An Advent Retreat
A 24-Hour Retreat December 12-13, 2003
7:00 pm Friday evening - 7:00 pm Saturday evening
Retreat House

For 24 hours this Advent, step back from the noise and bright lights of Christmas. Step back into silence, scripture, and stories of despair and hope.

Participation in the retreat is free and open to all. Call Vivian at 304-725-4172 or email vvatrr@juno.com to register. Please RSVP by December 8.

Friday Evening, December 12
7:00 pm Dinner
8:00 pm Gathering
Hearing stories from Scripture of despair and longing for God's intervention. Meditating in silence on signs of despair in our own times. Writing our thought into story form or poems.
10:00 pm Sending into the night
Experiencing a bedtime song (by Keith Lyndaker Schlabach) and prayer
 
Saturday, December 13
8:30 am Breakfast
9:30 am Gathering in a Reporting Circle
Reading our stories and poems, declaring the suffering of the earth and humans. Meditating in silence on these contemporary versions of despair.
11:30 am Lunch
Listening to reading from Jesus Against Christianity: Reclaiming the Missing Jesus (Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer) on embracing the abundant life.
2:30 pm Reflecting in silence on how we weill live in hope while surrounded by cause for despair. Completing the writing of our stories and poems.
5:30 pm Dinner
7:00 pm Return home

We warmly welcome you to this retreat on a fresh vision of Advent. Participating in the retreat is free and open to all. There will be opportunities for silence and sharing throughout the retreat. All meals will be simple and tasteful. Overnight stay on Saturday evnening optional. Please call Vivian at 304-725-4172 or email vvatrr@juno.com to register by December 8.

Restoring the Sacred Rhythm of LifeLed by Rabbi Marcia Prager and Cantor Jack Kessler
November 21-23, 2003
Friday, 3:00 pm - Sunday, 1:00 pm.<br> Arrival 1:00 - 3:00 pm Friday
Retreat House


Join Rolling Ridge Community for a celebration of Sabbath led by husband-wife team Rabbi Marcia Prager and Jack Kessler. Rabbi Prager is a nationally known Jewish renewal teacher, author, storyteller, artist and therapist from Philadelphia. She teaches in Jewish and interfaith settings, offering wisdom from Jewish tradition as a path of personal and global healing. Jack Kessler is a traditionally trained cantor and director of two Jewish music ensembles.

Bathed in candlelight glow, we begin Friday afternoon and evening with song, story, dance, prayer and a shared meal to welcome the Sabbath and invite the Spirit to be with us, blending the ancient words of sacred prayer with the new words and melodies that our modern journeys have taught us, awakening to new possibilities of thinking and being.

We continue Saturday venturing further into the inner dimension of prayer, exploring the teachings of Torah, renewing our relationship with each other and the mystery of creation. At sundown we conclude with a ceremony of fire, spice and wine to end the Sabbath time.

On Sunday morning, we will explore how the practice of Sabbath can transform our relationship to our work, and to the collective human project of living in right relationship with each other and the earth.

Wear comfortable clothing that allows you to relax and celebrate. Bring an open heart and a good appetite for delicious vegetarian cooking.


ON PRACTICING THE SABBATH ^top

"Sabbath time can be a revolutionary challenge to the violence of overwork, mindless accumulation, and the endless multiplication of desires, responsibilities, and accomplishments. Sabbath is a way of being in time where we remember who we are, remember what we know, and taste the gift of Spirit and eternity." — Wayne Muller

"Sabbath practice tills the compacted soil of our lives so that something new can grow. Without the Sabbath, there will be no future that we or our children would want to live in." — Bob Sabath

"We teach that even though we live in a society that wants to produce more and more, we are willing to stop being producers for 26 hours every week. This is a revolutionary stand in the face of a dominant culture that is runaway with the madness of over consumption and over production. When I turn off my computer on Sabbath evening, and put down my camera, and stop my business, and don't go to the stores, I make of my life a passionate statement that I am more than an addict to material productivity, however valuable." — Rabbi Marcia Prager

MORE ABOUT THE RETREAT LEADERS ^top

Marcia Prager serves as Rabbi of P'nai Or, an innovative Jewish renewal community in Philadelphia, as Director of Professional Development for Aleph, the Alliance for Jewish Renewal, designing programs of study leading to rabbinic ordination, and as faculty for the Jewish Renewal Life Center in Philadelphia, a year long leadership program in Jewish spirituality, community, and social change. Her recent book, The Path of Blessing, explores the roots of Jewish spirituality and practice.

