late 15c., "business of being a priest, exercise of priestly functions," from priest + craft (n.). After rise of Protestantism and the Enlightenment, it acquired a pejorative sense of "arts and devices of ambitious priests for attaining and holding temporal power and social control" (1680s).
prickly
pride
prideful
prier
priest
priestcraft
priestess
priesthood
priestly
priestridden
prig