PHILADELPHIA

July 22-24, 2024

Can These Dry Bones Live? Holy space to bring the dry bones of our hearts, churches, and world to the God who is making all things new. We will rest and worship together, connect with others, and learn practices of re-membering and reimagination.

LOCATION: pendle hill GUIDES: shane claiborne, rev stephanie spellers, rev lisha epperson, Drew jackson, Jonathan Merritt, AARON NIEQUIST


Retreat Schedule


MONDAY

1:00pm Registration
2:00pm Gathering & Invitation 6:00pm Dinner Together 7:00pm What Happened in the Wilderness? 8:00pm Contemplative Compline

TUESDAY

8:30am Quaker Worship in the Barn 9:30am The Valley of Dry Bones 12:00pm Lunch/Solitude 4:30pm Eucharist Service 6:00pm Dinner Together 7:00pm Practicing Delight 8:30pm Communal Campfire

WEDNESDAY

8:30am Quaker Worship in the Barn
10:00am Circle Conversations 12:00pm Lunch
1:00pm Sending Session
2:00pm Retreat Ends


Gathering & Invitation / Personal Retreat / Tangible Next Steps

On Monday we will arrive from all over the country and begin a shared journey. We’ll meet each other, worship together, orient ourselves to the retreat, and begin to exhale and slow down. Our retreat guides will help us reflect on the question “Can These Dry Bones Live?” through poetry, reflection, teaching, and embodiment. We’ll end with Night Prayer and the opportunity for a great night of sleep.

Tuesday morning will offer a three-hour, guided mini-retreat. Through spiritual practices, simple liturgies, and embodied prayer, we will be led into holy space in which God can do what only God can do. This will propel us into an afternoon of solitude on the Pendle Hill grounds, and then back together for an ecumenical, practice-based Eucharist service. And then after dinner, we will dive into the practice of delight and celebration.

Finally, Wednesday morning will focus on heading back into our actual home communities. How can we translate the practices and rhythms of the retreat into our real lives and churches? What are tools and resources that can support this good work? How can we become menders of the church cracked open?  We’ll end the whole retreat with a time of prayer and sending.

Or said more simply: the three movements of the retreat are (1) Opening to the rhythms of Grace, (2) Swimming deep in the rhythms of Grace, and (3) Learning tools to invite others into the rhythms of Grace.


 
 
God will often take you where no one dares, so that God can do what no one can.
— Jonathan Merritt, reflecting on God's invitation to Ezekiel (and us)

Our Retreat Guides

 

UNDER THE GROUND by Drew Jackson

Luke 24:1-12 

In the beginning there is darkness. It is the womb out of which we are born. . . .In this state of trusting refuge, the light of divine revelation, which pierces but does not castigate the darkness, may finally be seen. This is a mothering darkness that nurses its offspring. 

-DR. BARBARA HOLMES, RACE AND THE COSMOS 

Life is always happening 
underground— 
the place light has forsaken. 

Finite minds cannot take in 
that the belly of mother Earth 
is, indeed, a womb. 

Entombed in the soil is the pip 
of a new Eden. 

Only the seed that has fallen into the pit 
can burst through into the morning dew 
to announce to weeping eyes 
that a new day has risen— 
a day in which the voices and stories of women 
are believed, their word received 
as good news, 
and the men have no problem 
following them and 
learning how to believe again. 

What I mean is this: 
the world has been flipped 
on its head. 
Heaven has invaded hell, 
the spell of death is broken, 
and the doorway opened to a new way of being. 

It all begins with seeing 
that the darkness of our world is luminous, 
and in the humus of life is where we become 

fully human.

From God Speaks Through Wombs by Drew Jackson