The Master of Divinity (M.Div.) is the ordinary professional degree for those preparing for ordained Roman Catholic Priesthood. It is also open to people qualified with appropriate background. It is earned by the successful completion of the regular Seminary academic and pastoral curriculum requiring 118 units of credit (110 required units plus eight elective units) as outlined below in the "Course of Studies for M.Div." (For students who are not pursuing ordination to the Roman Catholic Priesthood, the total number of units is 106.)

The functional goals and objectives of the M.Div. degree at St. Patrick's Seminary & University are:

  1. To move the student to a conscious appropriation of the Christian biblical tradition and the Christian faith, and the ability to articulate that faith for himself and others;
  2. To provide the skills which promote the student's ability to interrelate theology and pastoral practice;
  3. To provide the appropriate spiritual and ethical formation which will enable the student to be an effective moral leader in the Church and in the world;
  4. To provide the skills which allow the student to minister effectively in the pluralistic, multicultural environment reflected in the Church in the dioceses served by the Seminary;
  5. To provide all the pastoral skills necessary to minister in a Roman Catholic parish through liturgical leadership, preaching, teaching, counseling, and organizing.

Program Requirements

Applicants must have an undergraduate degree, have completed thirty semester units of philosophy and twelve semester units of religious studies, and must have taken one of the following tests: GRE or MAT. In addition, those for whom English is not their native language, the TOEFL/TWE must be taken. To successfully complete the program, students are expected to maintain an overall Grade Point Average (GPA) of 2.0.

The first two years of the program are designed to provide students with the basic skills and academic foundation which they will utilize in the pastoral year, i.e., in the areas of scripture, systematics, moral theology, Hispanic studies, field education, introductory homiletics, and basic pastoral skills.

The Pastoral Year is a ten-month full-time parish experience of pastoral ministry in the student's own diocese. This program is a six-unit program carefully monitored by a trained on-site supervisor (usually the pastor) in conjunction with the Director of the Pastoral Year at the Seminary. Normally, the Pastoral Year takes place after Second Theology. Those who enter the program later will do their Pastoral Year after two full years of theological study. Those who do not take advantage of the Pastoral year must take six extra credits in Field Education.

After the Pastoral Year, students, return to the Seminary for the completion of their final year(s) of theological training. These final year(s) seek to deepen the student's theological development through advanced courses in scripture, systematics, and moral theology. Furthermore, they help students better integrate their pastoral experience with academics. Practical and theological courses in supervised ministry, homiletics, liturgical and sacramental celebration, and canon law provide immediate preparation for priestly ministry.

The areas described above outline general goals of the M.Div. Program. The academic courses which contribute to the desired development cover the following specific areas and number of units:

Sacred Scripture15
Moral Theology18
Systematic Theology26
Liturgy9
Church History8
Pastoral Studies *34
Electives8

* Includes six units for Pastoral Year and two units for Field Education

Course of Studies for M.Div. and Ordination Requirements

First Year Theology

SH-5105Patristic/Medieval Church History3
SL-5108Foundations of Christian Liturgy3
SS-5101The Pentateuch and Historical Books3
SD-5101Fundamental Theology and Theological Method3
MT-5103Prayer in Christian Tradition1
PS-5111Catechetics1
SH-5106Church in Reformation and Modern Times3
MT-5102Fundamental Moral Theology3
SS-5102Synoptic Gospels3
SD-6238Christian Anthropology and Life of Grace3
PS-5112Homiletics I: Proclamation1
PS-5103Ministry in a Multicultural Society2

Second Year Theology

SD-6231Christology/Soteriology3
SS-6241Pauline Corpus3
MT-6253Spiritual Theology2
PS-6271Pastoral Counseling3
PS-6184Ministerial Environment2
SD-6232Theology of Sacraments3
SD-6234Theology of the Church3
MT-6251Meaning of Human Sexuality3
PS-6101Homiletics II: Preaching3
PS-6280Field Education I1

Pastoral Year

PS-7282Pastoral Year I/Field Education Requirement3
PS-7282Pastoral Year II/Field Education Requirement3

Third Year Theology

SD-7235Theology of Eucharist3
MT-7352Catholic Social Ethics3
SD-7236Ordained Priesthood and Lay Ecclesial Ministry3
PS-6281Field Education II1
PS-7285Parish Administration and Finance2
SD-7233The Trinity3
SS-7242Gospel of John3
PS-7273Introduction to Canon Law3
SS-7341Prophets (or SS-9343:The Psalms)3

Fourth Year Theology

MT-8254Medical Ethics3
SH-8236American Catholicism2
PS-8275Theology & Canon Law of Marriage3
SL-8237The Liturgical Year3
SD-9442Apologetics in American Culture2

Number of Units Listed: 98

Students are required to take four elective courses – one of which is in Spiritual Theology, and earn eight units toward the degree.

Total Units Required - 106

Students in the M.A. program who need to take elective courses will need to do extra work and obtain 3 units for each of these elective courses. (12 units)

Ordination Requirements -12 Units

PS-7274Homiletics III:  Special Occasions and Issues3
PS-8276Homiletics IV: Intensive Practice3
MT-8255Theology of Reconciliation and Anointing3
SL-8237Liturgical Celebration3

Total Number of Units Listed: 118

Transfer Credits:

  1. For those students earning M.A. and M.Div. degrees concurrently at St. Patrick's, up to 24 credits may be transferred from the M.Div. program to the M.A. program (excluding pastoral Studies courses).
  2. M.A. students are allowed to transfer up to 12 credits of graduate level theology courses from an accredited outside institution.

For students enrolled concurrently in the M.A. and the M.Div. programs, credits transferred to the M.A, program from an outside institution count among the total of 24 transferable credits.

If a seminarian is in the M.A. Thesis Track, he can transfer 24 credits from the M.Div. to the M.A. degree (excluding Pastoral Studies courses). Of the remaining 24 credits required for the M.A.: 6 are earned by writing/defending his M.A. thesis, 12 by taking the Faculty Designated M.A. Courses, and 6 more by taking Electives.