The Senior Spirituality Seminar is more than just another theology credit. It’s a class about your personal journey.
At its heart, the course invites each student to step back from the noise of senior year and ask bigger questions: Who am I becoming? What do I believe? What kind of man do I want to be after graduation?
Through the stories and writings of holy men and women who devoted their lives to faith and service, students explore what it truly means to live with purpose. But this isn’t just about reading history—it’s about finding yourself in it.
On any given day, you might find students sitting in small circles, sharing stories that connect faith to real life. You’ll see journals open, pages filling with honest reflections. The conversations aren’t surface-level. They’re about struggle, growth, doubt, calling, and what discipleship actually looks like in today’s world. The Catholic call to live as a disciple—modeled so clearly by the Xaverian Brothers—becomes less of an abstract idea and more of a personal challenge.
This class is built for students who learn best through discussion, storytelling, and reflection. It’s for those willing to read deeply, think critically, and speak honestly. It’s for the student who wants more than information—who wants transformation.
As graduation approaches and the next chapter begins, this course becomes something even more meaningful. It equips seniors not just with knowledge, but with tools: daily spiritual practices, habits of reflection, and a clearer sense of identity and purpose. By the end of the year, the goal isn’t just that students understand the spiritual journey—it’s that they recognize their own and feel ready to walk it with confidence.

