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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: CHR-CLI |
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CLERGY (M.E. clergie, O. Fr. clergie, from Low Lat. form clericia [Skean, by assimilation with O. Fr. clergie, Fr. clerge,from Low Lat. clericatus) , a collective term
body
long since fallen obsolete. On the other hand, in modern times there has been an increasing tendency to depart from its strict application to technical " clerks," and to widen it out so as to embrace all varieties of ordained Christian ministers. While, however, it is now not unusual to speak of " the Nonconformist clergy," the word ." clergyman " is still, at least in the United Kingdom, used of the clergy of the Established Church in contradistinction to "minister." As applied to the Roman Catholic Church the word embraces the whole hierarchy, whether its clerici be in holy orders or merely in minor orders. The term
In distinction to the " clergy " we find the " laity " (Gr. Laos, people), the great
body
great
triumph
powers
long contest. The victory was, however, by no means complete. The Presbyterian model was, for instance, as sacerdotal in its essence as the Catholic; Milton complained with justice that " new presbyter is but old priest writ large," and declared that " the Title of Clergy St Peter gave to all God's people," its later restriction being a papal and prelatical usurpation (i.e. 1 Peter v. 3, for,cXi3pos and KXi pcvv).Clerical immunities, of course, differed largely at different times and in different countries, the extent of them having been gradually curtailed from a period a little earlier than the close of the middle ages. They consisted mainly in exemption from public burdens, both as regarded person and pocket, and in immunity from lay jurisdiction . This last enormous privilege, which became one of the main and most efficient instruments
Bingham
This diversity of jurisdiction , and subjection of the clergy only to the sentences of judges bribed by their esprit de corps to judge leniently, led to the adoption of a scale of punishments for the offences of clerks avowedly much lighter than that which was inflicted for the same crimes on laymen; and this in turn led to the survival in England, long after the Reformation, of the curious legal fiction of benefit of clergy (see below), used to mitigate the extreme harshness of the criminal law.End of Article: CLERGY (M.E. clergie, O. Fr. clergie, from Low Lat. form clericia [Skean, by assimilation with O. Fr. clergie, Fr. clerge,from Low Lat. clericatus) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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