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Catholic University Receives $7.1 Million Lilly Grant

Student priest in summer graduate program at The Catholic University of America. Photo credit: Catholic University/Patrick Ryan.

The grant is part of the Lilly Endowment's Pathways for Tomorrow Initiative and will support the formation of a new program to develop leadership skills among seminarians and priests.

The Catholic University of America’s School of Theology and Religious Studies has received a grant of over $7.1 million from Lilly Endowment Inc. to institute a new program that will strengthen practical leadership skills of current and new priests, seminarians, and other pastoral leaders. 

The program also will include a continuing formation institute for bishops, and collaboration with six U.S. seminaries, the Conference of Major Superiors of Men, and the Missionary Society of St. Paul the Apostle. 

The Catholic Project, at Catholic University, will serve as a leadership partner for the initiative.

New Wineskins is being funded through Lilly Endowment’s Pathways for Tomorrow Initiative. This initiative is designed to help theological schools across the United States and Canada as they prioritize and respond to the most pressing challenges they face as they prepare pastoral leaders for Christian congregations both now and into the future. 

 

The grant to Catholic University is one of 45 approved in this competitive round of funding to support theological schools as they lead large-scale collaborations with other seminaries, colleges and universities, and other church-related organizations.  

The Needs Met By This Initiative

The 2022 National Study of Catholic Priests, published by The Catholic Project, found young priests reported elevated burnout. The study also raised concern about the rate at which young men are leaving ministry within the first five years. 

Seminary programs are designed to prioritize teaching philosophy and theology, with less emphasis on the practical demands of running a parish, yet the reality is Catholic parishes need pastors with not only solid intellectual formation but also well-rounded human and pastoral formation.

In addition, men’s religious communities programs have reported a need to prepare their younger members to take on administrative roles within their communities. 

The project includes:

  •  A pastoral laboratory for seminarians at collaborating seminaries
     
  • Leadership formation for religious communities with the Conference of Major Superiors of Men
     
  • Tools for pastors and other pastoral leaders to address polarization within their congregations and the Church
     
  • The Gregory the Great Bishops’ Institute to address continuing education for bishops who often become bishops in a very different context than when they entered the priesthood.

“This initiative allows us to address some of the most pressing issues in leadership for seminarians, men’s religious communities, bishops, and pastoral leaders. This is an opportunity to build on the School of Theology’s 130-year foundation of preparing leaders for service to the Church,” said Susan Timoney, the principal investigator for New Wineskins.

Timoney is an associate professor of practice, associate dean for graduate ministerial studies and director of the certificate in pastoral ministry. Stephen White, executive director of The Catholic Project, will lead the project with her.

Lilly Endowment launched the Pathways for Tomorrow Initiative in 2021. Since then, it has provided grants totaling more than $700 million to support 163 theological schools in efforts to strengthen their own educational and financial capacities and to assist 61 schools in developing large-scale collaborative endeavors. 

Collaborating seminaries include Theological College, Washington, D.C.; Kenrick-Glennon Seminary, St. Louis; Mount St. Mary’s Seminary, Emmitsburg, Md.; St. Vincent College, Latrobe, Pa.; University of St. Mary of the Lake, Mundelein, Ill.; and St. Patrick’s Seminary and University, Menlo Park, Calif.

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