Trusteeism
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other uses of "trustee", "trusty", "trustee system", or "trusty system", see Trustee (disambiguation).
Trusteeism and the trustee system are practices and institutions within certain parishes of the Catholic Church in the United States, under which laypersons participate in the administration of Ecclesiastical Property.[1] When laypersons are among the trustees, the Church seeks agreement with the civil authorities to have the property administered under principles of canon law.
The Church often appoints deputies who are responsible to herself. Technically, such administrators, whether cleric or lay, are called the "fabric" of the Church (Fabrica Ecclesiae).