Members of a parish can take on many titles, depending on their vocation. A member of the clergy at a parish can either be a pastor, parochial vicar, deacon, or a similar title. The general term for the laity in a parish is simply parishoners.
I have never heard them called anything other than "member of the parish council".
Pretis relationship with his parish like a family members because all are living with one parish and treat each other as family support to each other.
Anyone who they want!! It could be a catholic you are close to, or someone who has done a lot for you, however it could just be a catholic in the parish.
priests do not necessarily have "power" they are there to serve the people who are members of the church
The parish priest should administer anointing of the sick.
A parish priest is the main priest in a parish. He is responsible for running the parish, so he may have to deal with more practical things, like doing the accounts for the parish. He will also have his normal duties as a priest. Other priests in the parish may help him and they are called curates.
Roman Catholic AnswerThe Church ministers, priests and deacons, get paid by the parish. The salary is set by the Bishop of the diocese in which the parish is. Parishes also hire music ministers, liturgy ministers, sisters to run various things, etc. The parish decides their salaries, usually, although there is a recommendation by the diocese as to what this should be. Most others are volunteers, there may be a paid person in the office who runs the Catechism program, but the Catechists are all volunteers from the parish. Likewise, the organist and song leader are paid, but the choir members are all volunteers, usually.
A Parish is a community of believers in a set boundary - we should liken it to school districts. Basically it is a territory where the priest has a responsibility.
You can inquire with the parish priest or church administrator about the relics contained in the local parish's altar stone. They should have records or information regarding the specific saints whose relics are placed within the altar.
I believe that the only acceptable reason for wanting to be married outside of your parish church is if you prefer to get married in your spouse's parish church. I'm not really sure, whatever reason you may be thinking of, you should check with your parish priest.
You can call parish of specific baptism and request a record of that one baptism. If parish is closed a receiving parish will have record; call archdiocese office. Records are weell kept but private and cannot be accessed by anyone othert than those authorized.