Lutheran
Roman Catholic AnswerNone of them are really "close" to Catholicism as they are all radically different from their very roots, however, High Church Anglicans (Episcopalians) look like Catholics in their worship, and many of them believe very similar things.Methodist.
Christian, mostly protestant though the largest single denomination would be Roman Catholic.
That depends on the practices of the denomination, but in general the answer is Yes for most main-line denominations (Presbyterians, Lutherans, Methodists, etc.)
Methodist
They do not differ much. They are very similar to Lutherans, which is extremely similar to Catholicism. Episcopal churches have Deacons and bishops as well as the Pastor, of course. Most episcopal churches are both Catholic and Protestant.
Yes he was Catholic as most people were back then, however, obviously he became Lutheran after the Protestant Reformation. This is similar to the fact that Jesus was Jewish in his lifetime, not Christian.
The largest denomination is the Roman Catholic Church especially in and around Philadelphia and Pittsburg. The United Methodist Church is the largest Protestant denomination with over 400,000 members. The Presbyterians, Lutherans and Episcopalians are next. The Baptists and fundamentalists which most Blacks belong to, are large especially in Philadelphia.
Catholic & protestant
The largest denomination of the French nation is Roman Catholic. France has been a loyal catholic nation since the Medieval times.
The most impact on what?
Mexico. Most Christians in Mexico are Catholic. Most Christians in the USA are Protestant. John F. Kennedy (1961 - 1963) was the USA's first Catholic President. All the others before him were Protestant.
The depends entirely upon which country you are talking about, although actually most of them are similar. In England and Scotland, the crown just confiscated all the Catholic property, the Churches were turned into protestant churches, and the Abbeys and other properties were awarded to nobility that the King wanted to reward. In northern Germany, the Peace of Westphalia gave all the Catholic property to the prince if he was protestant and they became protestant.
post-reformation, most protestant churches would've been identical to catholic structures in architechtural construction and style. however they would've been much plainer, white-washed walls, and without statues or similar artwork, which filled catholic churches.