Lilly Endowment Inc. has made a $7.9 million grant to the University of Notre Dame to support a collaboration with Boston College designed to grow the next generation of pastoral leaders to accompany and serve U.S Catholics, while rooted in the best of the Latino experience.
The grant is funding the creation of Haciendo Caminos, an initiative that will bring together 16 other Catholic institutions of higher education, advocates, and other entities in the wider Church to accompany students with demonstrated leadership experience in Hispanic communities to pursue graduate theological formation for ministry.
Haciendo Caminos鈥 goals are to respond to the ever-growing population of Hispanic Catholics in parishes, schools, and other ministerial spaces and the consequent need to invest in the talents and leadership of new generations of pastoral leaders to accompany these communities.
鈥淭his groundbreaking partnership has the potential to redefine how we think about theological and ministerial formation of pastoral leaders,鈥 said Boston College School of Theology and Ministry Associate Professor of Hispanic Ministry and Religious Education and Chair of the Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry Department Hosffman Ospino, who will lead the project along with Timothy Matovina, professor and chair of the Department of Theology at Notre Dame.
鈥淎s the U.S. Catholic Church becomes increasingly Latino/a, we seek to increase knowledge of and interest in ministerial professions among young adults and reduce barriers towards their graduate-level theological education,鈥 said Matovina. 鈥淭he present and future of Catholicism in this country will largely depend on how we engage and support young Latinas and Latinos in their faith journeys. If we desire a more vibrant and youthful Church, we need to personally invite young people to leadership and prioritize our collective support for them in their formation. That is why we are so grateful to Lilly Endowment and our partners in the Haciendo Caminos project.鈥
The institutions working with 蜜桃传媒 and Notre Dame on the initiative are Aquinas Institute of Theology, Barry University, Catholic Theological Union, Catholic University of America, Fordham University, Franciscan School of Theology (San Diego), Jesuit School of Theology of Santa Clara University, Loyola Marymount University, Loyola University Chicago, Loyola University New Orleans, Mexican American Catholic College, Mount St. Mary鈥檚 University, Oblate School of Theology, Santa Clara University, St. John鈥檚 Seminary (Camarillo, California), and University of the Incarnate Word.
Notre Dame will oversee the management of the Haciendo Caminos grant, which is being funded through the third and final phase of Lilly Endowment鈥檚 Pathways for Tomorrow Initiative. Pathways is designed to help theological schools across the U.S. and Canada as they prioritize and respond to the most pressing challenges they face in preparing pastoral leaders for Christian congregations both now and into the future.
Notre Dame is one of 16 theological schools that have received grants through the Pathways initiative to fund large-scale, highly collaborative programs. Lilly Endowment believes these programs have the potential to become models for other schools as they seek to strengthen the way they educate pastors and other congregational leaders.
鈥淭heological schools play an essential role in ensuring that Christian congregations have a steady stream of well-prepared leaders to guide their ministries,鈥 said Christopher L. Coble, the endowment鈥檚 vice president for religion. 鈥淢any theological schools believe that their paths to the future depend on their abilities to form strategic partnerships with other schools and church agencies. These grants will help seminaries develop innovative and collaborative approaches to theological education that we believe will strengthen their efforts to prepare and support excellent leaders for Christian communities into the future.鈥
Lilly Endowment launched the Pathways initiative in January 2021 because of its longstanding interest in supporting efforts to enhance and sustain the vitality of Christian congregations by strengthening the leadership capacities of pastors and congregational lay leaders.
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University Communications | October 2022
Updated February 2024