Priests will be priests: belong to the clergy, ministers of a Christian Church.
Ordained Lutheran priests were allowed to be married. They are still allowed to be today. Celibacy is not compulsory for Lutheran clergy.
There were doubtless occasions when priests were put in the stocks, but I would imagine they were the exception and this very seldom happened. Priests were members of clergy. The legal system of the Middle Ages included what was called "benefit of clergy," which provided for clergy to be tried by ecclesiastical courts when they were accused of crimes. Ecclesiastical courts were prohibited from using corporal punishments on several occasions by the popes (a sign it happened from time to time). Benefit of clergy, by the way, did not only apply to priests, but to all clerics. Today we is envision this as including monks and nuns, but this vision is incomplete. It was rather hard to determine who was a member of the clergy and who was not, so the question was put to a test to determine whether a person qualified, and the test was whether a person was literate to the point of being able to read the 51st Psalm. Under this system, all literate people were clergy, and this included a large number of students, members of nobility, merchants, poets, troubadours, and any scoundrels who had memorized the 51st Psalm.
priests do the same things our priests do today they held spiritual ceremonies and they did the wrappings of the mummies and the burials
wheel
The Sumariens created the calendar that we use today.
A good way to do this assignment is by using a Venn diagram . Opening your book and making the Venn will give you the information you need.
the wheel and irragation
From the 2012 edition of the "Annuario Pontificio" or pontifical yearbook, and the "Annuarium Statisticum Ecclesiae": The steady increase in the number of priests which began in the year 2000 has continued. In 2010 their numbers stood at 412,236, composed of 227,009 diocesan priests and 135,227 regular priests; whereas in 2009 they numbered 410,593 (275,542 diocesan and 135,051 regular). The number of clergy has increased in Asia (by 1695), Africa (765), Oceania (52) and the Americas (42), while their numbers have fallen by 905 in Europe
The early priests wore secular clothing that was reserved for liturgical use. The vestments worn by priests today developed from the Greek and Roman clothing worn by the priests of the early Church.
The decision that priests should not marry was formalized by the Roman Catholic Church during the Second Lateran Council in 1139, which prohibited the marriage of clergy. This practice was rooted in the belief that celibacy allowed priests to dedicate themselves fully to their spiritual duties and serve God without the distractions of family life. The tradition has been upheld over the centuries, although some Eastern Catholic and Orthodox churches allow married priests. The issue of clerical celibacy continues to be a topic of discussion and debate within the Church today.
Poverty, chastity and obedience.