The Pontifical College Josephinum
is a four-year liberal arts college and graduate school of theology founded by Monsignor Joseph Jessing in 1888 and located in Columbus, Ohio, USA. It is a seminary that prepares students to become priests in the Roman Catholic Church. The institution trains candidates for the priesthood for U.S. dioceses that do not have their own seminaries, as well as dioceses around the world.
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History
Overview
Founded in 1888, the Josephinum was the religious vocational outgrowth of an
orphanage and orphan's industries, founded by
Msgr. Joseph Jessing, in the early 1870s and relocated to Columbus. In 1888, Jessing founded the Collegium Josephinum, as it was then known. It was granted pontifical college status in 1892 by
Pope Leo XIII and renamed to its current name, thus becoming, and remaining, the only pontifical seminary in the
Western Hemisphere.
Background
In the early 1870s, inspired by the orphanage work of Father Jessing, when four older boys indicated a desire to serve the Church as
Roman Catholic priests, Father Jessing advertised in his German-language newspaper that he would be willing to sponsor two boys who wished to become priests but who lacked the financial means to do so. Jessing accepted twenty-three of the more than forty applicants who replied, and the first academic classes began on September 1, 1888. Originally his new seminary was called the Collegium Josephinum and was located in
downtown Columbus.
As those first students progressed through the seminary program, the institution initially provided six years of primary education ("minor seminary," four years of high school and two years of college/pre-theology) and six years of secondary seminary education ("major seminary," another two years of college/pre-theology and four years of theology/ seminary). Father Jessing lived to see the first class of six seminarians ordained to the priesthood in June 1899 but he died less than six months later.
Pontifical Status Granted in 1892
To make sure that the fledgling institution would continue after his death, Father Jessing asked that it be placed under the protection of the Holy See. Pope Leo XIII granted the request in 1892, thus making the new institution, the Pontifical College Josephinum, the only pontifical seminary outside of Italy. From that time to the present, the institution has been under the direction of the Congregation for Seminaries and Institutes of Study, with the Apostolic Nuncio to the United States as its Chancellor. Today, the seminary is financially independent from both the Holy See and the Diocese of Columbus.
Relocation to present campus
In 1931, the Josephinum moved to its present location just north of
Worthington, Ohio and eleven miles (18 km) north of downtown Columbus on a landmark one-hundred-acre campus. The academic structure changed over time during the 1940s and 1950s from the "six-six" format to four years of high school, four years of college, and four years of theology/seminary (though the distinctions were gradual and unclear). Reflecting the
German origins of its founder and its service to the German-speaking community, the seminary high school and college held almost all classes in German until the influx of non-German speaking students made this no longer practical. One can only begin imagine the difficulty for a new non-German speaking student to take
Greek and
Latin classes in
German. The first official College commencement occurred in June 1953; the College and Recreation buildings were dedicated in 1958; and the high school closed in 1967.
For the first few decades of its existence, the seminary focused its work on educating priests to work with the large population of German immigrants in the United States.
The Josephinum was incorporated under the laws of the State of Ohio in 1894; its Constitution was first approved by Pope Pius XI in 1938 and was most recently revised and approved by the Congregation for Catholic Education in 1996.
Modernization and increasing international focus
In the years after World War I, the focus of the seminary shifted away from its original mission of meeting the spiritual needs of German-speaking Catholics to a wider mission of preparing priests for dioceses throughout the United States that lacked their own seminary. With the advent of the
Second Vatican Council in 1962, the Church took on a more outward-looking and evangelical orientation. It was only natural that seminaries like The Josephinum also become increasingly involved in outreach and ministry work in the their local communities. This trend continues today.
Today, The Josephinum is under the direction of Rev. Msgr. Paul J. Langsfeld, Rector and President. The Josephinum alumni serve the needs of the Church in 48 states and 22 foreign countries. The Josephinum continues to prepare priests U.S. dioceses that do not have their own seminaries, missionary areas of the United States, including regions of the U.S. with growing Hispanic communities and finally, dioceses around the world in need of help with the education of their seminarians. The Josephinum, founded in the bygone age of the late 19th Century by an inspired German immigrant is, in the 21st Century, truly a seminary with a world-wide outreach.
Accreditation and certifications
Led by a decades long effort by its most significant graduate and 20th Century leader, Msgr.
Leonard J. Fick, the Josephinum was accredited by The Higher Learning Commission, an affiliate of the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools in 1976, as well as the Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada, and holds a Certificate of Authorization from the Ohio Board of Regents.
See also
- Joseph Jessing
- Leonard J. Fick