Thursday, May 29, 2025

Spiritual Practices for Troubled Times: an online retreat

Spiritual Practices for Troubled Times

an online retreat
 
beginning
 
Wednesday, June 4, 2025

Seven themes, seven practices, seven weeks.

Spiritual practices involve the mind and heart and soul

Spiritual practices are also, always, bodily practices.

Do you have a regular spiritual practice, whether it is explicitly religious or not?
If you do, how does it involve your body? Your mind? Your heart and soul? Is it regular or occasional? Daily? Weekly? Monthly?

Does it nourish and strengthen you? Does it offer you stability? Does it give you a measure of peace?

Do you practice it alone or in community, or perhaps both?

How does it help you meet the challenges we are facing today?

            These are not "should" or "ought" questions. 
                They are just "is" questions. 

Do you need support and strength in these difficult times? Read on.



We live in troubled times. You know that. Ours are times, in this country and others, of political and social divisions, changes, and stresses. Economic stresses, too. Cultural and relational challenges. Changes in the climate, in the earth and waters and skies. Often accompanied by fear, worry, anxiety. By grief, anger. By yearning. By greater attentiveness to small, present daily realities and activities. By resolve and by slivers or glimmers of hope.

Spiritual practices. Many of the practices we will learn or re-learn during this retreat are appropriate to any season, troubled or peaceful. You may already have practiced them, or you may want to experiment with them for the first time. Some appear in our religious traditions; others are less obviously present in them or have been lost or forgotten. Some are so basic that, explicitly religious or not, explicitly spiritual or not, you may not have thought of them as spiritual practices.

Spiritual practice isn't magic. It requires... practice. It is also ordinary and accessible, as you practice step by step. And as you practice, it usually helps to have support, guidance, and some good company.


What

Seven themes, seven practices, seven weeks. 

We will practice them with one theme a week in this online retreat, with one major introductory post every Wednesday.

STOP

BREATHE

MOVE

GAZE

MAKE

READ

JOIN


The themes are deceptively simple. They are practices or clusters of practices. They are basic building blocks of your day and week. 

You'll get to try them, to ask questions about them, to share past and present experiences of them if you want to share, or to stay silent on the blog while you try them out. The blog format will anchor you with its structure and schedule and also offer you some flexibility with its check-in-night-or-day format.

I will be facilitating but also practicing and walking with you. We'll do this together.

Join us! It will be fun, it will be healing, it will be a little challenging --but gently-- and it will be a learning experience. 

It will also offer you some company, in this online community, so that you remember that you are not alone: not alone in your worries, not alone in your concern for your immediate and broader communities, not alone in your small but important pieces of action and activism, not alone in your Sabbath times and breathing times, not alone in your times of peace and not alone in your times of confusion.

Whether you need spiritual support to help you survive or to fuel resistance and protest or both --or for some other reason-- you are welcome to our retreat.

When/duration
 
Seven weeks, seven practices.

Each retreat week begins on a Wednesday. So the weeks begin on

Wednesday,
June 4
                            ... June 11
                                    ... June 18
                                           ... June 25
                                                ... July 2
                                                    ... July 9            and
                                            ... July 16

Following that Wednesday theme-setting and basic practice, every day or two for the full week (Wednesday to Tuesday), there will be different examples of the practice of the week from various cultural, religious, and spiritual contexts -- with a reminder of the week's theme to keep us steady.
 
Where and how

This online retreat takes place on a members-only blog.

This means the blog is accessible only to people who have registered and signed onto the blog. It will be private and will not be searchable on the internet. Conversations (taking place in the comments section of the blog posts) will be among participants only and closed to all other persons.

You'll sign onto the blog once (I will send you easy directions once you have registered) and the blog will recognize you after that whenever you click its home page url.

As I mentioned above, the blog format will anchor you with its structure and schedule and also offer you some flexibility with its check-in-night-or-day format.


When/how often

Wednesday to Tuesday: one theme per week, with one practice or cluster of practices. Check in every Wednesday, and every day or two in between one Wednesday and the next, according to your needs. 

It won't be burdensome -- no long readings, no strict schedule except for that first weekly check-in every Wednesday, and even that gives you a 24-hour window. 

You'll receive new energy and hope from the retreat community and its shared practices.

No weekend check-ins are required, so you can still run off to the mountains or the shore in this summer season (or winter season if you're in the southern hemisphere). There 
will be offerings on the retreat blog on weekends in keeping with the week's theme, so you can practice on weekends, but you can pick the time that works for you.

Seven weeks:  Think of this as steady summer refreshment or nourishment in small doses

You check into the retreat blog 
---every Wednesday for each new theme and 
---every day or two during the Wednesday-to-Tuesday week, but on your own time, and the retreat blog will give you a reminder, an example, a new way of understanding or enacting the practice of the week.

