Showing posts with label Advent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Advent. Show all posts

Monday, November 25, 2024

Bonhoeffer in His Times and Ours: History Lessons and an Advent Retreat

Bonhoeffer in His Times and Ours:

History Lessons and An Advent Retreat

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.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer in Tegel Prison, Berlin, 1944
 

When/duration
 
Sunday, December 1* to 
Tuesday, December 24, 2024

* "soft opening" on Saturday, November 30

What

This online offering is a weave of three threads:

A historical thread 
educating us about the context of Bonhoeffer's life and writings.

Excerpts from Bonhoeffer's writings

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 major themes in DB's life and work. It is an invitation to ponder deeply both the readings and their context. 
Spiritual exercises

This thread is optional and invites participation from Christians who wish to observe Advent together with reflection, prayer, and action inspired by DB's life and work.

 This year, the 3-and-1/2-weeks-long Christian liturgical season of Advent, which precedes the 12-day season of Christmas, begins on December 1 and, as always, ends on Christmas Eve, December 24.
Read on for further details,
registration information,
and FAQ. 

Where and how

This online course/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 once (I will send directions once you have registered) and the blog will recognize you after that whenever you click its home page url.

When/how often

I will post readings from Bonhoeffer's works three times a week. I will also post something every day, but that something will vary from biographical information to spiritual exercises and meditations to music and visual art.

Participation will be on your own time (i.e., it will be--if you like to use long words-- asynchronous): check into the blog at any time that works for you, day or night.

You can check in daily if you like to have a daily anchor for your learning and meditation, but three times a week is fine, so that at the very least you pay attention to the readings.

We will have a structure and a schedule, but you are the one who decides where and when to read and ponder the materials and whether and how to apply the invitations to practice prayer or other spiritual exercises.

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 personal e-mail acknowledgment from me.


Bonhoeffer in His Times and Ours - Advent 2024
Write me if you need a lower fee or can afford a higher one.



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.

However... if you really want and need a real-time (aka synchronous) conversation, I will include an optional, weekly Zoom, most likely on Tuesdays December 3, 10, and 17, at either 10 a.m. or 7:30 p.m. (Eastern Time) depending which (morn or eve) works better for folks.

But:  1) this does not exempt you from signing onto the blog and reading the materials there and 2) You'll have to sign up ahead of time for each Zoom session. (I don't want to set up a Zoom link and have no one show up.)

Sign up for the Zoom sessions by writing me. Please indicate whether you prefer the morning or evening time; we'll go with the will of the majority. There is no extra charge for the Zoom sessions, but you are welcome to make a voluntary donation for the session(s) you attend.


P.S. What about that new Bonhoeffer movie?

I am, to say the least, highly suspicious of it. You have to make your own choices. Mine are influenced by the letter from Bonhoeffer family members and the position of the International Bonhoeffer Society. See here. Read about DB's historical context and read and ponder some of his writings. Then use your reason and your conscience. 

There are other films about Bonhoeffer. But most of all I encourage you to read and study and reflect. Take some time. Cultivate a discerning mind and heart. Join us on this online exploration.

Tuesday, November 29, 2022

ENTERING ADVENT: patience, impatience, and the present - a remote retreat

Here we are

Advent
, the beginning of the Christian year and the season leading up to Christmas, is full of paradoxes. It is a gentle season of waiting, but a season of prophetic warnings and invitations. It looks toward new beginnings and also toward the end of time. It is, as I have often said and as I preached on the first Sunday of Advent, both a time to enter God's patience and a time to enter God's impatience. To put it more casually, it can really mess with our sense of time.

Yet here we are, at the start of the season, with all this --and preparations for celebration of the birth of Jesus-- swirling around us and inside us, and in the readings appointed for the season, for those who use a lectionary.

Perhaps the most important thing we can do as we step into Advent --or as we wonder whether and how to enter the season-- is to make space, and time, to do so mindfully. To live Advent with care, in the present.

