Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

      • The temporalities are the revenues of the benefice and assets such as the church properties and possessions within the parish.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benefice
  1. Temporalities. Legally, the incumbent is a corporation sole i.e. "a legal entity vested in an individual and his successors by reason of his office" [1] and any particular occupant had the right to receive the income and make use of its assets to support him in his ministry.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BeneficeBenefice - Wikipedia

    The term benefice, according to the canon law, denotes an ecclesiastical office (but not always a cure of souls) in which the incumbent is required to perform certain duties or conditions of a spiritual kind (spiritualities) while being supported by the revenues attached to the office (temporalities).

  3. Jun 11, 2015 · The temporalities are the actual legal possession of the benefice as property. In the past this would mean tithes, fees and glebe, but is now a more limited right to manage the property and control the benefice.

    • What are the temporalities of a benefice?1
    • What are the temporalities of a benefice?2
    • What are the temporalities of a benefice?3
    • What are the temporalities of a benefice?4
    • What are the temporalities of a benefice?5
  4. The incumbent is put into possession of the temporalities of the benefice by induction, which is performed by the Archdeacon on the Bishop’s mandate or sometimes by the Rural Dean as the Archdeacon’s deputy, and on his mandate.

  5. A benefice is elective when the appointing authority may collate only after some electoral body has named the future incumbent; presentative when such nomination belongs to a patron; collative when the bishop or other superior appoints independently of any election or presentation.

  6. BENEFICE (Lat. beneficium, benefit), a term first applied under the Roman empire to portions of land, the usufruct of which was granted by the emperors to their soldiers or others for life, as a reward or beneficium for past services, and as a retainer for future services.

  7. People also ask

  8. The temporalities of a see include the rights of patronage that belong to the see. (They formerly also included episcopal estates but these are now vested in the Church Commissioners and no longer form part of the temporalities; but rights of patronage still do.)

  1. People also search for