Sacred Heart School of Theology

The Sacred Heart Seminary and School of Theology is a Roman Catholic seminary in Hales Corners, Wisconsin. It is associated with the Priests of the Sacred Heart, a Catholic religious community of priests and lay brothers. When the seminary program was established in 1932, the school was known as Sacred Heart Monastery. It offered classes in philosophy and theology for seminarians who were members of the Priests of the Sacred Heart.

Sacred Heart Seminary and School of Theology
Former names
Sacred Heart Monastery
TypeSeminary
Established1932
Religious affiliation
Priests of the Sacred Heart
Location, ,
United States
Websitewww.shsst.edu

The seminary is accredited by the Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada and the Higher Learning Commission.

History

In 1955, the philosophy program was moved elsewhere, and the seminary was dedicated to theological preparation for men preparing for priesthood.

In 1968, construction of the existing building was completed across the street from the original school, and in 1972 the name was changed to Sacred Heart School of Theology. In 1973 Sacred Heart received approval to accept second-career presbyteral candidates who are sponsored by dioceses or religious congregations. The candidates come from across the United States and Canada. The seminary offers a Master of Divinity to men who are in a program of priestly formation and a Master of Arts for men and women seeking theological training in a Christian tradition.

gollark: I actually found several good-looking ones:https://github.com/zardyh/amulethttps://github.com/kindl/Hypatiahttps://github.com/ptol/oczorI mean good-looking as in "will hopefully make my stuff less unreliable".
gollark: So, apart from the fact that for some reason some slots don't actually fill themselves when crafting (why?!) it mostly works.
gollark: Is it particularly type-safe?
gollark: I am seriously considering it.
gollark: Basically, it seems very much as if stuff autocrafts, then it vanishes.

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.