Marcia and Jack are both involved with Jewish Renewal, a movement of people engaged in creating contemporary models of Jewish expression that speak to both intellect and heart, in forms which embrace the full inclusion of women and the divine feminine, and which facilitate the deep healing of our relationships with each other and the earth. Their newest project involves creating innovative tools for exploring Jewish prayer and spiritual practice.

Rabbi Prager graduated from the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College, received her rabbinic ordination from the visionary founder of the Jewish Renewal Movement, holds a BA in cultural anthropology, and an MFA in photography and drawing from Pratt Institute, New York. She taught for five years as a member of the faculty of The International Center of Photography in New York City.

FOR MORE INFORMATION ^top

ALEPH: Alliance for Jewish Renewal: http://www.aleph.org
Rabbi Marcia Prager: http://www.rabbimarciaprager.homestead.com
Network of Jewish Renewal Communities: http://www.jewishrenewal.org
Jewish Renewal Life Center: http://www.jewishrenewallifecenter.org
P'nai Or Religious Fellowship: http://www.jewishrenewal.org/pnaior.htm
Rabbi Arthur Waskow's Shalom Center: http://www.shalomctr.org
Rolling Ridge Study Retreat Community: http://www.rollingridge.net

SABBATH POEM ^top

Tonight is a time to catch our breath
Whatever we have been
doing,
making,
working,
creating,
Tonight is a time to catch our breath.

No matter how necessary our work,
how important to the world,
how urgent that we continue it —

No matter how joyful our work,
how fully and profoundly human —

No matter how flawed our work,
how urgent that we set it right —

No matter how hard we have worked to gather
our modest fame,
our honorable livelihood,
our reasonable power —

Tonight we pause to catch our breath.
Tonight we pause to share whatever we have gathered.

We need this.
Our planet needs Sabbath!
We need to make Sabbath as individuals,
as a people,
and as a human species gone mad with despoiling our world.

I do my most important work on Sabbath,
and that work is making Sabbath!


CONTACT AND REGISTRATION INFORMATION

 

Rolling Ridge Study Retreat Community http://www.rollingridge.net
Bob Sabath Email: bsabath@sojo.net
RR 4 Box 314 Phone: 304.724.6653
Harpers Ferry, WV 25425  

For more information, or to register for the retreat, contact Bob Sabath. The cost of the weekend retreat is $100 and includes lodging, 6 meals, and program expenses. To reserve your space, mail your registration fee to Bob Sabath at Rolling Ridge Study Retreat Community. Make checks payable to Rolling Ridge Study Retreat Community.


November 8, 2003
10:00 am - 9:00 pm
Niles Cabin

Weather permitting, we will gather around 5:00 pm for simultaneous sunset and (full) moonrise and preparation for a potluck supper at 5:30 pm.

Then we will watch the total lunar eclipse, which is due to begin at 5:32 pm and reach its peak at 7:06 pm. Bring binoculars, groundcloths, blankets, lawn chairs, and warm clothes -- just in case.

If you've never watched this particular celestial performance, it's unforgettable. The Earth's shadow will slowly glide across the moon, producing images and colors that are way up there on the WOW! scale.

October 24 - 25
7:00 pm Friday Evening - 7:00 pm Saturday Evening
Deer Spring House

In three interactiave sessions we will discover how story, simple or complex, enables us to find our way through life. On Friday evening, Rolling Ridge staff will introduce story as a medium through which humans regularly interpret meaning in experiences, drawing on the writings of Mark Turner in the Literary Mind, and on a case study which illuminates the fact that personal identities consist of fragments of stories from both first and third-person perspectives.

