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Karmastrike
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How old can do you have to be to go into a seminary for the priesthood? I am 16 years old at the moment, and I am in high school. How much does it cost as well?
You have to be at least 25 to be ordained a priest and at least 23 to be ordained a transitional deacon:How old can do you have to be to go into a seminary for the priesthood? I am 16 years old at the moment, and I am in high school. How much does it cost as well?
As others have stated already, there is no age limit, strictly speaking, for entering seminary. If you’re thinking diocesan priesthood, there’s the two options - college seminary and major seminary. Major seminary requires you to have a degree already, whereas college seminary is like a college. So here are the two possible tracks:How old can do you have to be to go into a seminary for the priesthood? I am 16 years old at the moment, and I am in high school. How much does it cost as well?
Excuse me while I hijack the threadAs others have stated already, there is no age limit, strictly speaking, for entering seminary. If you’re thinking diocesan priesthood, there’s the two options - college seminary and major seminary. Major seminary requires you to have a degree already, whereas college seminary is like a college. So here are the two possible tracks:
1 - Go to college seminary after high school. Study four years of philosophy. After college seminary, go to major seminary, where you will study four years of theology.
2 - Go to college after high school. Study whatever. After you get your degree, go to major seminary, where you will study two years of philosophy, followed by four years of theology.
Age is not really a factor. I’ve got friends in seminary at various ages. One is a college seminarian who went to seminary straight out of high school. Another is a college seminarian in his first year of seminary, but he transferred after two years of regular college. Another is a major seminarian, straight out of college. Another is a major seminarian, a couple years out of college.
As for cost, most dioceses (if not all) will cover your educational expenses. Furthermore, there are numerous opportunities out there for scholarships - Knights of Columbus are huuuuuge supporters of vocations, and parishes are always supportive of well. And I think there’s also an education fund - Mater Ecclesiae, I want to say - that supports vocations. A friend of mine received a grant from them to pay off her loans so that she could enter the Dominicans. Do NOT let financial concerns stop you from exploring the priesthood.
You mean Sr. Maria Teresa of the Sacred Heart?Excuse me while I hijack the thread, but is your friend Sr. Lauren Franko?? (I know she has a religious name now, but I can’t remember it
).