Greek Major | In Partnership with Belmont Abbey College

Pursue a Bachelor’s Degree in Greek

Undergraduate formation in Greek in partnership with Belmont Abbey College. Suited for students seeking deep engagement with classical and early Christian texts.

Why Choose the Greek Major

For degree-seeking students, the Greek Major builds rigorous linguistic skill and interpretive habits for reading the tradition in the original. VSI accompanies your discernment; Belmont Abbey provides the accredited degree pathway.

Who this is for: Undergraduates aiming for classical or early Christian studies, future teachers, seminarians-in-discernment, and readers who want to work directly with Greek sources.

New to classical languages? Begin with foundational study first. VSI’s advisors can help you chart a phased path into degree-level Greek.

Program At-a-Glance

Awarding Institution

Belmont Abbey College

Program Type

Bachelor’s degree (Partner Program)

Admissions & Tuition

Managed by Belmont Abbey College

VSI’s Role

All Greek related courses will be taken through VSI, while all other Core curriculum courses are taken through Belmont Abbey College.

Next Steps

Apply through Belmont Abbey College; optionally complement studies with VSI practice and retreats

Program Overview

Program Structure & Coursework

A clear, staged pathway from consolidation to breadth and depth in reading:

  • Foundational Ecclesiastical Latin Language (10 credits)
    Consolidate core grammar, composition, and reading fluency; align prior learning through placement and targeted review.
  • Essential Texts for Ecclesiastical Latin (7 credits)
    • Classical Texts (3 cr): build range and sensitivity to style and idiom.
    • Ecclesiastical Texts (4 cr): read prayers, liturgical selections, and representative ecclesial writings.
  • Second Milestone Courses (7 credits)
    Guided coursework aligned to your specialization (see below). Prepares for the Second Milestone Examination.
  • DLE Capstone (6 credits)
    Supervised, text-intensive study integrating language, genre, and method in your chosen area.
  • Final Paper (2 credits)
    A substantive paper or project that demonstrates disciplined reading, argument, and engagement with sources.

Milestone Examinations

  • First Milestone: verifies readiness for Essential Texts and upper-level study.
  • Second Milestone: confirms advanced competency before Capstone work.

Specializations

Choose a focus area as you approach the Second Milestone to guide upper-level coursework and capstone reading:

  • Systematic Theology — Doctrinal texts and commentaries; vocabulary and argumentation patterns.
  • Canon Law — Introductory canonical sources and selected commentary; juridical language and structure.
  • Liturgy — Missal, Office, and rites; rubrical and oration styles; liturgical Latin in practice.
  • Biblical Theology — Vulgate selections and related ecclesial exegesis; intertextual sensitivity.
  • Moral Theology — Texts on the moral life; casuistic and virtue-theory vocabularies.
  • Pedagogy — Methods for teaching Latin as a living language; classroom practice and materials.

Note: Specializations guide course selection and capstone focus; they do not alter total credits.

How You Will Study

  • Instruction: focused live sessions each week using active acquisition and text-centered methods.
  • Practice: guided reading, listening, pronunciation, and spaced review calibrated to your level.
  • Assessment: formative checkpoints; milestone exams; capstone supervision; final paper.

Tuition & Scheduling

  • Model: Pay-as-you-go by course; see Tuition & Aid for current rates and any package options.
  • Pacing: Plan a steady weekly rhythm. Duration varies by placement, course load, and term availability.
  • Flexibility: You may adjust pace term-to-term in consultation with advising.

What You’ll Gain

Competence in Greek through structured coursework and extensive reading

Facility with primary texts that supports scholarship, teaching, and ministry pathways

Intellectual and spiritual formation grounded in engagement with the tradition

How The Partner Program Works

Note: Curriculum, modality, transfer credit, and tuition are defined by Belmont Abbey College.

FAQ

No. The degree is conferred by Belmont Abbey College. VSI helps with discernment and complementary formation.

All admissions and tuition are handled by Belmont Abbey College.

Transfer policies are set by Belmont Abbey College. Consult their admissions office.

Start with foundational study. VSI advising can help map a preparatory path before you begin the degree.

“[…] treasure the very rich heritage of the Latin tradition […]” and “[walk] along paths rich in hope and confidence…”

- Pope Francis

Dr. Nancy Llewellyn

Co-Founder, Veterum Sapientia Institute
Magistra - Introductory Latin


Magistra Annula is Associate Professor of Latin at Belmont Abbey College, coming to North Carolina after a decade at Wyoming Catholic College. She teaches Latin at the Charlotte Diocese’s new St. Joseph College Seminary in addition to her work at Belmont. Earlier in her career she studied with Fr. Reginald Foster and at the Pontifical Salesian University in Rome. Returning to her native California, Nancy founded SALVI in 1997 and served on its board until 2019, directing SALVI workshops (Rusticationes) around the country and abroad. She holds her PhD (2006) from UCLA.

