The clergy of the Catholic Church consists of the Bishops, the priests, and the deacons: all ordained clergy.
Priests, Deacons, Bishops, Cardinals, Monsignor's, the Pope, are all members of the Catholic clergy.
The title "Clergy with Christians" does not refer to a widely recognized work or concept. If you are referring to a specific text or context involving clergy and their relationship with Christians, please provide additional details for clarification.
Catholics and orthodox Christians have many levels of their clergy, those who preach are called priests other denominations will call the preachers by either preacher or pastor
Yes, deacons are ordained, you are a deacon once you are ordained. You are gradually elevated (if you are a transitional deacon).
These are the ordained church leaders in the protestant Churches. In the Methodist Church, for example, ordained clergy are called ministers, whilst in the Baptist Church they tend to be called pastors. In the Anglican Church, however, the ordained leaders are names the same as the Roman Catholic Church - deacons, priests and bishops.
The First Estate was Catholic clergy, so essentially, the Pope.
The two types of clergy were regular clergy and secular clergy. Regular clergy were those who were in monastic orders, and so were regulated by the rules of those orders; they included monks and abbots. Secular clergy were those who served the secular population; they were deacons, priests, and bishops serving the secular people, or people who were not clergy.
A mozzeta is a elbow-length cape that is worn by other clergy(priest,bishops,deacons etc)but the pope has a hood.
Russell B. Shaw has written: 'To hunt, to shoot, to entertain' -- subject(s): Catholic Church, Clergy, Laity, Clericalism 'Permanent deacons' -- subject(s): Deacons
Yes, a Protestant pastor can transition to becoming a Catholic deacon through a process called the Pastoral Provision, which allows for the ordination of former Protestant clergy as Catholic deacons.
Catholic Deacons are clergy (ordained ministers) and can witness a marriage if given the facilities to do so by the Bishop for which he serves.