A good deal has been written about the need for accountability and transparency in diocesan transactions, financial and managerial. |
|
A diocesan bishop does not take on the role of father to fellow priests as an abbot does to monks. |
|
The spiritual peerage consists of the archbishops and diocesan bishops of the Church of England. |
|
The remainder of the diocesan and archidiaconal records are held at the Lincolnshire Archives, which is the Diocesan Record Office. |
|
Is the phenomenon confined to the diocesan or secular clergy or has it also touched the regulars, men who live by rule and vow? |
|
Priests from religious orders and the diocesan priests both ministered in that part of Down. |
|
The local diocesan bishop is charged with enforcement of all these requirements. |
|
The courses themselves are run by the church, with significant participation by the diocesan bishop. |
|
Their vocational and pastoral activities formed an integral and intimate part of diocesan life. |
|
As came entirely naturally to him, the Bishop tapped as his resource person the chancellor of the diocesan marriage tribunal. |
|
The teacher alerted the diocesan chancellor, Fr Alec Stenson, who referred him to Bishop O'Mahony. |
|
In 416 Augustine and his African bishops convened two diocesan councils to condemn him and Celestius, another Celt. |
|
In occasional diocesan synods, they harangued their clergy and issued reforming regulations. |
|
He combines his pastoral work at diocesan and national level with a keen interest in gardening. |
|
Diocesan newspapers do not broadcast weaknesses in diocesan procedures or policies. |
|
This too may have its drawbacks, but at least a local appointee will have a fair knowledge of clergy and people and a sense of diocesan needs. |
|
It seems to me that it's been a long time since that was a working metaphor among diocesan clergy. |
|
At the same time, diocesan leaders must work especially hard to make clear the differences between a Mass and a Communion service. |
|
The documents issuing from Rome and diocesan offices come across as totally abstract and divorced from real life. |
|
But in the present climate, his testimony and that of diocesan attorneys just won't suffice. |
|
|
As I look back on decades of chairing parish and diocesan meetings, the book's purpose hits home. |
|
According to Haines, some 50 people followed Dixon, who was accompanied by several diocesan officials. |
|
How do we strive for justice and peace in our work with these minority groups in our seminary and diocesan community? |
|
This took place at the local diocesan or consistorial courts in each Diocese. |
|
A sum of over 800 was raised, which means that the committee will be able to send two invalids from the parish on the diocesan pilgrimage in May. |
|
Parish and diocesan pastoral councils, like presbyteral councils, are in place, but they do not seem to work very well. |
|
A diocesan spokesman, however, said neither man was on the track for the priesthood. |
|
Among the most recent foibles, the editor allowed a pro-abortion candidate to place her ad in the diocesan paper. |
|
As in many other dioceses, there is no structured prison ministry at the diocesan level. |
|
Many chapters have opened lines of communication with diocesan officials in an effort to find common ground but, in many ways, the rifts have only grown deeper. |
|
It would be reassuring if a sample of these diocesan reports could actually be audited by outsiders, and a closer look taken in cases that seem to be statistically unlikely. |
|
It was noted in a letter book of 1907 that the late Canon C. W. Foster was already being asked to produce glebe terriers for the diocesan registrar. |
|
Verastique's study is, at best, a broad text-book like survey of pre-Hispanic religion and culture and of the Christianization programs of mendicants and diocesan clergy. |
|
These were the products of intellectuals, bishops, and churchmen who were nevertheless still connected with the diocesan and imperial courts, in some cases as chancellors. |
|
He has now been appointed a diocesan curate in Allen, County Kildare. |
|
All 44 diocesan bishops and 10 suffragans were asked to attend the meeting to discuss October's Windsor Report, a document produced to examine the crisis. |
|
In all likelihood there will be no universal template for diocesan statements, but they could all comply with a certain set of standards for intelligibility. |
|
Father Behrens was a diocesan priest in Newark, New Jersey, prior to his decision to enter the Trappist monastery in Conyers, Georgia, where he now lives and writes. |
|
He conducted his diocesan visitations regularly and dutifully. |
|
Soon came the facsimile machine, and if there was not a machine at diocesan headquarters in Kenya, Ghana, or South Africa, there usually was one not far away. |
|
|
At the same time, a life of dedicated celibacy would be properly respected and maintained in religious life and among those diocesan clergy who freely choose it. |
|
Each diocese of the established church had a consistorial or diocesan court, and in Dublin, superior to these, was the Prerogative Court of Armagh. |
|
Within the Church of England canon law had, until 1969, allowed for the use of exorcism, provided that permission was obtained from the diocesan bishop. |
|
Although the parish priest has no faculty from the law to confirm these people, he could seek from the diocesan bishop the concession of the faculty to confirm them. |
|
Each local context requires creative action that enables parish and diocesan leaders to promote a sense of belonging and ownership among Latinas and Latinos. |
|
In addition, he provides guidance for Eucharistic concelebration and he encourages the creation of diocesan bodies laid down by canonical norms. |
|
Retreat directors and directresses are neither pastors nor diocesan administrators. |
|
He also stated that the invitees would include diocesan as well as stipendiary suffragan and stipendiary assistant bishops. |
|
Anthony Mission, a small Native American parish and school on the Pueblo of Zuni, in the midst of a diocesan audit of his mission. |
