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Wednesday, 12 November 2014

The Mysteries of the End of Curacy

There is a lot of myth surrounding how priests in training finally end their curacy. Many people wonder how it is that a curate can cease to be a trainee and become a fully-fledged incumbent.

Well, we've done some research, and we can reveal the secrets of how curates are trained up into their fully-fledged status.

The process starts when an ordinand first hatches out of theology college. In those early moments after ordination, the new "deacon" will be confused, and inclined to do things that are embarrassing.


Newly Hatched Curates
Over the next three years, the older female members of the church will feed the curate cake and tea. This special food causes the new priest to grow in girth, and to approach maturity.
Curates become especially able to detect new sources of cake and tea, and to communicate their location to other curates through the CME "Liturgical Dance"

"Mrs Brown in Little Tremlett has a new-baked ginger cake"
After about three years (part-time curates can take longer as they have fewer opportunities to obtain cake), the curate will be ready to become a new vicar. At this crucial point in their development, one of two things can happen.

If the curate believes that the vicar is weakened by age, they may attempt to take over the church where they have been growing. In this case, they will often fight the incumbent vicar in the garden of the vicarage. If the curate wins, they take over the existing church and the vicar goes into retirement.

If, on the other hand, the curate is not strong enough, they will instead strike out on their own with their own members of the congregation, to form a new church. On sunny spring afternoons, the sight of a Church Swarm will often be seen, clinging onto the outside of a church building.
A new Vicar heads out with his Church Swarm to find a new church building

What will happen, when the weather is warm enough, is that the curate will set off into the countryside, accompanied by the Church Swarm of those worshippers that choose to go with him or her to form a new congregation. The Swarm will wander around the neighbourhood until it finds a church with no priest, and then move into residence in the building. Normally they will merge with the existing congregation - however if the pheromones are not compatible, they will drive the old congregation out into the churchyard and take over the building completely.
Three priests with a supplier of cake.
The one on the left is about to eat the old one and take over.

4 comments:

  1. I always thought that Curacy never ended? I've heard a Bishop saying that he's still a deacon?? If so, what sort of management system allows a clearly trainee be given the Bishopric of a diocese or even a suffrage?

    No, laity should be in charge and all those trainee Vicar's, Bishop and Arch Bishop should be making tea, arranging the tables and chairs for the barn dance and visiting promiscuous male or female laity in their lairs as befits their gender or personal preferences.

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  2. Yay! I can comment again. :)

    When's the field guide being published then? As our native wildlife dwindles, curate-spotting could become the next big thing and will soon be appearing on Spring and Autumn Watch.

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    1. Yes, sorry about that. In letting Bruvver Eccles comment via G+ I managed to block everybody else in the world. I have reversed that situation.

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  3. Phew! I'm glad that was caused by you and not me. I am compelled to use Google plus for my work (yes, really!) so wondered if my computer had somehow muddled up my personal and work personas. I didn't dare comment in case it came out looking like an offiical opinion from my employer!

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