Trisha Shetty (Editor)

St. John's Seminary (California)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Motto in English
  
God is love

Affiliation
  
Roman Catholic

President
  
Patrick Nichelson

Undergraduate tuition and fees
  
15,000 USD (2011)

Total enrollment
  
89 (2010)

Type
  
Private, Graduate

Chairman
  
Jose H. Gomez

Campus size
  
40 ha

Phone
  
+1 805-482-2755

Founded
  
1939

St. John's Seminary (California)

Established
  
1939; 78 years ago (1939)

Address
  
5012 Seminary Rd, Camarillo, CA 93012, USA

Motto
  
Deus caritas est (God is love)

Notable alumni
  
Tod Brown, Armando Xavier Ochoa, Gerald Eugene Wilkerson, Joseph Martin Sartoris, Alexander Salazar

Similar
  
Thomas Aquinas College, ITT Technical Institute‑Oxnard, St Patrick's Seminary & University, Marymount California University, Mount St Mary's University

Profiles

St. John's Seminary is a Roman Catholic seminary located in Camarillo, California. It is within the Santa Barbara Pastoral Region of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles. The seminarians prepare for assignments in dioceses as well as religious orders.

Contents

History

St. John's Seminary began teaching seminarians on September 12, 1939. Juan Camarillo, Jr. donated 100 acres (40 ha) of land from his Rancho Calleguas on March 3, 1927 with the specific desire to have the land used for a seminary named for St. John the Evangelist. On January 14, 1938, John J. Cantwell announced the planned construction of the seminary. The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada first accredited St. John's in 1976; it had previously been accredited by the American Association of Theological Schools and the Western Association of Schools and Colleges.

Beginning in 1961, St. John's granted bachelor's degrees through its subsidiary St. John's Seminary College. Following a 2002 report from a task force appointed by Roger Mahony, the Archdiocese of Los Angeles closed the undergraduate portion of the seminary. Only 12 seminarians graduated in 2002, and the Archdiocese chose to focus solely on graduate training. The task force also scheduled a 2005 review to see if St. John's should be entirely closed with Loyola Marymount University taking over the school's functions; this shutdown has not come to pass. The diocese agreed to sell most of the seminary's land, including the area used for undergraduate study, in 2004, for a price which was dependent on the sort of zoning approval the land would receive. The seminary now seeks to become self-sufficient rather than relying on the archdiocese's funding. Toward that end, they are seeking to have an area formerly used as an undergraduate campus developed into between 270 and 290 houses for people 55 and older.

Library

Carrie Estelle Doheny donated her rare book collection to St. John's Seminary in 1940. The collection was sold at auction in 1988-89.

Degrees

St. John's offers the Master of Divinity degree as a first professional degree for seminarians. If interested in theological studies and research, eligible seminarians can also concurrently earn a Master of Arts. The seminary offers a Master of Arts in Pastoral Ministry for non-seminarians who are interested in lay ministry.

Sexual abuse

Alumni of St. John were accused in the sexual abuse scandal, which broke into public in the late 20th century, of molesting the underaged. Of the approximately 625 St. John's graduates to be ordained by the Los Angeles Archdiocese between 1950 and 2005, by 2005 65 had been accused in the sexual abuse scandal, reflecting a rate higher than what studies have found for U.S. priests in general. A seminary spokesman noted in November 2005 that California had extended its statute of limitations on molestation lawsuits, making more cases possible for prosecution. He suggested that a wave of publicity on molestation by priests had made St. John's graduates targets of such accusations. Four days later, the Los Angeles Times ran a letter to the editor from St. John's rector, Helmut A. Hefner. He said that substantial reforms had been implemented in the seminary in terms of recruitment and assessment of students. He noted that changes had been made; as a result, from 1985 to 2005, only two of the 155 priests ordained at St. John's Seminary for the Los Angeles archdiocese had been accused of sexual misconduct.

Homosexuality

In May 2002, Newsweek had article entitled "Gays in the Seminary"; it opened with a description by a recent alumnus of St. John's, saying it "may be one of the country's gayest facilities for higher education. Depending on whom you ask, gay and bisexual men make up anywhere from 30 percent to 70 percent of the student body at the college and graduate levels."

Notable alumni

  • William Levada, Prefect of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith
  • Justin Rigali, Archbishop of Philadelphia
  • Roger Mahony, Archbishop of Los Angeles
  • George Niederauer, Archbishop of San Francisco
  • Tod Brown, Bishop of Orange
  • Geoff Farrow, priest relieved of his congregation after denouncing California Proposition 8 from the pulpit
  • Msgr. Francis J. Weber, archivist of the Los Angeles Archdiocese, and biographer of Archbishop John Joseph Cantwell, Cardinal James Francis McIntyre, and Cardinal Timothy Manning
  • Bishop Jaime Soto of the Diocese of Sacramento
  • Gustavo García-Siller, archbishop of San Antonio.
  • William DuBay, ordained in 1960, but left the priesthood after challenging Cardinal McIntyre on race relations and other matters.
  • Cirilo Flores, Bishop of San Diego.
  • Cyprian Consiglio, O.S.B. Cam., Prior of New Camaldoli Hermitage
  • References

    St. John's Seminary (California) Wikipedia


    Similar Topics