I know nothing about the cost of living in Maine. But I do know about parish ministry having served in parishes and at diocesan levels and Catholic education.
The rule in the Church is that you cannot establish a new parish unless you can afford to keep it going. The way this chaplaincy is being setup it’s like a parish without walls.
It has all of the usual expenses of a parish.
I remember working with a religioius community to start a shelter in a diocese. The religious were going to run the shelter. They simply needed the bishop’s permission to enter the diocese. It took a year before it happened. The religious had to prove that they had the financial means to run the shelter. And religious don’t get paid salaries, don’t have life insurance, medical, dental and vision insurance, retirement plans or get paid salaries. Any ministry run by religious is much cheaper than those run by Diocesan priests.
In this case, if the priest is a secular priest, the parish (in this case the chaplaincy) must pay the following:
- His salary.
- Medical, vision and dental insurance.
- Retirement plan.
- Part of his auto insurance, mileage and maintenance for his car when he uses it for his employer, the faithful.
- Obviously he needs a place out of which to work, this requires an office, which has overhead.
- He needs housing, because it’s part of his salary. A diocesan priest’s salary is not much compared to what the rest of us make. Let’s not talk about poverty. Diiocesan priests are not bound to poverty. That only applies to members of religious orders. Diocesan priests do not make a vow of poverty.
Someone mentioned foreign language masses, such as Spanish mass. This is not the same. The priest who celebrates the mass in Spanish or in Maine, they probably have mass in French in some of the northern parishes, these priests are part of the parish staff. They perform other functions in the parish. These people are part of the parish, they make regular contributions to the parish. They are not starting a new ministry.
Once this chaplaincy gets rolling, it will run like any other parish. Those who belong to it will fiance it, just as they finance their current parishes.
Also, if you notice the letter, Father says that the members will enroll and eventually get envelopes like any other parish.
He’s talking about the annual cost being $72K, but the startup cost is what the community has to come up with. I believe that ws $18K. The title of this thread is really misleading. The parishioners are not being billed $72K.
This is not an existing parish. This is an independent ministry. They are using someone else’s property to celebrate the mass.
If my parish decided to take out an Of mass and replace it with an EF mass it would be ridiculous to have a separate budget, because the priest, the staff and the facilities are already being payed for by the weekly contributions.
However, if you’re taling about starting an entirely independent ministry from the local parish, that parish has no obligation to finance it. The ministry does not belong to the parish.
If you look at the letter again, a priest is being taken from somewhere and assigned to this ministry full-time. His expenses can no longer be charged to his former parish or where ever he served. That would not be fair to them. He is no longer on their staff.
This would happen in any organization. If person leaves an organization to begin a new one, the new organization is responsible for financing the cost.
Again, they are not being charge $72K. They are being informed of what it will cost to run this ministry. They have to come up with the startup cost, which is 18K. The rest will come from weekly donations.
What’s so unusual about this? This is the way all autonomous ministries begin.
One last example. In our diocese we have a new religious community of women. They applied to the bishop for status as a diiocesan congregation. The bishop recognized them as an association of the faithful, but will not recognize them as a congregation until they can prove that they can support themselves and that they can draw vocations.
This is called sustainability. The diocese in Maine is asking the community to prove that it is sustainable. It has to have enough members to keep it going and the necessary finances.
Where is the unreasonable part?
JR