|
The senior bishop of the seven diocesan bishops of the Scottish Episcopal Church bears the truncated title Primus from primus inter pares. |
|
Both dioceses and provinces hold synods, usually annually, consisting of the active diocesan clergy and lay delegates elected by parish churches. |
|
From 1635 the vestries and the clergy came loosely under the diocesan authority of the Bishop of London. |
|
The bishop and standing committee are elected by the diocesan convention whose members are selected by the congregations. |
|
The election of a bishop requires the consent of a majority of standing committees and diocesan bishops. |
|
In the Church of England, the diocesan vote against the covenant was decisive but the popular vote was only narrowly against the covenant. |
|
The assembly members are elected by the individual parishes, and the diocesan council members are elected by the assembly. |
|
In the absence of the diocesan bishop, they may be appointed as deputy head of the bishopric. |
|
Each congregation elects churchwardens and delegates who, together with the clergy, constitute the diocesan synod and annual convocation. |
|
In April 2016, the diocesan synod voted to dissolve the diocese due to its small size and merge with ACNA's Missionary Diocese of All Saints. |
|
The diocesan bishop may request that the Holy See appoint one or more auxiliary bishops, to assist him in his duties. |
|
|
The Bishop of Winchester is the diocesan bishop of the Diocese of Winchester in the Church of England. |
|
The men have all previously served the church as sidesmen, lay readers, and in one case, the diocesan treasurer. |
|
The main concelebrant at the Mass, which was attended by nearly 30 priests, was Monsignor Gerard Dasey, diocesan vicar-general, of Marske. |
|
A large number of diocesan clergy were also present to concelebrate the Mass. |
|
It may take a diocesan bishop a number of years to reach the House of Lords, at which point he becomes a Lord Spiritual. |
|
National, provincial, and diocesan synods maintain different scopes of authority, depending on their canons and constitutions. |
|
He went to the diocesan school in Trim when at Dangan, Mr Whyte's Academy when in Dublin, and Brown's School in Chelsea when in London. |
|
In the 16th century, a town was recognised as a city by the English Crown if it had a diocesan cathedral within its limits. |
|
The grant of the honour on the grounds of being a large industrial town, rather than a diocesan centre, was unprecedented. |
|
Patrick set up diocesan structures with a hierarchy of bishops, priests, and deacons. |
|
The Latin Church is governed by the pope and diocesan bishops directly appointed by him. |
|
Wilfrid spent the next nine years building churches, including at the monastery at Hexham, and attending to diocesan business. |
|
The Church of England comprises 42 dioceses, each led by a diocesan bishop. |
|
Theoretically, the power to elect archbishops and bishops is vested in the diocesan cathedral's college of canons. |
|
As with the primus of the Scottish Episcopal Church, the Archbishop of Wales serves concurrently as one of the six diocesan bishops. |
|
The Archbishop of Wales is elected from the currently seated diocesan bishops and continues as a diocesan after election. |
|
It is a commonly held misconception that there must be six diocesan bishops in order to hold the electoral college for the Archbishop of Wales. |
|
To be granted by the diocesan, at whose discretion one or more chapelries are to be founded by Robert. |
|
In about 692, in Bede's nineteenth year, Bede was ordained a deacon by his diocesan bishop, John, who was bishop of Hexham. |
|
For most of Christianity's first thousand years, canonisations were done on the diocesan or regional level. |
|
|
In July 2015, Rachel Treweek was the first woman to become a diocesan bishop in the Church of England when she became the Bishop of Gloucester. |
|
Of the 42 diocesan archbishops and bishops in the Church of England, 26 are permitted to sit in the House of Lords. |
|
Traditionally the status was afforded to towns with diocesan cathedrals and so there are smaller cities like Wells, Ely, Ripon, Truro and Chichester. |
|
Tver is the center of Diocese of Tver and Kashin of the Russian Orthodox Church, possessing the diocesan administration and residence of the ruling bishop. |
|
This would comprise four diocesan bishops and the Dean of the Arches. |
|
Such diocesan sobors may be held annually or only occasionally. |
|
All diocesan bishops continued to sit in Parliament, but the Bishopric of Manchester Act 1847, and later Acts, provide that only the 26 most senior are Lords Spiritual. |
|
Priests and deacons are ordained by their own diocesan bishop, while bishops are consecrated through the laying on of hands of at least three other bishops. |
|
In practice, diocesan assistant bishops have only been appointed within the diocese of the archbishop, in order to assist him with diocesan episcopal functions. |
|
Some contend that archbishops and diocesan bishops are peers during their tenures in the House of Lords, while others argue that only the Lords Temporal are peers. |
|
In processions and other occasions where strict protocol is observed, archbishops are ranked higher than diocesan bishops in the order of precedence. |
|
By the end of his reign there were 11 bishops and diocesan episcopacy had been restored, although there was still strong support for Presbyterianism within the Kirk. |
|
The Archbishop of the Archdiocese of St Andrew's and Edinburgh has his official residence in Greenhill, and the diocesan offices are in nearby Marchmont. |
|
An archdeacon represents the diocesan bishop in his or her archdeaconry. |
|
The antimins is a silk cloth, signed by the appropriate diocesan bishop, upon which the sanctification of the holy gifts takes place during each Divine Liturgy. |
|
The status does not apply automatically on the basis of any particular criteria, although in England and Wales it was traditionally given to towns with diocesan cathedrals. |
|