The Anglican church consists of several protestant churches all under the umbrella church of 'Anglicanism' including the Church of England, African churches, the Episopalian Church of Scotland, the Church in Wales etc. They are all main-stream Christian churches which accept The Bible as truth. Taking the Church of England as a typical Anglican church, the clergy fall into deacons, priests and bishops (like the Roman Catholic Church) although the supreme governor of the church is the reigning monarch (at the moment HM Queen Elizabeth II) and the Head of the Church is Jesus Christ. The Church of England employs the parochial system - in other words the whole of England is split into areas called parishes which are overseen by a parish priest. Everyone in England, churchgoer or not, has a right to access of pastoral care by the parish priest and therefore the C of E is excellent in pastoral care and evangelism. Doctrine is similar to other protestant churches. The church recognises baptism and Holy Communion as sacraments, and recognises the Bible as the true inspired Word of God. Unlike the Roman Catholic Church, the C of E does not accept the human-manufactured ideas of purgatory, the revering of the Virgin Mary, limbo, praying to saints, adoration of statues, priestly celibacy, and limiting priesthood to men only. In the Cof E women can become priests, and, in some Anglican churches (although the C or E has not adopted this yet), especially in Africa, women can become bishops. The church adheres to the 39 articles of faith which can be found at http://anglicansonline.org/basics/thirty-nine_articles.html
The main religion is Christianity; with the largest denomination being Presbyterian; there are also large Catholic and Anglican communities; and many other smaller denominations.
As no denomination is stated 'other' denominations cannot determined
Catholicism is not a denomination. It is the name of the original Christian Church and is not divided into denominations. There are different rites within the Catholic Church - Maronites and other Eastern Rites for example - but they are all Catholics and not separate denominations. Denomination usually refers to Protestants who have some 36,000 denominations.
The Anglican church is itself a Protestant denomination, so there would be no issue from that end. Some churches though do restrict access to their facilities on the basis of membership. However, certain other denominations (or religions) may take issue with a wedding that occurred in an Anglican Church.
Christianity is the main religion in New Zealand, with the largest denomination being Anglican. However, there is also a growing number of people who identify as non-religious or belong to other faiths such as Hinduism, Buddhism, and Islam.
Christianity is the predominant religion in Bermuda, with Anglicanism being the largest denomination. Other Christian denominations present in Bermuda include Roman Catholicism, Seventh-day Adventist, and various Protestant groups. There are also smaller populations of followers of other religions, such as Islam and Judaism.
I think the Rochester Cathedral was "built in" the denomination of the Catholic Church. I think so because there were no other denominations around in 604 A.D., when it was built. When the King of England took over the Church in England, he would also have taken over Rochester Cathedral and made it Anglican (Church of England).
because different denominations have different beliefs in god :P
The Salvation Army is a Christian organization and NOT a church denomination.
The key difference between the Episcopal and Anglican denominations is their organizational structure. The Episcopal Church in the United States is a self-governing province within the worldwide Anglican Communion. Anglicanism, on the other hand, refers to the broader global tradition of churches that are in communion with the Archbishop of Canterbury. While both denominations share common beliefs and practices, they have distinct governance and leadership structures.
I could find no information that tied Thomas Jefferson's father, Peter Jefferson to the Anglican Church nor any other denomination.
Denomination is the collective word for specific Christian religions eg: Catholic, Baptist, Anglican etc. A Church that does not follow the doctrine of any one denomination but still uses the same holy text and basic beliefs. Interpretation of holy texts is probably slightly different from most other churches.