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History
St. Joseph’s Catholic Major Seminary,
Institute of Theology, is the third
Institute of priestly formation ever to be
established on the soil of Myanmar. Since
September 1,1957, the day of its inception,
it has been providing priests for all the
Archdioceses and Dioceses of the Catholic
Church in Myanmar.
In 1769, Bishop Giovanni Maria Percoto, a
Barnabite, started an educational
institution in Monhla which aimed at
training catechists and, if possible,
priests. It was then moved to Nabet in the
year 1780. There was no record of any
success in the courageous effort of this
distinguished Barnabite.
Another Barnabite, Fr. San Germano, founded
a college for boys in Yangon. By 1783,
three priests were ordained for the Church
in Myanmar. These were Fr. Joseph Maung Gyi
of Chaung U, Fr. Andrew Ko of Chanthaywa and
Fr. Ignatius de Britto of Yangon. These
priests were the first and the last to
graduate from this college.
Since then up to 1957, priests from Myanmar
were all trained at the General College of
St. Joseph in Penang, Malaysia. The Bishops
of Myanmar had read correctly the signs of
the time and under the leadership of His
Grace the Most Rev. Victor Bazin, M.E.P.,
the first Archbishop of Yangon, decided to
open a Major Seminary in Myanmar itself.
This decision proved to be providential a
few years later, when sending of
seminarians to Penang became impossible.
The foundation of the National Major
Seminary was laid by His Eminence Valerian
Cardinal Graciàs, Archbishop of Bombay, on
February 4, 1956. Originally, it was set up
to offer courses in Philosophy as well as in
Theology. In 1983, the Catholic Bishop’s
Conference of Myanmar received a directive
from Rome allowing the separation of the two
sections due to lack of proper
accommodation.
1984-85 was the first academic year of this
Institute as “Institute of Theology”, of the
National Major Seminary.
The National Major Seminary, Institute of
Theology, was founded for the exclusive
purpose of educating candidates for the
priesthood of the Catholic Church. Its
responsibility, therefore, encompasses the
spiritual, intellectual, human and pastoral
formation of its students.
The academic courses comprise of four years
of professional study with almost total
concentration on Theology and allied
disciplines.
The Congregation for the Catholic Education
has conceded the Affiliation to this
seminary on 20th March 2006 to the Faculty
of Theology of Pontifical Urbaniana
University, Vatican City. The Affiliation is
been granted by the above mentioned ministry
" ad quinquennium esperimenti gratia". Those
students who have completed the courses
required and have passed the examinations
will be offered Bachelor Degree in Theology.
The students, after four years of formation
in this Seminary, are supposed to have
undergone adequate training which is broadly
classical in scope and scientific in method.
At the end of the four years of professional
study, the students return to their
respective Archdioceses and Dioceses, where
their Ordinaries will decide on the
questions of their vocation and priestly
ordination.
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