Bishops, priests, and deacons with the ecclesiastical
tonsure. Francis was an ordained deacon. , an
Anglican priest and pioneering
naturalist and
ornithologist , the first bishop to be martyred at the time of the
Russian Revolution The
Catholic,
Eastern Orthodox,
Anglican,
Lutheran,
Reformed and some
Methodist denominations have applied the formal, church-based leadership or an
ordained clergy in matters of either the church or broader political and sociocultural import. The churches have three orders of ordained clergy: •
Bishops are the primary clergy, administering all sacraments and governing the church. •
Priests administer the sacraments and lead local congregations; they cannot ordain other clergy, however, nor consecrate buildings. • In some denominations,
deacons play a non-sacramental and assisting role in the liturgy. In several countries, the clergy was one of the
estates of the realm, with separate representation in parliament. After compulsory celibacy was abolished during the Reformation in northern Europe, the formation of a partly hereditary priestly class became possible, whereby wealth and clerical positions were frequently inheritable. Higher-positioned clergy formed this clerically educated upper class.
High Church Anglicanism and
High Church Lutheranism tend to emphasise the role of the clergy in dispensing the Christian sacraments. The countries that were once a part of the
Swedish Empire, i.e.,
Finland and the
Baltics, have more markedly preserved Catholic traditions and introduced far fewer Reformed traditions, the roles of bishops, priests, and deacons are notably more visible. Bishops, priests and deacons have traditionally officiated over acts of worship, reverence, rituals, and ceremonies. Among these central traditions have been
baptism,
confirmation,
penance,
anointing of the sick,
holy orders, marriage, the
mass or the
divine service, and
coronations. These so-called "social rituals" have formed a part of human
culture for tens of thousands of years. Anthropologists see social rituals as one of many
cultural universals. File:Baptism Sainte-Chapelle MNMA Cl23717.jpg|Scene of baptism.
Stained glass from the
Sainte-Chapelle of Paris, last quarter of the 12th century. File:Confirmation VanderWeyden.png|A bishop administering
Confirmation.
Rogier van der Weyden,
The Seven Sacraments (detail), . File:Wedding of Grand Duke Alexandr Alexandrovich and Maria Feodorovna by M.Zichy (1867, Hermitage) detail.jpg|Wedding of
Maria Feodorovna and
Alexander III of Russia. Painting by
Mihály Zichy, 1867. File:Extreme Unction Rogier Van der Weyden.jpg|Extreme Unction. Rogier van der Weyden,
The Seven Sacraments (detail), . File:1962 consecration of William Evan Sanders - Bishop of Tennessee.jpg|Consecration of William Evan Sanders as
Episcopal Bishop Coadjutor of
Tennessee, 1962 Image:Исповедь берн собор.jpg|A penitent confessing his sins in a Catholic church in
Lviv, Ukraine File:Richthofen funeral.jpg|Funeral of
Manfred von Richthofen,
Bertangles Cemetery, France, 22 April 1918 The term "
rector" (from the
Latin word for "ruler") or "
vicar" may be used for priests in certain settings, especially in the Catholic and Anglican traditions. In the
Episcopal Church in the United States, a parish, which is responsible for its own finances, is overseen by a rector. A bishop is nominally in control of a financially assisted parish but delegates authority to a vicar (related to the prefix "vice," meaning substitute or deputy).
Pastors The term "
pastor" means "shepherd"; it is used several times in the
New Testament to refer to church workers. Many Protestants use the term as a prenominal title (e.g., Pastor Smith) or as a job title (like Senior Pastor or Worship Pastor).
Clergy The English word "clergy" derives from the same root as "clerk" and can be traced to the Latin "clericus" which derives from the Greek word "kleros" meaning a "lot" or "portion" or "office." The term Clerk in Holy Orders is still the official title for certain Christian clergy and its usage is prevalent in
canon law.
Holy orders refer to any recipient of the sacrament of ordination, both the major orders (
bishops,
priests and
deacons) and the now less known minor orders (
acolyte,
lector,
exorcist, and
porter) who, save for certain reforms made at the Second Vatican Council in the Roman Catholic Church, were called clerics or "clerk", which is simply a shorter form of
cleric. Clerics were distinguished from the laity by having received, in a formal rite of introduction into the clerical state, the
tonsure or
corona (crown), which involved cutting hair from the top and side of the head, leaving a circlet of hair that symbolised the
Crown of Thorns worn by Christ at his crucifixion. Though Christian in origin, the term can be applied by analogy to functions in other religious traditions. For example, a
rabbi can be referred to as being a clergy member.
Parson is a similar term often applied to ordained priests or ministers. The word is a variant on the English word "person" from the Latin "persona" ("mask") used as a legal term for one having jurisdiction.
Dominie, Dominee, Dom, Don The similar words "Dominie", "Dominee" and "Dom", all derived from the Latin
domine (vocative case of Dominus "Lord, Master"), are used in related contexts.
Dominie, derived directly from Dutch, is used in the United States, "Dominee", derived from Dutch via
Afrikaans is used in South Africa as the title of a pastor of the
Dutch Reformed Church. In Scottish English dominie is generally used to mean just schoolmaster. In various
Romance languages, shortened forms of Dominus (
Dom, Don) are commonly used for Catholic priests (sometimes also for lay notables as well) for example
Benedictine Monks are titled
Dom, as in the style
Dom Knight. Dom or Dominus, as well as the English equivalent, Sir were often used as titles for priests in England up to the 17th century who held Bachelor of Arts degrees.
Chaplains and padres Chaplain as in English or
almoner (preferred in many other languages) or their equivalents refer to a minister who has another type of pastoral "target group" than a territorial parish congregation (or in addition to one), such as a military units, schools and hospitals. The Spanish word
Padre ("father") is often informally used to address military chaplains, also in English and
Portuguese (
Brazil).
Elder Elders (in Greek, πρεσβυτερος [presbuteros]; see
Presbyter) in Christianity are involved in the collective leadership of a local church or of a denomination. • Some Reformed/non-mainline Presbyterian denominations, Anglican and some Methodists call their ministers
teaching elders as well. In Reformed tradition,
Ruling elders are also ordained laymen who govern the church along with the teaching elders as the
Church session. • In the
Assemblies of God and the
Metropolitan Community Church Elders are the most senior leaders serving, leading, and supervising the worldwide denomination. In the Metropolitan Community Church an Elder can be a lay person or clergy.
Types of ministries in non-denominational church • Such as men's ministry, women's ministry, youth ministry, kids ministry, singles and campus ministries, married couples ministry, because it gives each congregation member of different backgrounds and age groups to have a chance to fellowship with people in a closer life group to them. ==Leaders and pastoral agents==