(c) Jane Redmont 2016

The retreat

Our "Entering Advent" retreat is a two-hour experience on Zoom, with time and space for quiet, music, gazing at visual art, and personal reflection and prayer.

It can serve as an oasis in this already busy holiday season of the secular world, or as a beginning of your extended Advent practice with some resources, guideposts, and practices - or both.

I am offering the retreat twice (with a third time possible upon request) to accommodate your varied schedules and time zones.

Wednesday evening, November 30, 2022 at 7:00 pm Eastern Time (4:00 pm Pacific Time)

        If there are sufficient requests, Wednesday evening, November         30 at 9:30 pm Eastern (6:30 Pacific) for you night owls of the East             Coast, early evening for you folks of the Western time zones.

Thursday morning, December 1, 2022 at 10:30 am Eastern Time (7:30 am Pacific for you early birds out there).

The retreat lasts for two hours.


At the end of the retreat, I'll also send you off with a few suggestions of Advent practices, which I'll have on a page that I can e-mail you as well as show on Zoom at the end of our time together.

Registration

The regular fee for the retreat is $30. If you can't afford this, a lower rate is available. If you are seriously broke, write me to request a freebie. If your resources are more abundant, a benefactor rate is available too.

Registration and payment are here:

Entering Advent 2022 - pick one rate
Make sure you pick a time!

 

Zoom and your favorite device

Our retreat will be in real time, on Zoom, so you'll need a computer or tablet.
The larger the screen, the better: while you can use Zoom on your smartphone, technically speaking, I don't recommend it because you won't see the images (both other participants' faces and the visual art I will share) as well as you would on a larger screen, and also because your fellow participants run the risk of seeing your face bounce around if your phone is unstable, which can be a distraction on a retreat meant to offer some slowness and stability.
I'll send out a Zoom link and instructions once you have registered. If you haven't used Zoom before, I'll be glad to help you ahead of time.

A Zoom retreat really can happen! I've led many such retreats in a variety of formats.

Questions? Concerns?

Please feel welcome to e-mail me here.

Note:

Because I am going on an extended family visit during the winter holidays, there will be no long blog-based Advent retreat this year. 

I am, however, already planning a long retreat for Lent, "Re-membering Our Lives." Publicity and registration for Lenten retreat offerings will be available by the end of January.



Thursday, December 2, 2021

The Joyful Revolution: Mary's Magnificat in Advent - online retreat, December 8-24

The Joyful Revolution:

Mary's Magnificat in Advent

 an online retreat

December 8-24, 2021


"The Subversive Magnificat" on enemylove.com
 

The song of Mary, also known as the Magnificat, is a song of remembrance and gratitude, but also an invitation into the future, a vision of the world turned upside down: the hungry fed, the powerful gone from their thrones, the lowly lifted up –by the power of God.

The song of Mary is the oldest Advent hymn. It is at once the most passionate, the wildest, one might even say the most revolutionary Advent hymn ever sung. This is not the gentle,tender, dreamy Mary whom we sometimes see in paintings; this is the passionate, surrendered, proud, enthusiastic Mary who speaks out here.

This song has none of the sweet, nostalgic, or even playful tones of some of our Christmas carols. It is instead a hard, strong, inexorable song about collapsing thrones and humbled lords of  this world, about the power of God and the powerlessness of humankind. These are the tones of the women prophets of the Old Testament that now come to life in Mary’s mouth.

                                                                    Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Advent sermon, 1933

During this two-week retreat, we will take some time to reflect on the Magnificat (Luke 1:46-55) and on its predecessor in the First Testament, the Song of Hannah (1 Samuel2:1-10) and on their meanings for us today.

We will study the texts (including different translations of the Magnificat).
We will also (not at the same time) read scripture meditatively with the ancient practice of lectio divina, which ponders words and leads into deep silence. We will view visual representations of Mary --and of Mary and her kinswoman Elizabeth-- from diverse cultures and contexts. We will listen to musical settings of the Magnificat.

