B
BayCityRickL
Guest
I’m not sure why the Church insists that a man spend five years in a seminary.
After all, law school is three years, medical school is three or four years. Some nursing schools are down to 1 year for candidates with a college degree.
On the other hand, pharmacy takes 5 or 6 years, total. Architecture takes 5 years of full time work.
Is this seminary five years of pure academic work?
It seems that college plus three years ought to be enough. Let those who are chosen, do graduate, post-ordination studies, or let them all do graduate studies five years after ordination.
when I went away to college, the only thought that encouraged me was that each day I was one day closer to graduation, which seemed so far away.
We are so used to priests who have full faculties. But, what would it take to produce a weekend priest, whose faculties were perhaps limited to saying Mass and preaching?
After all, law school is three years, medical school is three or four years. Some nursing schools are down to 1 year for candidates with a college degree.
On the other hand, pharmacy takes 5 or 6 years, total. Architecture takes 5 years of full time work.
Is this seminary five years of pure academic work?
It seems that college plus three years ought to be enough. Let those who are chosen, do graduate, post-ordination studies, or let them all do graduate studies five years after ordination.
when I went away to college, the only thought that encouraged me was that each day I was one day closer to graduation, which seemed so far away.
We are so used to priests who have full faculties. But, what would it take to produce a weekend priest, whose faculties were perhaps limited to saying Mass and preaching?