Stay with the retreat's rhythm: It will be most beneficial that way. But if the seven weeks in a row become a problem and if you find you need to take a break after four or five weeks, please do so, and let me know how long a break you want and when you plan to return. (Say, you need to take a break for a two-week vacation that begins on the July 4 weekend, or for care for a loved one recovering from surgery for a week.) If you take such a break, I will leave the retreat blog open for you beyond July 22 (the last day of the seven consecutive weeks) so that you can pick up the retreat again. But do let me know so I don't log you off the retreat blog on July 23!

REGISTER HERE

Click the word "here" above and once the link takes you to the registration/payment page, pick one of the three options: regular, benefactor, or hardship.

If you are in tough straits financially and cannot afford even the hardship rate, please
write me and we will arrange for a scholarship. 
Don't let your lack of money prevent you from seeking spiritual support and nourishment here. 

If on the other hand you are able to register at the benefactor level, you can help make financial assistance possible and keep the online retreats coming. 
Thank you!

Idaho Road (c) JCR 2011
More FAQ...

Do I have to talk to other people on this bloggy retreat? I'm a very private person.

See the answer to the next question.

Can I get some support here? I want some company.

This online retreat offers you a choice; it is up to you to find your preferred balance between the solitary and the communal, between privacy and solidarity.
You can and may remain private and just read the blog and use the spiritual practices and meditations on your own. Nobody will force you to speak or disclose who you are.

Or you can and may take part in conversation with other participants. Conversation takes place in writing, through the comments feature on the blog posts. 

Please be prepared to observe confidentiality and to respect other participants' diverse experiences and outlooks.

Use the retreat according to your personality and your circumstances. The online retreat is like a room in which you are welcome to sit in the company of others and to be either visible or invisible.

What, no Zoom? 

Because this is a meditative experience and requires time for pondering and practicing, and because participants will be from different time zones, the best format for this offering is a blog.

If you find that you need a live check-in on a particular theme of the retreat, write me and if at least three people request this on any given theme-of-the-week, we'll  use a Doodle calendar to schedule a Zoom appointment.

Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Coming soon in June! Spiritual Practices for Troubled Times

Watch this space 

for an announcement of our next online retreat

Spiritual Practices 

for Troubled Times

Something we all need.

I'll be facilitating the retreat

 as well as 

journeying and practicing with you.

 

Beginning the week of June 1, 2025.

Cosmos through fence, August 2021 (c) JCR

Thursday, March 6, 2025

Two 9-day online retreats for Lent: Dorothy Day, March 7-15; Dietrich Bonhoeffer, March 21-29

We are offering TWO Lenten retreats this year focusing on and inspired by  the life and writings of Christians devoted both to their faith and to radical resistance against societal evil:

DOROTHY DAY and DIETRICH BONHOEFFER

Join us for one or the other or both!

Simple and accessible:

one quotation or short excerpt per day
one spiritual exercise per day
one prayer per day
                                      
 on nine consecutive days

Dorothy Day retreat:
 
FRIDAY, MARCH 7 - SATURDAY, MARCH 15
 
 
Dietrich Bonhoeffer retreat: 
 
FRIDAY, MARCH 21 - SATURDAY, MARCH 29
 
 
 

Dorothy Day (1897-1980): co-founder of the Catholic Worker, an anarchist, pacifist, lay Catholic Christian movement, and founder and editor of the newspaper by the same name, she was also a person of prayer whose Roman Catholic religious observance cannot be separated from her work for social and economic justice and peace or from what Christian tradition calls “the works of mercy.”
 
Dietrich Bonhoeffer (1906-1945): pastor, theologian, and anti-Nazi resister at a time when a great majority of the Protestant churches in Germany had allied themselves with the violent dictatorship in their nation. His short life and many writings have become known around the world, from South Africa to South Korea to the U.S and Canada.
  
For information about and registration for the Dorothy Day retreat, click here.
If you need to begin a day later than March 7, that's fine -- and you will still get the full benefit of the retreat.
For information about registration for the Dietrich Bonhoeffer retreat, click here.
 
