C
curlycool89
Guest
I did the opposite. 2 year into engineering and I decided to continue for (3 more years incidentally). Overall, it will be the same amount of time in school, because it would have been do a 4 year BA (because I expect that very little would have transferred over) vs. do 3 more years of engineering plus 1 year of philosophy. It also gave me a chance to volunteer to assist the campus ministry and Catholic student groups for a few years (something that I will not have time to do in Seminary, assisting on the university campus), which gave me a lot of good advice and experience in what you might call a “non-traditional” setting.I personally “dropped out” of engineering after 2 years because I was sure God was calling me and figured that if that is the case two years would be better spent in ministry later on than completing a degree.
It helped that I did co-op too, so I graduated debt-free.
It’s not a bad policy. You gain a lot of life experience, especially if you go to university away from home because it forces you to learn how to live (to do mundane tasks like laundry, cooking, cleaning, pay an electric bill, managing your savings, setting your own curfew, and managing your own academic career for success away from nagging parents and teachers), things that you can’t necessarily be taught in a seminary.In my home diosese they don’t take people straight out of high school. My archdioses says that you have to have a college degree first before entering the seminary. Well, at least what the priests who’ve told me.