What do you mean by "authorize the organizing of churches and baptizing".
I was asking Bob, because that seemed to be his repeated question.
Unfortunately my response to his post appeared on the next page, thus losing the connection.
An ordained, male, pastor, is authorized to organize a newly formed congregation after the local Conference has given permission for the congregatlion to be formed. This is an administrative function that has nothing to do with an evangelist baptizing 200 new members who are then organized into a congregation.
In all the churches I've seen officially organized, (and I've seen a few) First permission must be obtained from the conference. If the conference says "no", that's the end of the matter. If they say "yes", then the pastor in consultation with leading members of the new group decide on a date. Then conference personel come for the service. The official part isn't left to the pastor to do. Sure he, along with the members of the new group then have "nominating committee" and set people into the offices, etc.
"The actual "authorization" or including a new congregation into the statistics of the conference records of churches is of course, the role of the conference administration, not the work of the evangelist or minister."
I wanted Bob to explain how this affected "ordination".
The only problem I see [with women baptizing] there is the physical one.
Even men sometimes have a tough time raising a large convert back up out of the water.
Not if they have been properly trained. Problems only ocur if the person being baptized must remain in some device such as a wheel-chair or bed.
Yes they do! I've been witness. It takes more than "proper training", it takes some co-operation from the person being baptized. If they FORGET to keep their feet under them, or go limp, or do some panicky or other strange thing, the pastor may have a real struggle to get them up. Get a bunch of pastors together talking about all their mishaps at baptisms and they can have you laughing for hours.
NOTE: Some women are stronger than some men.
No argument there, I know I'm stronger than some men, but I also know there are men who are a LOT stronger than I am.
On the average men are stronger than the average women.
the church board is responsible for accepting or rejecting a person into membership.
False. The Chruch Board can only recommend. It is the congregation that votes one way or the other. The Church Board does not have that power.
Why don't you take the WHOLE of what I said instead of contradicting half without reference to the whole.
"A responsible pastor will present the names of perspective baptisms to the board to be voted into membership pending their baptism, before it is presented to the church as a whole. Then the church is also required to vote a new member into fellowship before their names are added to the church list."
If the church board votes it down, (unless the pastor goes against their vote) it never gets to the church.
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