A
amgid
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(Continued from the previous post…)
This is vastly different from the Catholic Church. In the RCC people train and qualify to become priests, just as they train to become doctors or mechanics, and they choose it as a lifelong profession. If you sack a Catholic priest, he wouldn’t have anyway to live, because he won’t be much good at doing anything else! That is why it is so difficult for the Catholic Church to sack a miscreant priest. If I committed adultery, I wouldn’t expect to loose my job. But I would expect immediately to loose my standing in the Church, and be released from all my callings. But if my job and my calling were one and the same, the Church would be faced with a quandary. They couldn’t easily sack me, because it is my job, and keeping me would mean corrupting the whole system. The way the RCC has traditionally dealt with such cases has been either reprimand the person, but let him keep his post; or worse still, just cover it up and allow it to continue, thus corrupting the whole system. The Lord never intended it to work like that. I was personally acquainted with a bishop once who committed adultery. He was a police officer by profession, and a good one. He was a great guy to be with. He had this weakness I guess and yield to temptation. He was immediately released from his calling and excommunicated from the Church. He still continued to be a good police officer, but he lost his standing in the Church. Now if his job was the same as his calling, the Church couldn’t have exactly dealt with him in that way. That is how the Lord’s church was intended to be run.
amgid
This is vastly different from the Catholic Church. In the RCC people train and qualify to become priests, just as they train to become doctors or mechanics, and they choose it as a lifelong profession. If you sack a Catholic priest, he wouldn’t have anyway to live, because he won’t be much good at doing anything else! That is why it is so difficult for the Catholic Church to sack a miscreant priest. If I committed adultery, I wouldn’t expect to loose my job. But I would expect immediately to loose my standing in the Church, and be released from all my callings. But if my job and my calling were one and the same, the Church would be faced with a quandary. They couldn’t easily sack me, because it is my job, and keeping me would mean corrupting the whole system. The way the RCC has traditionally dealt with such cases has been either reprimand the person, but let him keep his post; or worse still, just cover it up and allow it to continue, thus corrupting the whole system. The Lord never intended it to work like that. I was personally acquainted with a bishop once who committed adultery. He was a police officer by profession, and a good one. He was a great guy to be with. He had this weakness I guess and yield to temptation. He was immediately released from his calling and excommunicated from the Church. He still continued to be a good police officer, but he lost his standing in the Church. Now if his job was the same as his calling, the Church couldn’t have exactly dealt with him in that way. That is how the Lord’s church was intended to be run.
This division between “fulltime” and “part time” is not accurate, and does not correctly portray the situation. It may not be a “fulltime” job in the sense that he does not go to his office at 9 and return home at 5, but it consumes an enormous amount of his time and resources. Being a bishop is a very demanding job in the LDS Church. He is on call constantly for a Church member who may require his assistance. I wouldn’t be surprised if he puts in as much time and effort into his job as a professional fulltime Catholic priest does in his.So, it would be more correct to say that full time LDS clergy (GC’s) are paid a stipend and part time LDS clergy (bishops, stake presidents, etc.) are not paid.
The two systems are so vastly different that any attempt to equate them is going to be misleading. The way the two systems work are worlds apart. In the LDS Church everyone has something to do. The rate of member participation is extremely high, probably the highest of any church. The members run the whole thing. That is one reason why being a member of the LDS Church is such a satisfying experience for its members. You enjoy an activity far more if you participate in it and help to make it happen, than if you simply act as a spectator. I don’t want to be critical, but going to a Catholic Church is like going to the movie! The rate of member participation is almost zero. I went to a Catholic Church service a few weeks ago. I went towards the end, so I didn’t see the whole process. When the service had just ended, people couldn’t wait to get out! They were rushing out like mad as though they had just been forced to watch a very bad movie. There was hardly any socializing and interaction between the members. I could tell from the expression in their faces that it had been a burdensome, and not a terribly pleasant experience for them. It was also obvious from their expressions and behaviour that they were going to go home and not think about religion until they returned to church again the following Sunday, reluctantly, to watch the same bad movie once more. The two systems are just incomparable. They are worlds apart.It would also be correct to say that full time Catholic clergy (bishops, priests) are paid a stipend and part time Catholic clergy (deacons) are not paid.
No. That is a very simplistic way of looking at it, and misleading. See above.The determining factor here is that those being paid are devoting all of their time to their respective church and consequently have no time for a job. If being an LDS bishop was a full time job there would be a stipend. LDS wards are structured so that being an LDS bishop is NOT a full time job. Catholic parishes are structured so that being a priest IS a full time job.
amgid