The Future of Catholic Seminaries: Three Critical Issues
The Future of Catholic Seminaries: Three Critical Issues
The Future of Catholic Seminaries: Three Critical Issues
I
n the thirty-five years since I began research on seminaries, Catholic
seminaries have made significant adjustments in their missions and pro-
grams, influenced by factors in the culture and the Church. While the
challenges both from within and without the church have changed, the pur-
pose of seminaries remains constant. The main goal of seminary formation
is to prepare priests and lay ministers who are both competent and confi-
dent in providing pastoral ministry. That goal requires not only intellectual
formation but also human, spiritual, and pastoral formation.
The requirements for effective ministry in the Catholic Church in this
time include the following: knowledge of Church teaching as it exists pres-
ently in the United States (or wherever in the world graduates will be minis-
for solutions on the basis of honest motivations of faith and according to the
theological demands inherent in pastoral work.2
This need for cultural sensitivity in pastoral formation must flow from and
move toward an appreciation of the multifaceted reality of the Church.4
The backdrop of formation for a ministry also includes the secular cul-
ture that shapes the thinking of every person. In Evangelii Gaudium (The
Gospel of Joy), as in many of his addresses, Pope Francis speaks of cultur-
al challenges such as secularism, individualism, and globalization that af-
fect our ability to enculturate the faith.5 Preparation for ministry needs to
take into account the critical concerns of the twenty-first century and the
effect these factors have on people’s commitment to the Church and their
continuing affiliation as Catholics. The Center for Applied Research in the
Apostolate (CARA) conducted a study of a random sample of self-identified
Catholics, ages eighteen and older, who have left the Church because of the
disconnect between religion and science.6 The Catholic rate of disaffiliation
is greater than the rate for any other faith tradition.
The intellectual dimension of priestly formation is aimed at achieving
the capacity to interpret the world accurately as well as a solid competence
THE FUTURE OF CATHOLIC SEMINARIES 147
For “to each is given the manifestation of the Spirit for the common good”
(1 Cor. 12:7 NRSV).
The implementation of this vision of collaboration between priests and
lay ministers is a particular challenge for seminaries and theologates. Even
when the two groups study at the same time in the same school, they may
not be in the same classes or programs. The momentum of the late 1980s to
educate seminarians and lay students in a more collaborative environment
has been dampened by 2005 changes in the Program of Priestly Formation
and recommendations from the Vatican study of seminaries in 2008. The-
ologates are now more likely to underscore their primary purpose of pre-
paring men for priestly ministry, and the gifts of the laity for ministry are
underdeveloped. Schools have begun to issue separate catalogs and other
publications for each group, and in some places the integration of students
was prohibited. However, other centers for ministry preparation, most nota-
bly those operated by religious orders, continue to follow their commitment
to and belief in collaborative preparation for ministry.
A frequently asked question is how to resolve the differences in per-
ception and implementation of ministry between senior pastors/priests and
young/newly ordained priests. Several issues exacerbate the tension be-
tween younger priests (pastors) and lay ecclesial ministers, including the
separate program and learning environment and disparities in age, experi-
ence, and views of ministry. Moreover, in recent years the newly ordained
have been assigned as pastors within three to five years of ordination or
less. They encounter older lay ministers who most often have years of ex-
perience and on average are twenty to thirty years older. Staff members are
particularly vulnerable at times of transition from a seasoned pastor who
collaborated well to one who is unaccustomed or even opposed to collabora-
tion. One corrective for the separation during formation is the commitment
to pastoral field placements. If seminarians spend enough time in parishes
where priests and lay ministers collaborate well, they can learn by example.
Some dioceses provide continuing education programs that focus on effec-
tive methods for sharing ministry, especially in situations where the priest
pastors more than one parish.
THE FUTURE OF CATHOLIC SEMINARIES 149
Conclusion
NOTES
2 Pope John Paul II, Pastores Dabo Vobis (1992), paras. 57–58.
3 T. Howland Sanks, “Education for Ministry since Vatican II, Theological Studies 45
(September 1984), 481–500.
9 United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, Co-Workers in the Vineyard of the Lord: A
Resource for Guiding the Development of Lay Ecclesial Ministry (Washington, DC: Author,
2005), 20.
10 Katarina Schuth, Reason for the Hope: The Futures of Roman Catholic Theologates (Wilm-
ington, DE: Michael Glazier, 1989).