 Advent is a season of quiet waiting. It is also a season full of urgency, a time when we look to the future not just in the short term --here comes Christmas, welcome the child Jesus-- but in the long term. Advent speaks of change, not only in its visions of the end of time, but in Mary's song of a transformed society.

This retreat will take place, as other online retreats have done in the past, on a blog. Only retreatants will have access to that blog. You can check in with the regularly posted retreat resources privately, at any time that is convenient for you.

I will post resources every couple of days for the two weeks of the retreat. Some of them will be suggestions or guidance for reflection, meditation, journal-keeping (verbal or visual), and prayer which you can use and adapt to your daily life and to your own spiritual practice.

Romare Bearden, "The Visitation" (1941)
Gouache, ink, and pencil on colored paper
Museum of Modern Art, New York

Solitude or conversation or both?

As in our previous online-on-a-blog retreats, this one will include, but not require, opportunities for (written) conversation with other participants. My hope is that participants will feel moved to enter into conversation, since the retreat will be all the richer if we share our perspectives and reactions. But the choice is yours.

Those conversations take place in the comments sections of the blogposts. Again: these posts, with their resources and their opportunities for comment and exchange, take place on a private blog open only to people who have registered for the retreat. Once you have registered for the retreat, you will receive instructions on getting onto the retreat blog.

Try to log in to the retreat every day or two and to set aside time to spend with the resources. These regular check-ins and dedicated times will help you to have a fruitful retreat.

T
his kind of retreat is suited for both morning persons and p.m. persons! You can adapt reflection, prayer, and practice to your personal and work schedule. I'll be there for support and information if you need a consultation. 

Please write me with any questions or concerns.

Registration and cost

Registration and payment take place via PayPal secure link, which takes credit and debit cards in addition to PayPal. You do not have to have your own PayPal account to use this online payment method.  
--The drop-down menu below shows the payment scale.
--Discounts are available for those in financial hardship. (If the discounted rate indicated is still too costly for you, please contact me.)
--At the other end of the spectrum, the benefactor rate helps offset costs and makes discounted rates possible.

Payment is non-refundable and due upon registration.

RETREAT FEES
 
 
This is a different kind of online retreat from a Zoom retreat,
 where we are all together at the same time 
for part of an afternoon or evening.
If you are interested in that kind of retreat, see here and here
For a full listing of this year's Advent retreats, see here.
 
 
Ben Wildflower, "Magnificat"
(woodcut, 2016)


=
 

Wednesday, December 1, 2021

Strength for the Weary: A Restorative Advent - online retreat, December 3-23 (latecomers welcome)

Feeling weary, dry, disoriented in this second pandemic winter?

Wondering whether and how to observe the season of Advent?


Here's an online retreat for you. 

 Strength for the Weary: A Restorative Advent

  a three-week retreat

December 3 to December 23, 2021

(from Friday in the first week of Advent to Thursday in the fourth week of Advent)

Reading this after December 3? It's fine to register late.

This gentle retreat will offer written meditations, visual art, links to music, and guidance in spiritual practice, including but not limited to prayer. 

The major themes of Advent --a season of contradictions in which we encounter both God's invitation to patience and God's urgent call to be alert and awake-- will be present in this retreat, but adapted to a time in which many of us find ourselves weary, frightened, sorrowful, burdened, or distracted, or all of these. We will acknowledge all of these hard realities. We will also receive invitations to joy and reminders of God's faithfulness.

This retreat will take place, as other online retreats have done in the past, on a blog. Only retreatants will have access to that blog. You can check in with the regularly posted retreat resources privately, at any time that is convenient for you.

This is a different kind of online retreat from a Zoom retreat, where we are all together at the same time for part of an afternoon or evening. If you are interested in that kind of retreat, see here and here.

I will post the resources mentioned above every couple of days for the three weeks of the retreat. Some of them will be suggestions or guidance for reflection, meditation, journal-keeping (verbal or visual), and prayer which you can use and adapt to your daily life and to your own spiritual practice.

Solitude or conversation or both?

