phil19034:
The rest of the money collected for that day is then given to the diocese for the diocese to give to priests who did not receive a stipend that day.
What you are saying is correct if these were just regular Masses said by the diocesan priest in the diocese I’m arranging them through, but you’re missing the point here.
If I arrange Gregorian Masses through Diocese X (my home diocese in a distant state), they ship the request to Well Known Charitable Organization (WKCO), and they ask for a higher “suggested donation” than if I go directly to WKCO. It’s pretty obvious the diocese is taking a cut of the donation, whether that’s for administration or whatever, and then passing the request along to the WKCO, who passes it to one of their mission priests. The priest who is ultimately saying the Mass in Africa, Asia, or a remote island somewhere, is likely getting the same stipend regardless of whether I go through the diocese or directly to the WKCO.
I know this because when I saw a discrepancy between the suggested donation for Gregorian Masses …
directly with their mission priests. Like I said I have done a lot of these Gregorian Masses with at least 20 different organizations and have talked to a lot of their people because often the person receiving the donation calls me or messages me to tell me when the Masses will start.
In my experience, Gregorian Masses are never said by diocesan priests in the USA unless you “know somebody”. They simply don’t have enough priests to say these Masses and it would be seen as an unjust hogging of Mass intentions by the person donating for the Gregorian Mass. Therefore, it is not a case of priest X in USA can only take one Mass stipend and the diocese gets the rest. The diocesan priests in USA are not going to be saying the Masses.
Now if Mission Priest in Mission Diocese in Africa has more than one stipend for the day then maybe he needs to donate the excess to his own diocese, but that has no impact on me because I’m not arranging the Masses through his diocese and I never communicate with his diocese.
Bottom line, the diocese is not taking a cut. They are simply helping the priests to divy up the requests.
Respectfully disagree. You aren’t the person who actually talked to the particular diocese and WKCO in this instance, I am. Also, I believe you’re in the Philly archdiocese and this was a different diocese some distance away, so I don’t know how you would have any idea how they run their business of arranging Gregorian Masses through the WKCO.