On Saturday morning, Paul Costello will demonstrate the functions of story in discovering prefereed and wholesome futures. Paul is Director of Research at the Center for Narrative Studies in Washington and applies his skills in narrative therapy to assist persons and groups in several countries to move from difficult circumstances to a choiceworthy future. Paul's previous visit to Rolling Ridge was received with much enthusiasm.

On Saturday afternoon Phil Bufithis, a professor of literature at Shepherd College, will enable us to recognize two narratives, one Greek, the other Hebrew, culturally distinctive ways of telling a story and how these reflect differing understanding of what a person is, what a narrator is is, and what divinity is. Thus,w e see the fact that culture shapeshow we tell our stories.

The retreat will conclude with dinner. The retreat fee is $50. For more information or registration, call Vivian at 304-725-4172 or email Vivian at vvatrr@juno.com

Saturday, October 11, 2003
9:00 am - 5:00 pm
Keys Gap

The Appalachian Trail south of Harpers Ferry was the first section of the trail to be established south of New England. On this full-day hike we will begin at Keyes Gap (where Route 9 crosses the Blue Ridge) and finish at Rolling Ridge Study Retreat (total walking distance 12 miles).

Along the way we will take time to enjoy the views and the beauty of the changing fall colors on the mountain. We will listen to the stories of the ancient rock. Much of the trail is over rocky terrain and there are several short, but steep ascents; the last two miles is all downhill from the Ridge to Study Retreat, where a hearty dinner will await our arrival.

Jim Hall is an amateur naturalist and ecologist at the Dayspring Retreat Center near Washington and is a Rolling Ridge Study Retreat Board member. Contact Bob Sabath (304-724-6653) to confirm coming (we don't want to leave without you), and for last minute changes due to weather conditions.

October 4, 2003
10:30 am - 4:30 pm
FWMC Treehouse

We will meet at the Treehouse Platform for a day of silence, together or alone. You may hang out in the Treehouse, wander the trails, hike up to Crescent Rock for an inspiring Appalachian vista. Spend your time in meditation, or journaling, or reading, or silent exploration and opening up. It's your retreat.

We will begin at 10:30 a.m. with collective silence, break, then gather again for a shared bag lunch at 1:00 pm. Always in silence. The afternoon will be open for more of the same, meeting again at 4:00 in the Treehouse for a quiet culmination.

As the ancient psalm says: "Be still and know that I am God."

A modest donation to the Center is always welcome.

This event is for: Those who find collective silence to be profound, relaxing, inspiring, healing, an antidote to cacaphonic hustle-bustle, or just plain enjoyable. And to those who are not so sure, but would like to give it a try (maybe bringing along a favorite book or a personal journal with numerous blank pages thirsty for thoughts).

Directions: Call or e-mail Sheila for directions.

A Meditative Arts Retreat
October 3 - 5, 2003
Friday Evening - Sunday Lunch
Retreat House

Prayer shawls are found in many cultural and religious traditions. Whatever their material, pattern and design, prayer shawls represent an outward and tangible expression of an indwelling comfort and protection. In this retreat we will explore through stories and poetry some of the mystery and meaning of this form. We will also have opportunities to play with different media creating our own designs and patterns on a prayer shawl theme. Cheryl Hellner will lead our gathered times and our sessions of creative paly will be led by Keith Lyndaker, working in wood inlay; Linda DeGraf with patchwork; and Vivian Headings with knitting.

This Meditative Arts Retreat will be October 3-5, 2003, and cost $90, which includes materials fee. For more information, call Vivian at 304-725-4172 or Cheryl at 302-585-4291.

November 1, 2003
Retreat House

Join us for the annual meeting and retreat of the Study Retreat Associates of Rolling Ridge.

Where It Came From and Where It's Going
September 13, 2003
10:30 am - 4:00 pm
Niles Cabin

Chris Brunton of the Potomac Appalachian Trail Club (PATC) will give us some history on the "A.T." and tell us what the current programs are and where people would like the Trail to be heading in the future.

