once ordained in ame church will you always be called a minister
Deacon and minister are just titles within a church. Once you are ordained you technically hold all of these titles and can perform all of the duties, but can specialize in one at a time, often your church will appoint you to such positions sometimes in a hierarchy. This is really a question for your church on how they treat such titles, but I don't know of any religion that doesn't consider being ordained for life.
Being a minister.
No.
Marriages are made legal by a marriage license that is issued by the state, not by the church. The law does not stipulate that wedding ceremonies must be performed by an ordained minister. Since the US enjoys freedom of religion, you are free to use any religious or non-religious marriage ceremony you like. Your father can perform a ceremony without being an ordained minister.
In an emergency situation, ANYONE, even someone who is not baptized, CAN baptize anyone if they intend to do what the Church does when she baptizes. That being said, a Catholic deacon MAY baptize a baby legitimately for the Church. In the second case the deacon is acting as an ordained minister and fulfilling his function as such.
Antonio Vivaldi
The role of a permanent deacon is that they remain a deacon and do not move on to becoming a priest, bishop, etc. They can minister some sacraments and can celebrate mass, but their main role is to help the church, community and charities- through the church. They work for the church.
I've never heard of being self ordained, but as far as being ordained at all and marrying yourself, no. Marriage is a legal contract where you are required to have so many people bear witness, be present and such. The minister is actually a separate part of the contract and must be a separate entity. I would take up question of this sort with the local City Clerk though as laws on marriage very from here to there.
You generally present yourself to your local church as answering a call to the ministry. It is then up to the church to vote if they agree that your calling is valid. Not the same as being ordained. You generally present yourself to your local church as answering a call to the ministry. It is then up to the church to vote if they agree that your calling is valid. Not the same as being ordained.
An ordained vocation typically refers to a calling to religious ministry or service within a specific faith tradition. It involves receiving official recognition, such as being ordained as a priest, minister, rabbi, or cleric, to carry out specific religious duties and responsibilities within a religious community.
Yes you do because it is illegal to perform a funeral without being licensed.
No. Even uncontrollable stuttering will prevent one from being ordained a priest.