abides by the vowels taken at ordination
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.
The two parts were secular clergy, who lived like any of us, and interacted with people on a regular basis. And the Regular Clergy, who was made up of monks and nuns! === ===
Clergy were the Church officials, and the laity were the regular members.
The "regular clergy" are also known as "just regulars" and refers to Roman Catholic clerics who live their lives under a specific rule. The term clashes with the term "secular clergy."
Vicarization is the designation of a substitute or replacement for a member of the clergy, often a substitute priest or pastor who acts on behalf of the regular clergy member. This can occur when the regular clergy member is unavailable or incapacitated.
The secular clergy are deacons, priests, and bishops, as opposed to the regular clergy who are monks and abbots. The word secular means not religious, so the secular clergy are those clergy who go out into the world to serve in an environment that is predominantly not religious. The regular clergy are those subject to regulations monastic organizations, where life is entirely controlled for religious considerations.
They take vows of Chastity, Poverty and obedience.
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Regular clergy live in a communal setting and follow a specific rule or order, such as monks or nuns in a monastery. Secular clergy are ordained ministers who serve in a parish and engage with the wider community in their religious duties, such as priests in a church.
Secular clergy included priests, who mostly inhabited the rectories of their churches, and bishops, who mostly lived in bishops' palaces. Regular clergy, which included nuns and monks of all sorts, mostly lived in monasteries, convents, and abbeys. Some monks lived alone in cottages, huts, or caves, and some were homeless and dependent on others to house them.
There were two kinds of clergy, and their lives were very different. Some clergy were monastic. They were called regular clergy, and were the monks and abbots who lived and worked at monasteries. They did all sorts of things from farming the monastery's fields, cooking, cleaning, to transcribing books such as bibles. They were called regular because they lead a very ordered, regulated, life: early to rise and early to bed; attend chapel up to six times every day, including getting up for chapel at midnight; obey the superiors; no money or ownership; no family, and no sex. Other clergy were called the secular clergy, because they tended secular people. They were deacons, priests, and bishops. They lived among the people they served, and though their lives were simple and theoretically chaste, they lived more like ordinary people, often in their own houses. Sometimes they had jobs outside the church, as in the case of Thomas Becket when he was the Chancellor for King Henry II. Some of these clergy lived as lords, and in fact the bishops were regarded as lords. Some were important politically, as in the case of the three bishops who were among the seven men who elected the emperors of the Holy Roman Empire.
Clergy is a minister. Google him to find out!