Good Shepherd College Te Hepara Pai was established by
the New Zealand Catholic Bishops Conference and by the New Zealand Province
of the Society of Mary.
The College exists to provide
theological education in the Roman Catholic tradition and has a special
focus on the formation of candidates for ordained priesthood in the
Catholic Church.
The College is open to all
students who wish to study theology in the Roman Catholic tradition.
Students may be Catholic lay people or members of religious congregations,
members of other Christian Churches, followers of other religious traditions,
or students who have no religious association.
Why
We Study Theology
Religious faith is the deepest
thing in our lives, and to those who have it, the most important. Not
everyone studies it. In fact, some of those who have it to a superlative
degree never study it. But it is one of the most beautiful and interesting
things we can study, trying to get clear on what it is and what it isn't.
Good Shepherd College is
part of the Catholic tradition of reflection on religious faith. Catholicism
is, among other things, a way of looking at the world. Good Shepherd
College teaches about this view of the world, what it is like to see
things through Catholic eyes. It also engages with the criticisms and
debates which arise when non-believers look on at this vision and comment
on it, asking whether it can be justified.
In all this, the College
continues the long, colourful, sometimes quarrelsome tradition of Catholic
theology, trying to get clear about this ancient tradition of belief,
with its words of faith, hope, love, forgiveness and reconciliation.
If the thought of learning
about such things attracts you, Good Shepherd College is the place for
you!
Now
and Then
Good Shepherd College
Te Hepara Pai began teaching in February 2001. It brought together the
resources and traditions of two theological colleges in New Zealand,
Holy Cross College, Mosgiel and Mount St Marys College.
Holy Cross College was founded
in 1900 by Bishop Verdon of Dunedin. Educated in Rome, Bishop Verdon
headed seminaries in Ireland and Sydney, with an intervening period
as vice-rector of the Irish College in Rome. For 100 years Holy Cross
College taught theology to candidates for diocesan priesthood in New
Zealand and more recently to a much wider group of students.
Mount St Marys College
began its life in Auckland at the beginning of the 1992 academic year.
Its prior history was at Meeanee and Greenmeadows in Hawkes Bay, having
been founded in 1890 by French Marists who formed the first faculty
of Mount St Marys College in Hawkes Bay.
Originally established to
teach theology to candidates for Marist priesthood and for brothers
in the Society of Mary, Mount St Marys College, like Holy Cross
College, has taught theology to a much wider group of students in recent
years.