Showing posts with label courses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label courses. Show all posts

Friday, June 7, 2013

Soelle in Summer: Challenge and Wonder -- an online course-retreat, June 17-July 31

Yes, a course-retreat. Less reading and more spiritual practice than a course, more reading and exercising the mind than a retreat -- the perfect combination for reflecting on Soelle, for whom acting, praying, and thinking were always consciously intertwined.

Soelle in Summer: Challenge and Wonder
online
 June 17-July 31, 2013
 

Read and reflect in community on the work, thought, and spirituality of Dorothee Soelle (also spelled Sölle). 

Dorothee Soelle (1928-2003) was a German theologian, poet, peace activist, and Protestant Christian with Catholic, secular, humanist, and Jewish companions and allies; she was also a friend, teacher, spouse, mother, socialist, and from mid-life on, feminist. 

Course-retreat designed, led, and facilitated by Jane Redmont, theologian, author, and spiritual director. 

Seven weeks, $245. 

To register, write readwithredmont@earthlink.net.  


More details...


What, when, where

* A seven-week  online course-retreat from June 17 to July 31, 2013
 
* Reading, personal reflection, group conversation.  

* Prayer and study intertwined. 
 

* At home, in your daily life: read and reflect in a way that suits your schedule.

* Two brief online check-ins (in writing) per week.

* Not for academic credit -- but a solid contribution to your spiritual, intellectual, and community life and civic engagement, and to your work in the arts, community organizations, religion, activism, and/or academia.

* Readings are not lengthy (one and a half paperback books over seven weeks, plus short excerpts from Soelle's work on the course blog) but topics in Soelle's work are of the "oh, that's deep" sort. Expect gentle and friendly guidance and space for questioning and wonder, but also challenge and seriousness.

More on Dorothee Soelle

* Soelle is the author of Political Theology; Revolutionary Patience; SufferingTheology for Skeptics; Creative Disobedience; The Silent Cry: Mysticism and Resistance; Against the Wind: Memoir of a Radical Christian; and many other works including books, essays, and poems. She also co-authored several books with friends such as her husband Fulbert Steffensky, biblical scholar Luise Schottroff, and others.

* I have shared insights from Soelle in the past on my personal blog, Acts of Hope. See, for instance, here, here, and here.

* Soelle wrote in an accessible manner --mostly in prose, sometimes in poems-- and not in the form of long academic treatises. 


* Her chosen topics, though, were challenging. We will visit a number of them on our retreat:

- history, evil, and Christian political engagement
- silence, language, and poetry in the struggle to name God
- suffering and the vulnerability of God
- Jesus the risk-taker and the community of the friends of Jesus
- church as community of memory, resistance, and hope
- feminism, disobedience, and human wholeness
* I often refer to Soelle as "an un-anesthetized Christian."  

How the course-retreat will work

* Soelle in Summer is part course, part retreat
* As such it will examine some of Soelle's writings with the intention of understanding them and her and the historical, social, political, and economic context in which Soelle  lived and wrote. 

* It will also invite us to reflect on some of the themes Soelle raises in our own contexts and lives, to ponder some of the questions she raises, slowly and prayerfully, and to share some of the fruit of our reflection and prayer with other participants. 
* There will be required readings every week, not too long, some from the two small required books** and some shorter ones posted on the course blog.
** Required books:
- Dorothee Soelle, Against the Wind: Memoir of a Radical Christian (Fortress Press, 1999)
-Dorothee Soelle, Essential Writings, ed. Dianne Oliver (Orbis Books, 2006)
There are a number of used-book online booksellers (abebooks.com and alibris.com, for instance) if you prefer a used, inexpensive copy.  If you are in a country where it is difficult to find these books, write me and we will find a way for me to get scanned readings to you until you can get a hold of the books.
* I will post short readings, meditations, and questions for you to the course blog twice a week, usually on Wednesday during the day and on Saturday evening.

* You will take time to read and ponder over the next three or four days and then write your brief responses on the blog any time before the next posting. We can have further conversation if you have responses to each other!

An online retreat? Really?
 

* As you saw above, two small books are required. Otherwise, I offer further resources (quotes, images, reflection questions, guidelines for spiritual exercises, explanations and clarifications) online on a blog. More specifically, a closed blog.


* What's a closed blog? It's a blog like this, but it is not public; it is open only to those whom the blog owner-administrator (that's me) allows in. In other words, it is not open to anybody wandering around the internet. Random web surfers will not be able to view either the blog or our conversations in the comments. Once you register for the course, I will send instructions on the one-time sign-in mechanism. After that, the blog will always recognize you.


* We have conversations online in the comments section of each post on the blog. These are written conversations. I will post questions for your reflection and you will ponder them on your own, then reflect on them in community through your twice-weekly check-ins on the blog. You must check in twice a week, but your check-in may be as short as one or two thoughtful paragraphs. You may write more if you wish, but that's the minimum: one or two paragraphs, twice a week.

