38,155 deacons almost all live in Europe and the U.S.
Catholic AnswerThat would depend entirely on what kind of clergyman you were talking about. A Catholic diocesan priest normally lives in a rectory, a Catholic religious priest might live in a monastery, a Friary, a hermitage, or a rectory. A permanent deacon might leave in his own home.
St. Rose's Catholic Church Rectory was created in 1905.
Roman Catholicism PriestsRoman Catholic parish priests live in a building called the rectory. This is owned by the church and is often attached to the church building.
Priests, as they do today, would have lived in a separate dwelling called a rectory, not in the church.
In a general sense, a Catholic priest usually lives in a rectory. It is a house provided by the church for the comfort of the priest. Usually, it is a house that would be common in a given area.
Yes, deacons are ordained, you are a deacon once you are ordained. You are gradually elevated (if you are a transitional deacon).
Diocesian priests usually live in a Rectory, a house provided by the parish of which they are the priest. Religious priests either live in a monastery, or a house owned by their Order unless they are serving in a diocese, in which case they live in a Rectory.
There were seven men chosen by the early Church as deacons.
Not usually. If you're referring to the priests, they live in what's called a 'rectory'. The rectory can be attached to the church.
They usually live in the parish house or rectory.
In a rectory. But a vicar lives in a vicarage.