Fr. Dylan Schrader, PhD

Magister - Scholastic Theology

Pater Pelagius is a priest of the Diocese of Jefferson City, Missouri, ordained in 2010. He holds a PhD in systematic theology from the Catholic University of America and is the translator of several Scholastic works, including On the Motive of the Incarnation, the first volume in CUA’s Early Modern Catholic Sources series, and Book 2 of Thomas Aquinas’s Commentary on the Sentences, edited by the Aquinas Institute for the Study of Sacred Doctrine. Fr. Schrader is the author of The Shortcut to Scholastic Latin, published by the Paideia Institute Press. He has attended every Veterum Sapientia conference since its inception.

Mr. Christopher Owens, STM

Chief Executive Officer

Christopher Owens completed licentiate studies at the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas (“the Angelicum”) with a concentration in Thomism, and is a doctoral candidate at the same university. His research investigates the question of predestination in the writings of the early Thomists. More generally, Christopher’s research interests in both philosophy and theology are focused on the preambles of faith, ontology, meta-ethics, and action theory as found principally in the Thomistic tradition, as well as in the medieval dialectic of the University of Paris. Additionally, Christopher serves on the editorial board for Philosophical News, the official journal of the European Society for Moral Philosophy, and is vice-president of the Albertus Magnus Center for Scholastic Studies, based in Norcia, Italy.

Fr. Joseph Matlak

Magister


Fr. Joseph Matlak is a priest of the Eparchy of Saint Josaphat in Parma (Ukrainian Greek-Catholic). Born in Dunstable, Bedfordshire, England, he studied Ancient History at King’s College London, and completed seminary studies and a Licentiate in Sacred Theology at the Catholic University of America, Washington DC. He is currently finishing a doctorate at the Institute for Orthodox Christian Studies in Cambridge, England. He serves as administrator of Saint Basil the Great Parish in Charlotte, North Carolina, and is an instructor within the Honors College of Belmont Abbey College. He has previously worked in parishes and missions, schools, youth and young adult ministry, liturgical music, and Catholic media, among other roles.

Magister Marcus Porto

Magister - Introductory Latin

Magister Marcus holds a B.A. in Liberal Arts from Thomas Aquinas College and a Latin Fluency Certificate from Academia Vivarium Novum, where he learned to speak Latin under Luigi Miraglia. He is currently a graduate student at Kentucky University, studying Latin under Terence Tunberg and Milena Minkova, and works as a classical languages’ instructor, Liberal Arts teacher, and editor at Instituto Hugo de São Vitor, Brazil.

Dr. Samuel Stahl

Magister

Samuel Stahl earned a PhD in Classics at the State University of New York at Buffalo. His dissertation is an annotated verse translation from Claudian’s carmina minora; his passions, both personal and professional, include Christian poetry and ecumenism. In addition to his work with VSI, he teaches ELA at a Catholic grammar school in Western New York, where he lives with his wife and two cats.

Magister Tod Post, MA

Magister

Mr. Post holds a B.A. in philosophy from St. John’s Seminary College in Camarillo, CA and an M.A. in Medieval Studies from the Centre for Medieval Studies at the University of Toronto. His areas of study and interest include codicology and palaeography and creating medieval and classical inks and writing materials. He particularly enjoys working in his garden surrounded by plants from the classical world such as papyrus, acanthus, figs, olives and grapes which also gives him an opportunity to practice his botanical Latin. He is a lifelong resident of southern California where he has been teaching and promoting Latin since 2004 and where he resides with his wife and six children.

Kit Adderley

Magister

Kit Adderley became interested in Ancient Rome at a young age, and following a particularly interesting and formative Roman History class in high school, decided to study Classics at Franciscan University of Steubenville. While studying and in subsequent years, Kit was blessed to attend many spoken Latin programs both in the United States and in Rome. Kit has taught Latin for 10 years at the high school and middle school level in Texas and Minnesota, most recently designing and implementing a spoken Latin program for high school that enjoyed tremendous success. Kit currently works in the finance industry but continues to love Latin and the classical world and is excited to work with Veterum Sapientia in bringing that knowledge to others.

Matthew Ratcliff

Coordinator for Marketing and Course Development

Matthew Ratcliff is a graduate from Belmont Abbey College, where he fell in love with Latin while studying under Nancy Llewellyn and Gregory DiPippo, and where he encountered the natural method for the first time. He has previously taught for Aquinas Learning Center in Charlotte for the 2023-2024 academic year. Matthew firmly believes that everyone can learn Latin well. He loves incorporating physical movement in the classroom and is excited to share the joy of the language with every class!

Magister Gregory DiPippo

Director of Academic Development, Assistant to the Dean, Magister - Introductory Latin

Magister Gregorius was born and raised in Providence, Rhode Island, where he attended a high school which offered an excellent Latin program. He attended McGill University in Montreal, where he studied Classical Languages and Literature, and the Augustinian Patristic Institute in Rome, where he studied the Fathers of the Church. For 23 years, he worked as a tour guide in Rome, and for the last 15 years, he has been a regular contributor (and for 10 years editor) to the New Liturgical Movement website.

Andrea Allen

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