Registration

The course-retreat begins Monday, June 17.


Registration has begun and will remain open till Tuesday, June 18.

To register, write me, Jane Redmont, at readwithredmont@earthlink.net. I will send you full registration instructions with payment address and online sign-up information. (Both of these are quite simple.)

Cost 

Seven weeks, $245.

(i.e. $35 per week)

Payment is non-refundable and due upon registration, by check or money order. I will send you the mailing address when you write me to register.

"I am thinking of a friend's answer to that ['Do you have strength to endure? ... to sustain yourself?'] when I was in a state of despair, and had this sense of meaninglessness and never reaching anything, and then he talked about the cathedrals which were built during the Middle Ages. Most of them were built over 200 years, some over 300 years even, and some of the workers in those cathedrals never saw the whole building, they never went to pray there, they never saw the glass and all the beautiful things they gave their life for. And then this friend said to me: 'Listen, Dorothee, we who are building the cathedral of peace, maybe we won't see it either. We will die before it is complete, and yet we are going to build it. We are going on even if we won't live in that building.'" 
Dorothee Soelle, in a conversation with C.F. Beyers Naudé,
published as Hope for Faith: A Conversation (1986)

Thursday, May 30, 2013

Interested in Dorothee Soelle? A summer course/retreat possibility

I don't as they put it believe in god
but to him I cannot say no hard as I try
take a look at him in the garden
when his friends ran out on him
his face wet with fear
and with the spit of his enemies
him I have to believe

Him I can't bear to abandon
to the great disregard for life
to the monotonous passing of millions of years
to the moronic rhythm of work leisure and work
to the boredom we fail to dispel
in cars in beds in stores

That's how it is they say what do you want
uncertain and not uncritically
I subscribe to the other hypothesis
which is his story
that's not how it is he said for god is
and he staked his life on this claim

Thinking about it I find
one can't let him pay alone
for his hypothesis
so I believe him about
god

The way one believes another's laughter
his tears
or marriage or no for an answer
that's how you'll learn to believe him about life
promised to all
 


I had posted this poem here at Acts of Hope many moons ago. It is from the series of 10 poems "When He Came" in Dorothee Soelle's book Revolutionary Patience (1977).

So -- SOELLE IN SUMMER" - June 17-July 31 - a mix of retreat and course, online, with opportunity for both individual reflection and conversation. Interested?



A few people have already expressed firm interest in this and I need a few more before I can make a final decision about offering it. Do write me privately at readwithredmont@earthlink.net if you are interested. (Or if you leave a comment here on the blog, please let me know how to contact you!) If there is enough interest, I will begin registering people this weekend.
 

(Note: both spellings, Soelle and Sölle, are correct.) 
 
This online course/retreat would, as the name indicates, focus on the work, thought, and spirituality of Dorothee Sölle (1928-2003), theologian, poet, peace activist, Protestant and ecumenical Christian, spouse and mother, teacher, socialist, and from mid-life on, feminist. She was the author of The Silent Cry: Mysticism and Resistance, Against the Wind: Memoir of a Radical Christian, Revolutionary Patience, Theology for Skeptics, and many other works, most of them not in traditional academic treatise form.

Readings would not be too lengthy, but topics in Soelle's work are of the "oh, that's deep" sort.

Examples:
--history, evil, and Christian political engagement
--silence, language, and poetry in the struggle to name God
--suffering and the vulnerability of God
--Jesus and friends
--church as community of memory, resistance, and hope
--feminism, disobedience, and human wholeness
Offering from me by and/or about Soelle twice a week. Requirements: reading, reflection and prayer and/or meditation, check-in twice weekly (online, in writing) with me and the other retreatants. Cost: $245 for the full seven weeks (i.e. $35 per week).

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Feminist spirituality and liturgy course: full information

Naming Mystery, Living Justice:
Spirituality and Liturgy in Feminist Perspective
Ten weeks, January 27* -April 7, 2013
 
Registration is open now!

Note below the discount for those who register by Sunday, January 20.
* "Soft launch" the week before the formal beginning of the course when the course blog will open to those who are registered and wish to get started a bit early with the initial reflection and a look at some resources.
Bracha Lavee, Dancing Miriam
 The course

A 10-week (Jan. 27-April 7) online course which you can take from any time zone as long as you have a reliable internet connection.


For the past four decades, feminist, womanist, and other women-defined theologies** have challenged Christian and Jewish thinking and practice in fundamental ways and worked toward reshaping them, both in academia and in communities of faith and practice. Religious feminism also exists in Pagan or Goddess-oriented communities, in Islam and Buddhism, and it is now a global movement, though not a uniform or unified one.
** We will look at terminology and have a chance to learn new words and examine old ones, especially since the course is preoccupied with how we name the sacred.
The boundaries between "theology" ("God-talk") and spirituality, between theology and ethics, and between ethics and spirituality are porous, and in especially so in feminist and other liberation theologies. One way of looking at this course is as a class in feminist theology or religious feminism viewed through the lens of spirituality and liturgy (or ritual). 

