History

Aearial view - the fourties of the 20th century

In his pastoral letter of 1912, Archbishop Neil McNeil proclaimed boldly that he expected St. Augustine’s Seminary of Toronto to do “a great work for the Church,” by training men for the ministerial priesthood. The history of St. Augustine’s Seminary has proven that his words were prophetic ones. In the last century, it has produced more the two-thousand priests, nearly forty bishops, and two cardinals from its fertile formation program. More than a place of learning, the Seminary is where men conform lives to that of the Good Shepherd, Jesus Christ, seeing with His eyes, hearing with His ears, preaching with His mouth, healing with His hands, and most importantly, loving with His heart.


A SEMINARY IS MUCH MORE THAN AN INSTITUTION OF LEARNING. IT IS ESPECIALLY A PLACE WHERE PRIESTS ARE TRAINED TO CARRY OUT THE WORK OF TRUTH AND GRACE. HOLINESS OF LIFE AND CONSECRATION OF PURPOSE IN THE SEMINARIANS ARE MORE IMPORTANT THAN SCHOLARSHIP, AND MORE DIFFICULT OF ATTAINMENT.
— ARCHBISHOP NEIL MCNEIL ARCHBISHOP OF TORONTO FROM 1912 TO 1934

The choir in the chapel
The funeral procession of Eugene O'Keefe
Seminarian studies
Seminarians
ordinations - priests kneeling

The book St. Augustine’s Seminary, A History discusses our one-hundred-year history. Contact us if you’re interested in learning more.


This work, celebrating the centenary of St. Augustine’s Seminary is dedicated to all those, who have studied and taught at St. Augustine’s Seminary.

 

St. Augustine's Seminary was established in 1913 as one of the first major Seminaries in English-speaking Canada to train diocesan priests. From the time it was founded, the Seminary has been a renewing source of study and reflection, enabling men of faith to mature both in knowledge and commitment.