im talking on the sense that say I was in a position where i wanted to go the priesthood and i never had the qualifications and i wanted to get in … i would need to go to sixthform, now say if they never had the courses i was interested in? does that mean id have to do a course completely irrelevant to what the priesthood was to teach me, there is only one way in my church and that is to get A levels… no alternative root at all… now what am i to do if it costs money to get to there and i havent got the support to fund the courses??
Any junior seminary or minor seminary in the uk would need to teach a suitable, internationally recognised syllabus. If it was not teaching A-Levels then who would pay for that education?
If you haven’t been to 6th form then why don’t you go? It’s paid for by the Government if you’re of typical age.
What subjects do you believe are not relevant?
You need English
You need some Maths
You need some Natural Sciences.
you could study R.E.
You could Study Philosophy
You could study Classics
You could study a language or 2
all these are relevant to later training as a priest. how can you suggest taht any major 6th form college would not teach a-levels in English, Maths and Science? There may not be many offering Latin, and only a few more offering Classics, but many offer Phsycology and Sociology… Very usefull subjects. Many offer Philosophy… essential. Any Catholic school would offer RE or even better a course in Catholic Catechism or Catholic History.
the church need to open up a pre seminary again… the amount of money for training a priest is disgraceful…
Those are 2 very divergant points.
The costs of running a university are very high. Seminaries are universitys. An international student or a post-graduate student needs to find around £10,000 - £15,000 per year to attend most universities. Why should the state fund the Catholic Church to train their priests? therefore the church must find that kind of money to train each seminarian… oh wait it’s going to be more, because the Seminary wont have many thousands of students, they’ll have a few dozen at most… so a whole university must be funded to teach a few dozen students. that’s hugely expensive.
Now most dioceses will not ask a candidate for the priesthood to pay a contribution if he cant afford to, they will take the funding from direct donations to the seminary or from general funding for the dioceses.
You’re now asking them to set up free church funded High schools, that wont be eligible for state funding, and will cost several thousand per term per pupil, To educate kids who are thinking they just might want to apply to the major seminary a few years later???
Where is this money supposed to come from? How much do you see people putting in the offertory plate every sunday at mass? I see lots of coins and few notes… Catholics don’t “Tithe 10%” few even come close to 1%. The Church in the UK is Poor. it cant afford to pay for the heating for many parishes, never mind refurbishments. and you think they should pay for new High-Schools when the government already pays for a very good system?
i hope Pope Francis looks at this and takes it back to the roots it needs by looking on how Jesus chose Peter… he never asked him to show him a certificate with grades on. now i understand on needing to be clever but say i you had true wisdom inside of you granted by the spirit but instead the church want to see a piece of paper with grades on them?? the opportunities the church is offering these days for seminary is quite sad to see! there is going to be a big crisis in the future if it carrys on being this way… completely less priests. i kind of skipped over your other points, not much time on my hands! peace and love anyway!
Interesting thought… Most seminaries in the english speaking world are experiencing exactly the opposite of what you predict. Most are taking in the highest numbers of students since Vatican 2. The same is true in other parts of the world.
Of course that’s still going to leave a gap, as the old priests are reaching retirement age faster than new priests can be trained in… but the answer is not what you suggest… it is to restore a sense of the Sacred to our churches. It is to remember that every Christian is called to be an evangelist. It is to fill the Pews. It is to teach the fullness of the truth with no equivocation. These new priests are coming out of movements that do exactly that.
Some are traditionalist, others are charismatic… and everything in between, but they all have been taught to Love Jesus and to evangelise.
I see your point. but at the end of the day a Priest needs a very good university education. Their studies are not for the feint-hearted. they cost the church a huge ammount of money. It would be pure stupidity of the church to send someone to a seminary if they did not have a 6th form education with grades and subjects suitable for the university course they are applying for.
Now if you were to give real consideration to the fact that the course is a challenging as a Law degree, and those typically require AAB grades, yet the seminaries will condisider candidates with BCC grades… I think your point is rather turned on it’s head.
They insist you have proved the ability to study, and achieve reasonable pass marks. They do not insist on the grades that would be expected for an equivalent course for non seminarians.