Modern seminary establishments
The shaping of modern seminary establishments was a firsthand termination of Roman Catholic reforms of the Counter-Reformation after the Council of Trent. This reform insisted on the enrichment of the instruction of clergy by means of making Theology Degree as live-in establishments which would be below the implicit watch of ranking clergy. The conception of secondary seminaries to groom adolescent boys for the priesthood took after this first movement. A seminary pattern named the Tridentine was that of a living in monastic community where lifestyle and petition were closely supervised and disciplined as a means to reforming pre-Reformation misuses among the clergy. The seminaries were very much in counterpoint to the more easy and unbound life styles of the universities. There existed a very much greater stress was put on individual correction as well as the instruction of philosophy to develop for theology. Protestant reformers of the day rejected this approach.