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EncyclopediaCollege of Saint Benedict > Saint-John's-University

The College of Saint Benedict / Saint John's University (hereafter referred to as CSB/SJU) is a joint academic institution in rural central Minnesota. While the two schools share the same academic curriculum, they are recognized as being both separate and joint institutions at the same time.


Both schools are Catholic and deeply rooted in the Benedictine tradition, the oldest western monastic tradition still in existence. SJU is one of the oldest colleges in Minnesota, and is only one of five exclusively men's colleges or universities in the United States, while CSB accepts only female enrollment.

Contents

Historical timeline

  • 1857 -- Officially started as Saint John's Seminary by five Benedictine missionaries, SJU moved a few times from its original stake along the Mississippi river near St. Cloud to its present location.
  • 1868 -- The first abbot at Saint John's, Rupert Seidenbush, is elected.
  • 1870 -- Saint John's is allowed to grant diplomas and degrees by the Minnesota government.
  • 1888 -- First copy of The Record (the official student newspaper) is printed.
  • 1902 -- Saint John's first football "championship."
  • 1929 -- Saint John's officially becomes a State Game Refuge
  • 1961 -- CSB is officially incorporated as a separate institution.
  • 2003 -- Saint John's long-time football coach John Gagliardi becomes the coach with the greatest number of wins in college football history, regardless of division.
    • [1] (http://www.csbsju.edu/sjuarchives/), [2] (http://www.csbsju.edu/csbarchives/)

Current activities

CSB and SJU both serve as two of the top three Catholic liberal arts colleges in the United States (U.S. News and World Report). The current student population is approximately 3,900 students (roughly 52% female, 48% male), making CSB/SJU the largest of the United State's liberal arts colleges. Students come from a wide variety of backgrounds and demographics, including a large concentration of students from the Bahamas, due to continuing missionary efforts. Student studies flow in both directions as well, since CSB/SJU is also ranked first for number of students who study internationally. [3] (http://www.csbsju.edu/admission/)


Saint John's Abbey and University is currently undertaking a massive effort to create The Saint John's Bible. This will be the first handwritten Bible since Johann Gutenberg invented movable type in the mid-1400s. The first section to be completed, the four Gospels of the New Testament and the Acts of the Apostles, were officially unveiled in May 2002. [4] (http://www.saintjohnsbible.org/)


The Hill Monastic Manuscript Library, a project and library dedicated to preserving old manuscripts from European monasteries by photographing them onto microfilm, is housed at Saint John's. Currently, there are over 25 million pages from over 90,000 volumes in HMML, representing one of the largest medieval and Renaissance collections in the world. Researchers from around the world are invited to use the tools available at HMML rather than risk damage to these ancient and invaluable resources. [5] (http://www.hmml.org/)


Controversies

Saint John's has not been without its controversies, both in the past and the present. Current allegations throughout the United States of sexual abuse by members of the clergy have had a few incidents through the Saint John's Abbey. As a result of this, and through their ongoing mission, the Interfaith Sexual Trauma Institute is in the process of helping to rebuild and heal the community and those affected. [6] (http://www.csbsju.edu/isti/)


On Saturday, November 9, 2002, Saint John's junior Joshua Guimond was reported missing. Over the past months, countless numbers of volunteers and law enforcement personnel have searched in and around the Saint John's area, but no trace has yet been found. [7] (http://www.csbsju.edu/news/crisis/findjosh_guimond.htm) [8] (http://www.findjoshua.com/)


External links





  Results from FactBites:
 
CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: The Benedictine Order (17155 words)
Though a Benedictine himself born in Aquitaine and trained at Saint-Seine near Dijon, Benedict was imbued with the rigid austerity of the East, and in his Abbey of Aniane practiced a mode of life that was severe in the extreme.
Benedict's Rule was widely propagated by Charlemagne and his son, Louis the Pious, and the Council of Aix-la-Chapelle in 817 enforced its general observance in all the nunneries of the empire.
Benedict himself began by converting and civilizing the barbarians who overran Italy in the sixth century, the best of whom came and learned the Gospel principles at Monte Cassino.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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