 

Nine Days in Lent with Dietrich Bonhoeffer: An Online Retreat with Lessons from History

Join us for

Nine Days in Lent with Dietrich Bonhoeffer:

An Online Retreat with Lessons from History

Friday, March 21*
to
Saturday, March 29, 2025

* "soft opening" on Thursday, March 20


Please join us for learning, reflection, meditation, and (if you are a praying person) prayer inspired by the life and work of Dietrich Bonhoeffer (1906-1945), pastor, theologian, and anti-Nazi resister. DB's life and writings have become known around the world, from South Africa to South Korea to the U.S and Canada. Becoming acquainted with them is always timely -- and now more than ever, in tense and troubled days.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer in Tegel Prison, Berlin, 1944
 

What

* Spiritual challenge and nurture

* Simple and accessible:

one quotation or short excerpt per day
one spiritual exercise per day
one prayer per day
                                        on nine consecutive days
There will also be some historical posts to help you understand the historical and social context of the readings and of Bonhoeffer's life.
The writings, posted online, will be short enough to read in the midst of your busy life and long enough to offer a glimpse into Bonhoeffer's thought, faith, and life commitments. This is not a course with a long syllabus and whole books to read; nor is it an exhaustive examination of DB's work. Nevertheless, this offering is representative of some of the major themes in DB's life and work. It is an invitation to ponder deeply both the readings and their context and, if you wish, to pursue further reading, reflection, and engagement.

Where, when, and how

* This online retreat takes place on a members-only blog.

This means the blog is accessible only to people who have registered and signed onto the blog. It will be private and will not be searchable on the internet. Conversations (taking place in the comments section of the blog posts) will be among participants and closed to all other persons.
* You'll sign onto the blog just once (I will send easy directions once you have registered) and the blog will recognize you after that whenever you click its home page url. You do need to bookmark that home page once you have access to the blog, so that you can find it again easily.

* You will visit the blog daily for the nine days of the retreat but you can log into the retreat at any hour of the day or night that is convenient  for you.

* Have your retreat time at home, on a break at work, in a coffee shop, on vacation, in your daily life: read, reflect, meditate, and pray with the retreat materials in a way that suits your schedule.

* You'll need 20 minutes a day of focused time (any time, day or night) and a computer or tablet with internet access. More than 20 minutes (say, 40 minutes) would be even more enriching, but 20 mns will be fine if that's what you've got!
 
Register and pay

Register and pay in a single transaction
using the secure PayPal button below.


Note: You can use the PayPal button and its secure connection to pay with a credit or debit card even if you don't have a PayPal account. The button offers you a choice of payment modalities. The PayPal mechanism will record your name and e-mail address and serve as your registration. You will receive an automated acknowledgment from PayPal and a also personal e-mail acknowledgment from me.

 
cards
Powered by paypal

Payment is non-refundable and due upon registration.

If you are in a situation of financial stress, please use the hardship rate on the menu above or write me so that we can arrange for a payment plan or a scholarship. Don't let your lack of money prevent you from seeking spiritual support and nourishment here. If on the other hand you wish to help make possible more scholarships and discounts, just check the benefac
tor rate.

More FAQ...

Do I have to talk to other people on this bloggy course-retreat? I'm a very private person.


See the answer to the next question.


Can I get some support here? I want some company.


This online offering offers you a choice; it is up to you to find your preferred balance between the solitary and the communal, between privacy and solidarity.

You can and may remain private and just read the blog and use the spiritual practices and meditations on your own. Nobody will force you to speak or disclose who you are.

Or you can and may take part in conversation with other participants. Conversation takes place in writing, through the comments feature on the blog posts. 

Please be prepared to observe confidentiality and to respect other participants' diverse experiences and outlooks.

Use the retreat according to your personality and your circumstances. The online retreat is like a room in which you are welcome to sit in the company of others and to be either visible or invisible.


What, no Zoom? 

Because this is a meditative experience and requires time for reading and pondering, and because participants will be from different time zones, the best format for this offering is a blog.

Questions? Concerns? Write me at readwithredmont@earthlink.net.

We are also offering a nine-day retreat inspired by the life, writings, and work of Dorothy Day. It begins on March 7. (You may begin a day later if you don't see the announcement soon enough to begin on March 7.) Click here for full information and registration. 

Tuesday, February 25, 2025

An online retreat ("novena" = nine days) with DOROTHY DAY -

Longing for reflective and prayerful time in your busy life?
    Need some support and inspiration?
Hungry for justice and mercy?
    Wondering about models of Christian commitment
    other than the ones making the most noise these days?
If you choose to observe the season of Lent,
hoping for a life-giving Lent?

Join us for
 
Nine Days with Dorothy Day
 
an online retreat
 
Friday, March 7 - Saturday, March 14, 2025


What can Dorothy Day teach us? How can she inspire us? Join us to reflect on her life,writings,  prayer, and practice.

Dorothy Day (1897-1980) is best known as the co-founder of the Catholic Worker, an anarchist, pacifist, lay Catholic Christian movement, and founder and editor of the newspaper by the same name. Journalist, activist, mother, speaker, she was also a person of prayer whose Roman Catholic religious observance cannot be separated from her work for social and economic justice and peace or from what Christian tradition calls “the works of mercy.”

