What is the true difference between a monastery, an abbey, a priory, and a friary?
I know that friars are members of a mendicant order, holding to extreme poverty and spreading the Gospel message through active community ministry (Franciscans and Dominicans).
All answers will be greatly appreciated!
The abbey is the motherhouse of a monastic community.
Monasteries can be daughter houses to abbeys. They are also independent houses in other communities, such as the Passionists who live in monasteries.
The abbey takes its name from the Abbot (Father) who governs the house. Monastery takes its name from monialis or monastic.
A priory can also be a daughter house to a monastic community. It is also a house where Dominican, Carmelite, Augustinian, and Servite friars live. It takes its name from the term Prior, who is the superior of the house.
Abbeys always have a papal enclosure. The other houses may or may not have one, depending on the religious community.
Friary is a house where Franciscan menn live. We’re the only ones who use the term friary. It comes from the French, Frere (Brother). Our houses are not known by the title of the superior, because the local superior has no real authority. His job is to take care of the needs of the friars in the house and to see to it that the house runs smoothly. The Major Superior is the real muscle man. But he may not live anywhere near the friary. He usually governs a region.
Friaries have no enclosures. People can come and go, men and women. The local community may decide that they want to restrict traffic to a certain part of the house, for the sake of privacy. But these are not real cloisters, because they are not papal enclosures.
Another difference is that abbeys, monasteries, and priories are allowed to own property as a community. It’s called corporate ownership. The individuals in the house do not own anything. If one leaves, he takes nothing. When he dies, there are no heirs, because he is not an owner. It’s not the type of corporation where the individuals are shareholders. The entire property is an estate. It can be very rich.
Friaries do not own property. The friary is built on a piece of land just big enough to meet its needs. The estate is nor corporately owned. It is owned by the Church, not by the friars.
There is another important detail about these houses. As long as they are occupied by religious, the local bishop has no jurisdiction over them. He’s not even allowed to enter them without the permission of the superior. However, because the local bishop is responsible for the sacraments, only he can give the house permission to reserve the Eucharist and he can take it away too. He cannot suppress the house, nor can he grant faculties to any to hear confessions in those houses. Only the superior can grant those faculties.
When an institution, such as a university, is attached t a friar, priory, monastery or abbey, it all falls under the jurisdiction of the superior, not the bishop. The institution is an extension of the house.
Rectories do not have these privileges and rights. They are secular houses.