Chris knows the Meditation Center and Rolling Ridge intimately, and he helped to build the "Ridge to River Trail" that traverses one border of the Rolling Ridge property and connects the A.T. with the legendary Shenandoah River. Held at FWMC.

Chris is a gifted storyteller and has boundless enthusiasm for the A.T. and the sanctuary which has been entrusted to us.

We will meet at the Treehouse Platform at 10:30 am for a talk by Chris, followed by a bag lunch and a hike up the mountain and along the A.T.

The program will be held, rain or shine, though the hike may be truncated if showers are heavy. (Not to worry; we have put in a request for good weather.)

A modest donation to the Wilderness Center is suggested for this event.

This event is for: All those who love the Appalachian Trail and/or want to know more about it. And all those who would like to hear some good stories and go on an uplifting hike.

Directions: Check with Sheila Bach by phone or e-mail. In case of very bad weather on the day of the event, call Sheila for specifics.

An Ecological Integrity Retreat
September 5-6, 2003
Friday 7:00 pm to Saturday 7:00 pm
Deer Spring House

Ever since God created the world, his invisible qualities, both his eternal power and his divine nature, have been clearly seen... in the things God has made. Romans 1:20 (Good News for Modern Man)

Why do we have such a wonderful idea of God? Because we live in such a gorgeous world. If we had lived on the moon, for example, our sense of the divine would reflect the lunar landscape. Imagination is required for religious development. What would there be to imagine if we lived on the moon? -- Thomas Berry (Befriending the Earth)

We live in a time when our children have less and less direct experience with the natural world (and perhaps more experience with a virtual, abstract world). For most of our evolution as a species, however, our children grew up with their hands in the clay earth, their ears filled with the sound of wind and storm and the gentle rustle of leaves on the trees; their eyes filled with the wonder of clouds crossing the sky, of ants at play. If our children grow up with no direct experience of nature, what will they know of God?

On Friday night of this retreat we will share with one another our childhood stories of encountering the natural world. What did we come to know of God in those places ? On Saturday after morning prayers and a brief introduction, we will enter the wildness of Rolling Ridge as children ourselves, to "explore the neighborhood" and search for our own special and sacred places. After lunch there will be time for returning to those special places and for wandering on the land. Dietrich Bonhoeffer once said in a commentary on the Lord's Prayer, "Only wanderers who love both the earth and God at the same time can believe in the Kingdom of God." Later in the afternoon we will share learnings and experiences at our special places (and elsewhere) and ponder how to facilitate such experiences for our children, especially in our faith communities We plan to continue the conversation at a follow-up retreat in the spring that will include both children and adults.

Readings for this retreat will include, Pocketfull of Stones: Memories of Childhood, collected by David Sobel; An Indian Father's Plea, by Medicine Grizzlybear Lake; and Loving Children: the Political Economy of Design, by David Orr. Here is an excerpt from David Sobel: And so, when the barred owl whoo-whoos loudly from the oak in the backyard shortly after midnight, I slip up to my daughter's room. She's sitting up in bed, listening. "What's that?" she whispers, a mixture of fear and wonder in her voice. Cold wellies on bare feet, parkas over pajamas, we creep out across the frosted grass, flashlight in hand, hoping to catch a glimpse. The thick darkness is imposing, but we are emboldened by our mission. Sadly, this bird has flown. But perhaps she'll hold on to an image of the warm alliance between us, the dark, and a mysterious presence.

Leaders for the retreat are Jim Hall, Cheryl Hellner, and Rolling Ridge staff community. Cheryl and Jim have led several retreats and classes on the scripture of earth and for the past five years have taught an earth Sunday School for children monthly at Dayspring Church.

Cost for each retreatant is $50 if lodging is in DeerSpring, $30 if tenting. You may stay overnight on Saturday and leave Sunday morning if you wish. Check the Rolling Ridge website (www.rollingridge.net) or contact Vivian for more details, telephone 304-725-4172 (email: vvatrr@juno.com). Register by mailing the form below with one-half the retreat fee to Vivian Headings, Ecological Integrity Retreat, RRSRC, Route 4, Box 314K, Harpers Ferry, WV 25425.

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