prays to god on there behalf. Whereas pentecostal people pray directly to God.
I don't know much about the Pentecostal beliefs, but Catholics, as well as most Christian groups, consider it a sin to have sex outside of marriage, and a grave sin if one of the two is married to somebody else.
They do not believe in evolution; only creation.
The religious affiliation of Texas are as follows: * Roman Catholic - 28% * Baptist - 21% * No religion - 11% * Methodist - 8% * Christian - Others- 7% * Lutheran - 3% * Pentecostal - 3% * Presbyterian - 2% * Episcopalian - 1% * Judaism, Islam, other - 1% * Non-denominational - 1% The largest denominations by number of adherents in 2000 were the Roman Catholic Church with 4,368,969; the Southern Baptist Convention with 3,519,459; and the United Methodist Church with 1,022,342. Also, approximately 400,000 Muslims live in Texas.
Pentecostals are an organized movement: there are specific denominations (such as the Assemblies of God) that officially codify Pentecostal belief (in a nutshell, basic evangelical/fundamentalist beliefs plus an emphasis on the work of the Holy Spirit, through miracles, healings, speaking in tongues, etc). Charismatics are Christians who hold Pentecostal beliefs but belong to churches that are theologically non-Pentecostal. Examples include Oral Roberts (United Methodist), Pat Robertson (Southern Baptist), the late Brian Hathaway (Plymouth Brethren), Bill Subritsky (Anglican), Larry Christenson (Lutheran), Jack Deere (Presbyterian), and Francis MacNutt (Roman Catholic).
Choose a partner that is a member of the church.
I wouldn't think so. My Pentecostal beliefs wouldn't stop me from getting a treatment if it would improve my health, I would pray about it, and if God was for it, I'd go for it, but if He was against the idea, I would know that there was something better he had in mind for me. So, if my beliefs are anything like his, the Pentecostal beliefs are not what would stop him.
"Evangelical" is a general term that includes many churches; basically, most Christian churches that are not Catholic. I believe it includes baptists.