You extend your help to an ordained minister in exactly the same way you'd extend your help to any other person in need.
Don't let the person's ordination color your responses to whether you offer help, or to the type of help you offer. Extend the help you feel they need, or the help they may be asking - or seem to be asking - for.
Imagine if a friend who is a doctor became ill, and clearly needed emotional support. Would you hold back that support for fear a doctor already knows all about their illness, and has sufficient support from their medical colleagues? Of course not!
Imagine if this minister for whom you are concerned held holy orders in a faith completely unfamiliar, even meaningless, to you. If a minister of that unknown faith needed help, would you feel uncomfortable extending that help? Surely not!
Perhaps you feel you have little to offer in the way of emotional, spiritual, or even material, support to a person trained and ordained to provide such support themselves? Consider that a person in their position might feel all the more lonely in their time of need, knowing full well that others could be holding back for fear of proving unequal to supporting a person who traditionally should be supporting them.
This might make it all the more difficult for a minister of your faith to show need, and so, in turn, those who would offer support could see this as a sign their support would be unwelcome, or even inadequate, and so hold back the very human strength and comfort needed at this time.
Give whatever help you can to this minister, as a friend or simply as a person in need and, if you feel it necessary, encourage others to do so. And, of course, respect privacy at all times, just as you'd do for any friend in a vulnerable situation; don't repeat any conversations you might have.
King was ordained a minister in 1947 at Ebenzer Baptist Church in Atlanta
once ordained in ame church will you always be called a minister
The prefix for an ordained minister is typically "Rev." which is short for Reverend.
Any ordained minister can resign from any church.
Al Sharpton was ordained a Pentecostal Minister when he was a child.
Antoinette Brown Blackwell is recognized as the first woman to be ordained as a minister in the United States. She was ordained by the Congregationalist Church in 1853.
holy orders
Yes
Yes!
yes
Yes
Each religious organization has there own process for becoming ordained. You can take correspondence courses too become a non denominational minister.