Neither of these --spirituality and liturgy-- is only an individual phenomenon; liturgy is primarily communal.

The course is called Naming Mystery, Living Justice because (among other reasons):


* spirituality involves not only our attempts to name and encounter the mystery at the heart of life but also our daily efforts to live justly and compassionately on this earth;


* liturgy (from two Greek words meaning "the people" and "work") is a privileged, separate, sacred time, yet profoundly related to "ordinary time" and to human suffering, struggle, joy, to power in and outside our religious communities, to our efforts to preserve or transform our institutions and Earth itself.

A few more details about the course
Not for academic credit.

Readings are at a university level, but no college or graduate degree is required in order to take the course, only interest and commitment.

Open to persons of all genders, though likely with a majority of women participants.
Content

  Naming Mystery, Living Justice will address such themes and topics as:
-voice and silence
-naming and language
-spirituality and the body
-spirituality and ecology
-spirituality and justice
-spirituality and sexuality
The course will examine feminist liturgical critique and creativity in Christian, Jewish, and Pagan/Goddess communities, including:
-liturgical language and the language of prayer (with careful attention to the question of inclusive and expansive language and reflection on metaphor and symbol)
-new and renewed rituals and liturgies from the traditions mentioned above

-feminist, womanist, and other women-defined biblical interpretation
-power and the dynamics of communal religious life in the experience and leadership of worship
We will learn new words and concepts as we go along, helping each other to understand and use them.

In addition to learning this common material, which will make up most of the course, you will have a chance to work on a small project of your choice in order to tailor the course to your own interests. I will provide mentoring and resources for this. See details below.


Requirements

1.  Commit to the full ten weeks.

2.  Read three essays a week (essay = an article or a chapter from a book)

3.  Check in at least once a week on the course blog with a short response to the readings for the week.  (Everyone in the course sees this.)

4.  Write one short reflection as you begin the course and one short reflection as you end the course. (Only Jane sees these.)
These reflection essays can be as short as one typed page, or longer if you prefer. I will provide guidelines for them. They offer a chance for you to reflect on what has brought you to this course and, at the end, on what you have learned.
5.  Choose and complete one small personal project.
You may skip this one, but it will make the course much more rewarding and will adapt it to your own interests, context, and circumstances, and I will provide mentoring and resources with a private consultation. (Choose the project by Feb. 17; consult with me --by phone, Skype, or e-mail, your choice-- by Feb. 24.)
Some examples of projects:

-Research inclusive and expansive language in your particular religious community (e.g. the ELCA, the Reform Jewish movement, Wicca).

-Do a little extra reading (two or three essays) in an area of the course you wish you had more time to explore.

-Visit a local community that worships in a way that incorporates feminist spirituality or feminist liturgical action and write up the visit (I will provide field trip guidelines to support you in this visit, and of course you may bring a companion even if that person is not taking the course). The community can be a regular congregation or a small base community or ad hoc group.

-Design and/or facilitate a ritual in your own context (you will have examples and models of ritual from our readings), e.g. a blessing for someone about to give birth or adopt, a house blessing, a healing ritual after a specific event or life transition.


What will we be reading?
 

Essays from ...
Carol Christ and Judith Plaskow's Womanspirit Rising and Weaving the Visions; Teresa Berger, ed.'s Dissident Daughters: Feminist Liturgies in Global Context; Gail Ramshaw's Liturgical Language: Keeping It Metaphoric, Making It Inclusive; Rosemary Radford Ruether's Women-Church ...
 ...and writings by Musa Dube, Starhawk, Ada María Isasi-Díaz, the Con-spirando collective, Marcia Falk, and others.

How the online dimension works

The course will be on a closed blog -- which is a blog (same format as this) but open only to those whom the blog owner-administrator (that's me, Jane, your friendly instructor) allows in. In other words, it is not open to anybody wandering around the internet. Random web surfers will not be able to view either the blog or our conversations in the comments. Once you register for the course, I will send instructions on the one-time sign-in mechanism. After that, the blog will always recognize you.

Because one cannot upload documents to a blog (though there will be web links, reading guidelines, and illustrations, and of course the comments function) I will e-mail you the readings in PDF form if they are not available through links online. I will do so in group e-mails with your e-mail address in bcc to protect your privacy.


Registration and cost

Register by


1. writing me at readwithredmont@earthlink.net to tell me you wish to take the course.


2. putting your check in the mail. 

 (Once you have e-mailed me, I will send you the mailing address.)

Cost for the ten-week course: $300.

Cost is discounted to $250 for those who register by January 20.

 
Course tuition is non-refundable.


Questions?

Write Jane Redmont at readwithredmont@earthlink.
net.