Skip to main content
Home
  • About
  • Quotations
  • Newsletters
  • Events
  • Blogs
  • Donate
  • Subscribe
  • Search

Holy Week Quiet Days

April 14 - 20, 2003
10:00 am Morning Prayers, 4:00 pm Evening Prayers
Retreat House

Do you need space removed from dailyness to ponder persistent questions? Or to get your heart ready for Easter? You are invited to Rolling Ridge during Holy Week for time and space apart.

Rolling Ridge offers you:

  • Retreat House space for thinking, reading, journaling
  • Woodland walking and hiking trails and quiet spaces
  • Appalachian Trail overlook one-hour walk from the Retreat House
  • Creeks, waterfalls, and creek-watching rocks
  • Morning prayers daily at 9 am with the retreat community
  • Evening prayers daily at 4 pm with the retreat community
  • Art Cottage with art supplies available
  • Spiritual direction or guided day retreat available upon request
  • Friendly dogs and welcoming staff community

The Week's program also includes:

  • Easter Weekend Silent Retreat, led by Rolling Ridge Staff
  • Friday Evening Stations of the Cross, led by Lindsay McLaughlin
  • Saturday Meditative Art experience, led by Keith Lyndaker

If you need a respite from the world's turmoil, consider time at Rolling Ridge, between the Blue Ridge and the Shenandoah. Come for one day or several, Monday through Friday. Bring a bag lunch, or fast. Cool spring water, coffee, and tea available. Simple meals will be serve during the silent retreat, starting Friday evening. Reading materials available. No charge for day retreats. Overnight stay is an option. Cost for overnight stay during week nights is $12. Cost for weekend (Friday and Saturday nights with meals) is $40. For more information, overnight reservations, or directions call Vivian Headings (304.724.6653) or Bob Sabath (304.724.6653).


Stations of the Cross

In the Stations of the Cross, we follow the path that Jesus followed during his Passion, from the courtroom to the place where he died. Jesus' difficult journey took place in Jerusalem 2000 years ago, where the path is known as the Via Dolorosa, or the Sorrowful Way. Certain spots where Jesus stopped along his route are marked, and these are called Stations.

Over the centuries, people traveled to Jerusalem to retrace and recall Jesus' steps to Calvary, especially during Lent. But Jerusalem is very far to go for most people, so in the Middle Ages, they began making the journey along the Via Dolorosa in churches, using painted or carved images of the 14 stops Jesus made. At each Station people would think about what happened to Jesus and they would pray about it.

On Good Friday evening, after dusk, we are going to make that journey through the hushed woods and quiet spaces of Rolling Ridge. As we go on our Via Dolorosa we will be telling the story of Jesus' last hours, his death, and his burial, a story that has deep meaning for us. At each Station we will pause to allow the moments recalled there to shape our prayers for the places in our hearts and our world that, like Jesus, are battered and broken.

We invite you to send us the names of loved one who have died, or whom you have lost, of those sick, or in trouble. You may also want to name situations or places, both far away or next door, that cry out for God's healing presence and for which you want to pray. We invite you to send us snapshots, clippings, or objects that depict or represent these persons and places. We will include them as we construct each Station. You may send them to Rolling Ridge, c/o Vivian Headings, RR 4 Box 314K, Harpers Ferry WV 25425. You will have them returned to you, so be sure to include your name on the items.

Lindsay McLaughlin

Newsletter Subscription

There is no cost to have the Friends of Silence monthly letter sent to you each month.

Yes, I want to subscribe!

Free Daily Quote

Enjoying the Friends of Silence monthly newsletter? Now you can sign up to receive a free daily quote in your inbox each morning taken from more than 37 years of 410 newsletters and 5,450 quotes on silence and the contemplative path.

Sign Me Up!

Donate Now

For the past 35 years, a small band of dedicated friends have poured their hearts and love into Friends of Silence.

Each month we send out the newsletter in print and email to a growing community of over 10,000 people.

The monthly newsletter of contemplative quotes remains free and is made possible by your generosity and support.

If our work brings you any hope and a sense of belonging, then please consider supporting our labor of love with a donation.

And if you’ve already given, from the bottom of our hearts: THANK YOU.

Donate Now

Search Quotes

Quotations by Author
Quotations by Source
Quotations by Topic
Daily Quotes
Get iPhone App

Quote of the Day

The hardest thing in life may be to learn to truly trust that there is something noble and generative in ourselves. This is a greater sense of the notion of believing in our self; to truly believe in oneself means to uncover the inner core of imagination and authenticity that can also be called the genius within us. When we connect to the inner resident of the soul, we also learn how we are woven to the Soul of the World.

~ from THE GENIUS MYTH by Michael Meade
 
Purchase from Amazon

Home | About | Quotations | Newsletters | Events | Blogs | Donate | Subscribe | Search

Friends of Silence Friends of Silence | 1681 Patriots Way | Harpers Ferry WV 25425 | Phone: 304-870-4574
Unless otherwise noted, all material © Friends of Silence 2025