§40-1-2
New Mexico Marriage Statute
33
New Mexico Counties
49 yrs
Continuous Standing
3-5 wks
Credentialing
New Mexico Ordination Through AEGA
Recognized credentials, no state registration.
New Mexico is a no-state-registration state for marriage officiants. Unlike states where ministers must register with a court before officiating, New Mexico NMSA §40-1-2 authorizes "an ordained member of the clergy" of any religious organization to solemnize marriages. The AEGA ordination credential is sufficient. Sign the marriage license, the county clerk records it.
AEGA Ordained Minister credentials in New Mexico name the holder as an ordained minister of AEGA Ministries International, a Spirit-filled fellowship recognized as a religious organization under U.S. law and chartered as a 501(c)(3) since 1976. Sufficient under NMSA §40-1-2 to conduct marriages in any of the 33 counties. AEGA is not a denomination; it is a covenant fellowship of ministers credentialing ministers.
Who AEGA Credentials in New Mexico
Six common New Mexico ordination pathways.
AEGA carries credentialed ministers across every region of New Mexico, from senior pastors of established congregations to first-call wedding officiants. Each pathway runs through the same Credential Committee review.
Senior pastors of New Mexico congregations.
Lead pastors carrying ordination through AEGA across New Mexico cities and rural communities. The National Division covering reaches every region through state and area coordinators.
Church planters and bivocational ministers.
Ministers starting new works inside New Mexico. AEGA's 49 years of standing carries weight with landlords, banks, and county officials handling new church incorporations.
Wedding officiants across the state.
Ministers whose call includes officiating weddings across New Mexico. NMSA §40-1-2 recognizes the AEGA ordination credential in all 33 counties without further registration.
Ministers transferring credentials into AEGA.
Pastors and ministers moving from another fellowship or denomination who want a Spirit-filled covenant covering. AEGA has a transfer-of-credentials pathway for established ministers.
New Mexico chaplains needing the ordination prerequisite.
Hospital, hospice, federal-prison, state-corrections, and law-enforcement chaplains. AEGA Ordained Minister credentials are the gate for endorsement by AEGA Chaplaincy Commission.
Worship leaders and associate ministers.
Music ministers, youth pastors, associate ministers, and staff ministers across New Mexico congregations. Christian Worker and Licensed Minister tiers fit most associate roles.
Credential Pathways for New Mexico Ministers
Four credentialing tiers under one Spirit-filled fellowship.
AEGA carries four ministerial tiers: Ministerial Apprentice, Christian Worker, Licensed Minister, and Ordained Minister. Begin at the tier that matches your call.
Ministerial Apprentice.
The formation tier for ministers preparing for Licensed or Ordained credential. 12-24 months under a local pastor. New Mexico applicants begin here if no prior ministerial standing.
Christian Worker.
For those called to lay ministry roles: Sunday school teacher, jail or street ministry, house-to-house visitation. $50 application + $50 annual renewal. Open to ministers in any New Mexico city.
Licensed Minister.
For ministers in part-time or full-time ministry with limited experience. Authorizes preaching, marriage officiation under NMSA §40-1-2, baptism, and all sacerdotal duties.
Ordained Minister.
The highest credentialing tier. Required for chaplain endorsement, charter pastorship of an AEGA congregation, and the most formal forms of New Mexico ministerial standing.
Why AEGA in New Mexico
A covenant fellowship for the long career of New Mexico ministry.
AEGA-credentialed New Mexico ministers receive recognition under NMSA §40-1-2, covering through a Spirit-filled fellowship, and the standing of an organization that has carried ministers since 1976.
NMSA §40-1-2.
The statute that authorizes AEGA-ordained New Mexico ministers to conduct marriage ceremonies across all 33 counties. No state registration required.
Recognition across all 33 counties.
From the largest New Mexico metro areas through the rural counties. The AEGA credential carries the same weight statewide.
Spirit-filled covenant covering.
AEGA is a covenant fellowship of ministers credentialing ministers, not a denomination. New Mexico ministers receive ongoing covering, conference participation, and Credential Committee support.
49 years of standing.
AEGA has carried Spirit-filled ministers since 1976. New Mexico county clerks, chaplain boards, and charter agencies recognize the credential on file.
Get Ordained · By State or Nation
Become an ordained minister wherever you serve.
Every state has its own requirements for officiating weddings, performing chaplaincy, and operating a church. We’ve mapped the path for the states most of our applicants come from.
Frequently Asked
Getting ordained in New Mexico, answered.
Do I need to register with New Mexico to officiate weddings as an ordained minister?
No. New Mexico NMSA §40-1-2 authorizes "an ordained member of the clergy" of any religious organization to solemnize marriages. The AEGA ordination credential is sufficient in all 33 New Mexico counties. The minister signs the New Mexico marriage license after the ceremony; the county clerk records the marriage based on the signed license.
How long does AEGA ordination take in New Mexico?
Most AEGA credentials, including ordination, are issued within three to five weeks of a complete application. The timeline is the same in New Mexico as in any U.S. state. The Credential Committee review covers doctrinal alignment with the historic Spirit-filled stream AEGA has carried since 1976, references, and ministry experience.
Is AEGA a denomination, and does that matter for New Mexico marriage law?
AEGA is a covenant fellowship of ministers credentialing ministers, not a denomination. NMSA §40-1-2 does not require an officiant to be ordained by a denomination; it requires ordination by a religious organization. AEGA Ministries International is recognized as a religious organization under U.S. law and chartered as a 501(c)(3) since 1976. County clerks across New Mexico accept the AEGA credential.
Can a New Mexico-ordained AEGA minister also become a chaplain?
Yes. AEGA Ordained Minister credentials are the prerequisite for chaplain endorsement. AEGA-ordained New Mexico chaplains serve in hospital, hospice, federal-prison, state-corrections, and law-enforcement settings. The credentialing path runs first, then chaplaincy endorsement through the AEGA Chaplaincy Commission.
How does AEGA ordination compare to online ordination services in New Mexico?
AEGA ordination is a sacred setting-apart act inside a covenant fellowship, not a same-day certificate. AEGA requires an application, doctrinal review by the Credential Committee covering doctrinal alignment, references, and ministry experience, and a monthly giving commitment for Licensed and Ordained tiers. Both produce a credential a New Mexico county clerk will accept under NMSA §40-1-2; only one places the minister inside ongoing covering.
Learn more about ordination through AEGA.
Spirit-filled covenant fellowship. 49 years of continuous standing. Recognized under NMSA §40-1-2 across all 33 New Mexico counties. AEGA credentialing is the pathway for New Mexico ministers, chaplains, and church planters.