When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Mass stipend - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_Stipend

    In the Catholic Church, a Mass stipend is a donation given by the laity to a priest for celebrating a Mass for a particular intention. Despite the name, it is considered as a gift or offering ( Latin : stips ) freely given rather than a payment ( Latin : stipendium ) as such.

  3. Suspension (Catholic canonical penalty) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suspension_(Catholic...

    Suspension (Latin: suspensio) in Catholic canon law is a censure or punishment, by which a priest or cleric is deprived, entirely or partially, of the use of the right to order or to hold office, or of any benefice. [1]

  4. Stipend - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stipend

    A stipend is a regular fixed sum of money paid for services or to defray expenses, such as for scholarship, internship, or apprenticeship. [1] It is often distinct from an income or a salary because it does not necessarily represent payment for work performed; instead it represents a payment that enables somebody to be exempt partly or wholly from waged or salaried employment in order to ...

  5. Benefice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benefice

    Parish priests were charged with the spiritual and temporal care of their congregation. The community provided for the priest as necessary, later, as organisation improved, by tithe (which could be partially or wholly lost to a temporal lord or patron but relief for that oppression could be found under canon law).

  6. Ordinary (church officer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ordinary_(church_officer)

    In canon law, the power to govern the church is divided into the power to make laws (legislative), enforce the laws (executive), and to judge based on the law (judicial). [6] An official exercises power to govern either because he holds an office to which the law grants governing power or because someone with governing power has delegated it to ...

  7. Curia (Catholic Church) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curia_(Catholic_Church)

    The Roman Curia includes the Secretariats, the Curial Congregations, the Pontifical Councils, Pontifical Commissions, the tribunals, and other offices. References [ edit ]

  8. Team of priests in solidum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Team_of_priests_in_solidum

    The law entrusts the cura pastoralis (pastoral care) to each member of the team of priests equally. However, the team of priests is not a juridical person . The team is made up of single priests who assume pastoral care simultaneously or conjointly, and are obligated to the majority of duties proper to a parish priest .

  9. Incumbent (ecclesiastical) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incumbent_(ecclesiastical)

    The form of admission to office has two parts: the future incumbent is first authorised by the bishop to exercise the spiritual responsibilities (institution or collation – see below), the second puts him in possession of the "temporalities" (induction) which he receives at the hands of the archdeacon or his deputy.