As in our previous online-on-a-blog retreats, this one will include, but not require, opportunities for (written) conversation with other participants. Those conversations take place in the comments sections of the blogposts. Again: these posts, with their resources and their opportunities for comment and exchange, take place on a private blog open only to people who have registered for the retreat. Once you have registered for the retreat, you will receive instructions on getting onto the retreat blog.

It be helpful for you to check in by logging on to the retreat blog every couple of days, and to set aside time --try 20 minutes for starters-- to spend with the resources.

You will be integrating the insights and practices of the retreat into your daily life, but how, when, and how much is completely up to you.

T
his kind of retreat is suited for both morning persons and p.m. persons! You can adapt reflection, prayer, and practice to your personal and work schedule. I'll be there for support and information if you need a consultation.

Please write me with any questions or concerns.

Registration and cost

Registration and payment take place via PayPal secure link, which takes credit and debit cards in addition to PayPal. You do not have to have your own PayPal account to use this online payment method.  
--The drop-down menu below shows the payment scale.
--Discounts are available for those in financial hardship. (If the discounted rate indicated is still too costly for you, please contact me.)
--At the other end of the spectrum, the benefactor rate helps offset costs and makes discounted rates possible.
Payment is non-refundable and due upon registration.
 

RETREAT FEES
 
 
For a full listing of this year's Advent retreats, see here.

Three Twilight Retreats on three Thursdays in Advent: "Annunciations," "What about Joseph?" and "Visio Divina: Images of Advent" (all on Zoom)

Interested in a couple of hours of reflective, prayerful time? 
Join us for one or more of these three Thursday Twilight Retreats
during Advent. All of these will be online, on Zoom.
 

 Annunciations in Advent: A Twilight Retreat

                                                                                                        (4:00-6:30 Pacific Time)

This meditative retreat will involve a period of lectio divina (a form of the ancient method of meditative "holy reading") using selected readings from the Rev. Dr. Wilda C. Gafney’s A Women's Lectionary for the Whole Church. (Note: all genders are welcome to this retreat!) Dr. Gafney, scholar, professor, and priest, reconfigures Advent as a season of Annunciations (in the plural).

It will also include some text study and some time for silence and prayer.

For registration and payment, click the button below. You don't have to have a PayPal account: you can pay with a card. Note the sliding scale. I will e-mail you the Zoom link once you have registered.

RETREAT FEES

 

Alan Rohan Crite, "Annunciation"


What about Joseph? A Twilight Retreat

Thursday, December 16, 7:00-9:30 p.m. Eastern Time
                                                                                        4:00-6:30 p.m. Pacific Time

Joseph, Mary’s partner, rarely gets much consideration. He doesn't appear at all in this year's Advent Sunday lectionary (Year C), which has readings from the Gospels of Luke and John, but he's there in the Gospel of Matthew and we hear about him in Year A. He is thus among what I call “the people of Advent,” and it's not just Mary who says "yes" in the stories of Jesus's beginnings: Joseph has his own encounter with an angel. We will read from the first and second chapters of the Gospel of Matthew using lectio divina (slow, meditative reading that moves us into prayer and silence) but also explore some images of and devotions to St. Joseph.

For registration and payment, click the button below. You don't have to have a PayPal account: you can pay with a card. Note the sliding scale. I will e-mail you the Zoom link once you have registered.

RETREAT FEES
 
 
 
Robert Lentz, OFM, "St. Joseph of Nazareth"
(Trinity Images)

 
 
Visio Divina: Images of Advent 
A Twilight Retreat
 
Thursday, December 23, 7:00-9:30 p.m. Eastern Time
                                                                                    4:00-6:30 p.m. Pacific Time

You know about lectio divina (the ancient method of “holy reading,” see above) but there is also such a thing as visio divina -- holy gazing or sacred gazing. We will view, learn about, and meditate on selected Advent images -- from images of Mary and Elizabeth to visions of the messianic era from a variety of cultural contexts.  

Take a break from the pre-Christmas rush to linger in Advent with these visual reminders of creation, incarnation, and salvation.

