(3.) Into benefices titular (titularia) and benefices in commendam. The former are those which are given in perpetuity; the latter for a time only, until a clerk, capable of discharging the duties, can be found. There area however, perpetual commendams, i.e. where the temporal revenues of a regular benefice are given to a secular clerk to hold perpetually.
There are six lawful ways of obtaining a benefice, viz.:
1. By the presentation of the patron, and subsequent institution;
2. by election, and the subsequent confirmation of the person elected;
3. by postulation, and the subsequent confirmation of the person postulated;
4. by free and voluntary collation;
5. by exchange;
6. by resignation in favorem, followed by collation. — Landon, Eccl. Dict. 2, 164
III. In the Church of England parochial benefices with cure are defined by the canon law to be a distinct portion of ecclesiastical rights, set apart from any temporal interest, and joined to the spiritual function, and to these no jurisdiction is annexed; but it is otherwise as to archdeacons and deans, for they have a jurisdiction, because they formerly took the confession of the chapter, and visited them. It is essential to a parochial benefice that it be bestowed freely (reserving nothing to the patron), as a provision for the clerk, who is only a usufructuary, and has no inheritance in it; that it have something of spirituality annexed to it, for where it is given to a layman it is not properly a benefice; that in its own nature it be perpetual — that is, forever annexed to the church; and all manner of contracts concerning it are void.