M
migueltojose
Guest
Do deacons get compensated?
This is what Canon Law has to say on the topic:Do deacons get compensated?
Can. 281 §1. Since clerics dedicate themselves to ecclesiastical ministry, they deserve remuneration which is consistent with their condition, taking into account the nature of their function and the conditions of places and times, and by which they can provide for the necessities of their life as well as for the equitable payment of those whose services they need.
§2. Provision must also be made so that they possess that social assistance which provides for their needs suitably if they suffer from illness, incapacity, or old age.
§3. Married deacons who devote themselves completely to ecclesiastical ministry deserve remuneration by which they are able to provide for the support of themselves and their families. Those who receive remuneration by reason of a civil profession which they exercise or have exercised, however, are to take care of the needs of themselves and their families from the income derived from it.
Or, rather, he’s a Permanent Deacon, working part-time for the parish and part-time running his own small business.Our Permanent Deacon does. His salary appears in the parish’s annual accounts, which are displayed for everyone to see. From that, I learn that he receives about half the national average wage, which makes sense, as he is part-time PD, part-time running his own small business.
Exactly, as a Deacon, his compensation is strictly spiritual in nature.Or, rather, he’s a Permanent Deacon, working part-time for the parish and part-time running his own small business.![]()
Yes, you are quite right. Phemie! It was badly phrased.Or, rather, he’s a Permanent Deacon, working part-time for the parish and part-time running his own small business.![]()
That is how it is in our diocese too. Unless a deacon is specifically employed by a parish as DRE, business manager, etc., he does not receive any form of salary or compensation. Also he is expected to work up to ten hours the parish where he is assigned doing duties assigned to him by the pastor (RCIA, marriage prep, wakes, etc.) without payment.In our diocese the rule is that deacons, married or not, working or retired from a secular job, do not receive compensation unless they are directly employed by the diocese in a chancery-type job. Deacons working at the parish level do not receive any compensation from the diocese. An individual pastor might decide to provide either a small stipend or permit the deacon to keep any offerings that a family might make for a baptism. Many parishes, however, expect the deacon to turn in anything he might receive for doing a baptism or conducting a wedding or a committal. It is my understanding that about 2/3rds of our deacons receive or allowed to keep nothing. An occasional pastor might give his deacon a small check at Christmas, but again that seems much less common that it used to be.
The same in our diocese.In my diocese, not only are the deacons not compensated, but each parish is assessed a couple hundred dollars per year to the diocese for the privilege of having a deacon. I think it helps pay for their mandatory retreats.