The mission of Saint John Paul II Seminary is to provide an environment that forms men to be committed disciples of Christ who are free to respond to God’s call to the priesthood, including the call to the celibate life.
It is an environment that strives to form well-rounded Christian men characterized by a life of holiness, human virtue, and generous service. Such a life is nurtured by a deep interior life of prayer and sound piety, filial devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary, and a profound love for the universal and local Church. It is further nourished through a rigorous intellectual formation in a faithful and loving obedience to the Magisterium and the sacred truths entrusted to the Church.
The Seminary strives to instill the pastoral charity and priestly witness modeled by its patron, Saint John Paul II, and fulfills its mission through a balanced program of spiritual, human, intellectual, and pastoral formation, as outlined in Pastores Dabo Vobis and the Program of Priestly Formation.
Great things start first as ideas. Someone has a vision which will make things better, a way of improving something that matters. Saint John Paul II had a vision, and what he saw was that the mission given by Jesus Christ to the Church should be brought to completion (Phil 1:6). During his life, his priesthood, and ultimately his pontificate, every waking moment was dedicated to making that vision a reality.
That priestly example inspired Donald Cardinal Wuerl, Archbishop of Washington, to give the Archdiocese its own place where men could be trained for service as diocesan priests. The idea became a reality on October 22, 2011 when Cardinal Wuerl formally dedicated Saint John Paul II Seminary. That day was the culmination of a great deal of hard work, determination and prayer.
The process formally began May 1, 2011 when Cardinal Wuerl, judging it expedient to erect a seminary for college and pre-theology, signed the Decree of Erection. Having just moments before concelebrated the Beatification of the future saint in St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome, Cardinal Wuerl founded the first seminary in the world with Saint John Paul II as its patron.
The site chosen for the new seminary was 145 Taylor Street in northeast Washington, a building originally built in 1951 by the Franciscan Friars of the Atonement to train future priests. Eventually, the building was purchased by the Archdiocese of Washington when the Atonement Fathers moved back to their provincial headquarters in Garrison, New York. For some time, the space was used for diocesan offices including the Catholic Standard, El Pregonaro and the Catholic Youth Organization.
Renovations had begun even before the decree was signed by the Archbishop. The building was transformed, with special attention given to restoring the chapel, the heart of our new home. The seminary is fortunate to have in its chapel the altar used by Pope Benedict XVI at the Mass at Nationals Park April 17, 2008, the altar-stone used by Bishop John Carroll, first bishop of the United States, and a First Class Relic of Pope John Paul II on display.
Even before the seminarians could begin their school year at the Catholic University of America, the renovation of their new home was not complete. For the first two months of our existence, the Society of St. Joseph (an Order known as “the Josephites”) generously offered the seminarians and faculty the fourth floor of their seminary – located about a mile from our present location – so that they could live in a communal setting according to their own seminary rule of life.
These initial years have been richly blessed. Two years after we opened, in the fall of 2013, Saint John Paul II Seminary received the first seminarians from outside the Archdiocese. In September of 2015, the seminary had the tremendous honor of welcoming, during his trip to the United States, His Holiness Pope Francis for a short visit to encourage our seminarians in holiness, prayer, and joy. Later that Fall, Phase II of the seminary was dedicated. D'Aniello Hall includes a spacious Cardinal Wuerl library together with an initial collection of approximately 10,000 volumes donated by Rev. Kenneth Haydock as the Haydock Collection. In addition to the library, D'Aniello Hall includes 20 new seminarian bedrooms, a common room, and an exercise facility.
The reason for the seminary's existence, of course, is to prepare men for the priesthood. It was a great joy, then, when the first alumni of the seminary were ordained to the priesthood on June 17, 2017.
In August of 2017, Cardinal Wuerl dedicated the third and final phase of the seminary, which includes the Comstock Conference Room and a new refectory. In addition, the previous refectory has been transformed into a conference room as well as rooms dedicated to spiritual direction.
Saint John Paul II Seminary opened with 20 seminarians and expanded in the upcoming years to include over 50 seminarians in formation. About half of those seminarians are typically from the Archdiocese of Washington, the remainder coming mostly from our neighboring Archdiocese of Baltimore and the Dioceses of Richmond and Arlington. Also represented are the Dioceses of Wilmington, Wheeling-Charleston, Springfield in Massachusetts, and Bismarck.
In 2019 we had the joy of welcoming Cardinal Wilton Gregory to the Archdiocese of Washington. Cardinal Gregory visits the seminary regularly, reflecting his solicitude for our seminarians and his desire that the formation program continue to flourish.
When the COVID-19 pandemic required our seminarians to disperse in March 2020, formation continued through remote media - spiritual direction, formation advising, talks, and even virtual get-togethers. While it was a challenging time, the Lord continued to bless each of us throughout the academic year until the very end, when we graduated our largest class yet.
In 2023 the seminary implemented its first "propaedeutic year" in which 14 seminarians embarked upon a year focused on prayer, fraternity, and service. For the first time we were able to offer some courses in-house for academic credit at Catholic University. In addition, there was a more focused approach to detaching from digital distractions - in addition to the one-year social media "fast", they turned in their smartphones for the duration of the academic year. In doing so they were able to experience a freer life of life untethered from those devices and were able to resume using them with greater intentionality.
Renovations to our chapel were completed in the Spring of 2024, with new stained glass windows, woodwork in the sanctuary and around the Stations of the Cross, and new statues of Mary and Joseph. The result has been an even more prayerful and beautiful chapel for our daily liturgies and prayer.
As we enter our fourteenth year of existence, we pray that these young men may continue to be formed as true disciples of Christ, ready to embrace the great privilege of the priesthood according to the mind of the Church, and following in the footsteps of our saintly patron, Pope St. John Paul II.