 For registration and payment, click the button below. You don't have to have a PayPal account: you can pay with a card. Note the sliding scale. I will e-mail you the Zoom link once you have registered.

RETREAT FEES

 

 

                                                                    John August Swanson, "Peaceable Kingdom/ Isaiah 11"

 
We have other Advent retreats, too. See here for a full listing.

Questions? Write me here

Peace,

Jane

Tuesday, November 30, 2021

An early-in-Advent Twilight Retreat -- offered twice (on Zoom) 12/2 and 12/4

 There's Always Time: 

An Advent Twilight Retreat

  (on Zoom)

 Thursday, December 2, 8:00-10:30 p.m. Eastern Time 
                                                    (5:00-7:30 p.m. Pacific Time) 
 
 Saturday, December 4, 3:00-5:30 p.m. Eastern Time  
                                                    (12:00-2:30 p.m. Pacific Time) 

This is the same retreat offered twice for your convenience, on two different days at different times.


Advent, the season before Christmas, looks toward both the first and the second comings of Jesus. It is a gentle, slow season --I like to speak of it as "the seasonal slowdown," a countercultural choice if there ever was one, amid the bright lights and the many "BUY ME!" messages. It is also a bracing, even startling season with Scripture readings announcing changes of cosmic proportions. It is thus a season of paradoxes and contradictions. It murmurs "Slow down..." and shouts "Wake up!" How will we observe it this year?

It's wise, if you are able, to begin by clearing some space and slowing down. Even that can be a challenge. Even during a pandemic. Or perhaps especially so: the experience of time, for many of us, has been strange. How many of us have asked "What day of the week is this?" over the past months. Add to this the fact that Advent is always a reexamination of time and of our rhythms of life and you have an additional challenge.

This retreat will offer a “Welcome to Advent” experience. It will even work for you if you’re muttering to yourself "I am SO not ready for Advent" or are starting your observance of Advent a little late this year. (In other words, you can think of it as a "Help! I'm not ready for Advent!" retreat) 

One retreat offering will be in the middle of this first week of Advent. The other (pick either one) will be in the afternoon of the second Sunday of Advent. 

It's never too late to get started.

The retreat will offer some shared quiet time, some reflection on the themes and practices of Advent, and a little music and visual art. While it will offer several threads or layers of this rich season, you can and may pick just one thread as you emerge from the retreat and live your own Advent. Do what brings you life. Listen for the promptings of the Holy Spirit.

Advent challenges our impatience and invites us to enter God's patience. It is the season of taking the long view, beyond our own small range of vision. If the Good News is to take root in us, we need to enter God's time, God's timetable.

Yet Advent is also a time to enter God's impatience, a time of righteous anger, a time when prophets challenge our apathy and paralysis and urge us forward into visions of a changed world. It is a season of yearning in which the stories and songs in the scriptures speak of a God who longs to transform our hearts, our society, and creation itself -- soon, now, urgently.

One of the challenges of this season is to readjust our sense of time, to learn again (or for the first time) when it is appropriate to enter into God's patience and when it is time to entire into God's impatience.

The retreat is on Zoom and is two and a half hours long, with a little break in the middle. We'll take all the time we need to settle down, quiet our bodies, focus our hearts and minds, and listen for a word, an image, a story that speaks to our whole being. It will be good to do this in a community, however small, across the miles. Join us.

For registration and payment, click one of the two buttons below. Make sure to pick the day you plan to attend!

Please note that there is a sliding scale so that this retreat can be accessible to as many people as possible. The PayPal link below offers options for payment besides a direct PayPal transfer. In other words, you don't need to have a PayPal account. Once you have registered, with your e-mail address, I will get in touch with you and send you the Zoom link.

There's Always Time Twilight Retreat THURS DEC 2



There's Always Time Twilight Retreat SAT DEC 4

Do contact me if you have any questions or concerns. (Click on the underlined words "contact me" for e-mail.) I'm looking forward to our time together. 
 
We are also offering several other Advent retreats, some short and some long, some "live" (on Zoom) and some on your own time. See here.

Jane