Type |
Roman Catholic all-male seminary; coed lay programs |
---|---|
Established | 1857 |
Affiliation | Catholic Church (St. Meinrad Archabbey) |
Rector | Vy. Rev. Denis Robinson, OSB |
Students | 170 (78 undergrad, 92 postgrad) |
Location | Saint Meinrad, IN, United States |
Campus | Rural; 250 acres (1.0 km2) |
Website | saintmeinrad.edu |
Saint Meinrad Abbey's school | Established | 1857 |
Type | secondary school | |
Saint Meinrad College | Opened | 1861 |
Type | liberal arts college | |
Closed | 1887 due to fire | |
Transferred to | Jasper Academy | |
Saint Meinrad Seminary | Opened | 1887 |
Type | major seminary, minor seminary | |
Saint Meinrad High School, Seminary, and College | Reorganized | 1959 |
Type | major seminary, minor seminary, liberal arts college, secondary school | |
Saint Meinrad College | Closed | 1998 |
Coordinates: 38°09′58″N 86°48′38″W / 38.166008°N 86.810636°W
The Saint Meinrad Seminary and School of Theology is located in Saint Meinrad in southern Indiana and is affiliated with the St. Meinrad Archabbey, which itself is affiliated with Einsiedeln Abbey in Switzerland. Saint Meinrad Seminary and School of Theology is a Roman Catholic seminary which prepares priest-candidates for ordination— the receipt of and the participating in the sacrament of Holy orders. Saint Meinrad Seminary and School of Theology is named in memoriam of Saint Meinrad.
Saint Meinrad Seminary and School of Theology offers programs in Roman Catholic priesthood formation, theological formation for Roman Catholic permanent deacon candidates, lay degrees in theology, continuing adult education and youth leadership as part of its secondary education mission.
The priesthood formation program goes beyond academics; it provides in-depth training for a lifetime commitment as a priest in four areas: human formation, spiritual formation, academic formation and pastoral formation. In the human formation, the graduate must take responsibility for integrating the various aspects of their humanity and behavior into a well-woven fabric that is compatible with being a Christian minister in general and a Roman Catholic priest in particular, including the lifestyle that both of those require. In the spiritual formation, spiritual direction fosters, encourages and challenges the seminarian's growth as a Christian and strengthens their relationship with God. In the academic formation, the seminarian must be familiar with sources of each Roman Catholic tradition as well as the rich two-millennia intellectual heritage of the Roman Catholic Church. In the pastoral formation, a program similar to a university's institutional management program is taught to the seminarian as preparation for managing a parish and its relations with the larger community.