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Regular Clergy
 Perspectives on Marriage: Leader's Guide by ACTA Publications, Prepared and regularly updated through consultations with family life ministers, clergy, counselors and married couples, "Perspectives on Marriage has been used successfully by millions of engaged couples in a wide variety of marriage preparation programs. Through exercises, discussion questions, practical activities and helpful advice, this easy-to-use workbook focuses on the essential topics and issues that engaged and newly married couples face. Communication, commitment, finance, religion, family of origin, conflict resolution, family planning, love and intimacy are just some of the vital topics considered. Excellence and affordability make "Perspectives on Marriage among the most widely used, bestselling marriage preparation resources available today.
 Strength for the Day: Psalms and Prayers for Use When Sick Designed as a giveaway booklet for use by parish clergy, hospital, chaplains, lay eucharistic ministers, and others who minister regularly with the sick. Includes prayers from the Book of Common Prayer and other prayer books.
Secular clergy - In the Catholic Church, secular clergy are religious ministers, such as deacons and priests, who do not belong to a religious order. While regular clergy take vows of chastity, poverty, and obedience and place themselves under a rule (regulum), secular religious do not take vows and live in the world (saeculum). Royal Army Chaplains' Department - The Royal Army Chaplains' Department (RAChD) is an all-officer corps that provides ordained clergy to minister to the British Army. As of 2004, there are 154 serving regular chaplains (commonly known as "padres") in the British Army; these belong to either one of several Christian churches, or to the Jewish faith. Prince-Bishop - ... territorial prince of the church on account of one or more secular principalities, usually pre-existent nobiliary titles held concurrently with their inherent clerical office. If the see is an archbishopric, the correct term is prince-archbishop; the equivalent in the regular clergy is a prince-abbot. Religious (Catholicism) - In the lexicon of certain branches of Christianity, especially the Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Orthodox branches, religious as a noun usually refers to a member of a religious order of monks, nuns, friars, clerics regular, or other individuals who take the three vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience (the evangelical councils). Neither of those groups should be identified as clergy, which in Catholicism includes bishops, priests and deacons.
regularclergy
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