Anyone can baptize a baby in case of necessity. Otherwise it is the priest who should do it.
absolutely, a priest would be very happy to baptise a child!!
According to the Catholic church a ordinary minister of baptism is reserved for the head parish priest, but can also be done by a bishop, deacon or other priest in the parish. In emergencies, like someone about to die anyone delegated by the church.
Catholic priests are assigned a parish by the bishop of the diocese.
Parish Priest 35,000 to 45,000 Pastor 45,000 to 55,000
The key essential words that are said to baptise someone are: "I baptise you in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit." A priest or deacon or some other clergy man should be doing the baptising unless if it is an emergency where the person is about to die and asks to be baptised.
It's just Catholic, not Roman Catholic. Roman is an epithet first commonly used in England after the protestant revolt to describe the Catholic Church. It is never used by the official Catholic Church. It differs from diocese to diocese, you would need to contact the diocese in which you are looking for the information in order to obtain their pay scale.
I would say no, but ask the bishop of the diocese or the local priest, that's what they're there for.
You would need to contact your Chancery to find out the pay scale for the priests in that diocese.
That depends on the number of years the priest has been ordained.
A Catholic Parish is a designation of a geographical locale, established by the local Catholic diocese. It is the area that is identified as a single congregation of Catholic worshipers. A parish usually has one church in it, and one priest.
A priest who resigns is considered to have resigned from the Church itself and is no longer considered as a Catholic. Since he is no longer Catholic he is free to do as he pleases. However, a priest can remain in the Church as a Catholic if he is laicized. To be laicized the bishop of the diocese would have to declare the priest's Holy Orders as null and void. In other words, he would no longer be a priest. He, too, would be free to marry but would still be considered a Catholic.
You would need to contact the Chancery in the diocese you were interested in, and ask them for the pay scale.