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The Benefice of the Barony of Burgh

Popularly the term benefice is often understood to denote either certain property destined  for the support of ministers of religion, or a spiritual  office or function, such as the care of souls, but in  the strict sense it signifies a right, i.e. the right  given permanently by the Church to a cleric to receive  ecclesiastical revenues on account of the performance  of some spiritual service. Four characteristics are  essential to every benefice:
1. the right to revenue from church property, the beneficed cleric being the usufructuary and not the proprietor of  the source of his support;
2. a two fold perpetuity, objective and subjective, in as much as the source of income must be permanently established and at the same time the appointment to the benefice must be for life, and not subject to revocation,  save for the causes and in the cases specified by law;
3. a formal decree of ecclesiastical  authority giving to certain funds or property the character  or title of a benefice;
4. an annexed office or spiritual function  of some kind, such as the care of souls, the exercise  of jurisdiction, the celebration of Mass or the recitation  of time Divine Office.
This last mentioned element is fundamental, since a benefice  exists only for the sake of securing the performance of  duties connected with the worship of God, and is based  on the Scriptural teaching that they who serve the altar  should live by the altar. In fact, as Innocent III declares, the sole purpose of the foundation of benefices was to  enable the church to have at her command clerics who might  devote themselves freely to works of religion.