Click here for an informative essay on Dorothy Day if you want to know more.

For Christians in both the Western and Eastern traditions, the season of Lent begins next week: Monday March 3 for Orthodox Christians, March 5 (Ash Wednesday) for Catholics, Anglicans (including Episcopalians), and Protestants.

It is a season of deepened reflection and prayer,  simplicity, and generosity -- in traditional terms, "prayer, fasting, and almsgiving."
 
Some, informally, speak of Lent as a 40-day spiritual tune-up. It is like a seasonal retreat for the church. It also is preparation for the most important feast of the Christian year, Easter (aka Pascha), the celebration of Resurrection. It is meant to renew awareness of the life, teachings, acts of healing, community building, suffering, and death of Jesus Christ. (And there's more community-building and -living after Easter!)

If you observe Lent, this online retreat will nourish and support you in your Lenten practice. If you are not observing Lent and/or are from a different spiritual path or religious tradition from Christianity, you are also welcome to the retreat.

Dorothy Day's nonviolent witness, radical social analysis, community life, and spiritual practice can speak to you, especially in these challenging times.


This year, a large portion of Lent coincides with the holy month of Ramadan in Islam, during which Muslims practice deeper prayer and study, observe a strict fast (daily from sunup to sundown), and practice deeds of charity. The Muslim calendar is a lunar one, like the Jewish calendar, so the coincidence with the Christian calendars (East and West) this year is an unusual one.

What

* Spiritual refreshment, nurture, and challenge

* Simple and accessible:

one quote or short excerpt per day
one spiritual exercise per day
one prayer per day
                                        on nine consecutive days

Where, when, and how

* This online retreat takes place on a members-only blog.

This means the blog is accessible only to people who have registered and signed onto the blog. It will be private and will not be searchable on the internet. Conversations (taking place in the comments section of the blog posts) will be among participants and closed to all other persons.
* You'll sign onto the blog just once (I will send easy directions once you have registered) and the blog will recognize you after that whenever you click its home page url. You do need to bookmark that home page once you have access to the blog, so that you can find it again easily.

* You will visit the blog daily for the nine days of the retreat but you can log into the retreat at any hour of the day or night that is convenient  for you.

* Have your retreat time at home, on a break at work, in a coffee shop, on vacation, in your daily life: read, reflect, meditate, and pray with the retreat materials in a way that suits your schedule.

* You'll need 20 minutes a day of focused time (any time, day or night) and a computer or tablet with internet access. More than 20 minutes (say, 40 minutes) would be even more enriching, but 20 mns will be fine if that's what you've got!
 
Register and pay

Register and pay in a single transaction
using the secure PayPal button below.


Note: You can use the PayPal button and its secure connection to pay with a credit or debit card even if you don't have a PayPal account. The button offers you a choice of payment modalities. The PayPal mechanism will record your name and e-mail address and serve as your registration. You will receive an automated acknowledgment from PayPal and a also personal e-mail acknowledgment from me.

cards
Powered by paypal

Payment is non-refundable and due upon registration.

If you are in a situation of financial stress and the regular rate is too much for you, please use the hardship rate on the menu above or write me so that we can arrange for a payment plan or a scholarship. Don't let your lack of money prevent you from seeking spiritual support and nourishment here. If on the other hand you wish to help make possible more scholarships and discounts, just check the benefac
tor rate.




More FAQ...

Do I have to talk to other people on this bloggy course-retreat? I'm a very private person.


See the answer to the next question.


Can I get some support here? I want some company.


This online offering offers you a choice; it is up to you to find your preferred balance between the solitary and the communal, between privacy and solidarity.

You can and may remain private and just read the blog and use the spiritual practices and meditations on your own. Nobody will force you to speak or disclose who you are.

Or you can and may take part in conversation with other participants. Conversation takes place in writing, through the comments feature on the blog posts. 

Please be prepared to observe confidentiality and to respect other participants' diverse experiences and outlooks.

Use the retreat according to your personality and your circumstances. The online retreat is like a room in which you are welcome to sit in the company of others and to be either visible or invisible.


What, no Zoom? 

Because this is a meditative experience and requires time for reading and pondering, and because participants will be from different time zones, the best format for this offering is a blog.

 

I really, really, wanted
to take that Bonhoeffer retreat last December
but couldn't do it.

Last December, I offered a similar nine-day retreat, inspired by the life, writings, and practice of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, the pastor and theologian who resisted the Nazi regime and was executed just weeks before the end of World War II at the age of 39. 
YES! We are offering a Bonhoeffer retreat again, from Friday, March 21 to Saturday, March 29. For information and registration, click here.