To be a pilgrim
To be a pilgrim Aug 5 2009
Take: CDs, photos, photocopies, lighter, candles, display material, books, this sheet
Play Guide me O thou great redeemer during which everyone who wishes to lights a candle on the central table.
Welcome
Introductions and ask about pilgrimages undertaken or planned
Give out psalms sheet
Say together the 2 pilgrimage psalms (alternating verses) and the pilgrimage prayer we used on the Belmont Abbey Holy land pilgrimage
A pilgrim (lat. peregrinus) is one who undertakes a pilgrimage, literally 'far afield'. This is traditionally a visit to a place of some religious or historic significance; often a considerable distance is traveled. Examples include a Christian or Jew visiting Jerusalem or a Muslim visiting Mecca. No religion has laid greater stress on the duty of a pilgrim than Islam in the Hajj.
•
An Indian pilgrim in Gangasagar in West Bengal, India
Pilgrims are common in many religions, including the faiths in ancient Egypt, Persia in the Mithraic period, India, China, and Japan. The Greek and Roman custom of consulting the gods at local oracles, such as those at Dodona or Delphi, both in Greece, is widely known. In Greece, pilgrimages could either be personal, or state-sponsored.[1]
In the early period of Hebrew history, pilgrims traveled to Shiloh, Dan, Bethel, and eventually Jerusalem, leading the way for the other Abrahamic religions to include the practice. The great Islamic pilgrimage to Mecca (now in Saudi Arabia), is obligatory for every able Muslim, and other Islamic devotional pilgrimages, particularly to the tombs of saints, are numerous. The early Christians made pilgrimages to the scenes of the Passion of Christ in Jerusalem. Even after Jerusalem had been occupied by the Saracens, the liberty of pilgrimage, on payment of a tax, was secured by treaty; the necessity of protecting pilgrims, however, gave rise to the medieval military orders, such as the Knights Templar.
While religious pilgrims usually travel toward a singular destination, a physical location is not a necessity. One group of pilgrims in early Celtic Christianity were the Peregrinari Pro Christ, (Pilgrims for Christ), or "white martyrs," where pilgrims left with the intent to wander.[2] This sort of pilgrimage was an ascetic religious practice, leaving home and the clan for an unknown destination, in complete trust of Divine Providence. These travels often resulted in the founding of new abbeys and spreading Christianity among the pagan population in Britain as well as on continental Europe.
The idea of the day is to look at where you are on your pilgrimage. Do you know the destination? How close do you find yourself to that destination? I want to include some movement in the day. There will be silent meditation at 12.30, lunch and then another talk at 2 with a long break and gathering for tea at 3.30 and finish at 4.15.
You can undertake a pilgrimage without leaving your home. Reading, praying, thinking, imagining. But essentially a journey is involved. Takes you out of routine.
Very ancient – Stonehenge, standing stones on Orkney, Greeks, Asia. In the Bible we find many journeys but little use of the word pilgrim. Abraham, Moses and the Exodus, Babylonian exile, the return to Jerusalem. Our Lord and his family travelling to Jerusalem every year and using the psalms we have just said – these psalms were said at the start and end of the pilgrimage and Our Lord would have sing them on the night of his Passion.
Many Christian sites – Holy Land, Turkey, Greece, Canterbury, Walsingham, Rome, Santiago da Comastella, Lourdes, Fatima, Medjugore. Marian emphasis.
I also want to mention going backwards like visiting my old school and visiting my headmaster. The unexpected. Being a cultural pilgrim – Elgar’s birthplace, Dickens’s home. Shakespeare.
But this morning I’d like to focus on Mt Sinai. Anticipation, expectations, difficulties. Camel, money, night time, falling over, being helped and then alone but not alone, reaching the top alone, being reunited, stumbling down the hill, exhaustion, St Catherine’s. Physical rather than spiritual.
The spiritual uplift comes later – achieved climbing the mountain, reflection on the readings.
Sharing the experience – mention Ross Kempsell and his pilgrimage. Life changing experiences. Life can never be the same again.
Spiritual high points – glimpses of Heaven. Colin Mawby Ave verum, Archbishop Nichols, Truro. On the other hand Rome during Holy Year!
Use Benedictine chant to introduce meditiation for 20 minutes, Michael Main prayer card.
2 p.m. Welcome newcomers and do brief summary of morning session.
Play Who would true valour see
Focus on Jerusalem.
Pass round photos of Stations and talk about the experience – carrying the cross in the cathedral, being moved. The Via Dolorosa where 4 people each took turns to carry the cross was most moving - unexpectedly so. I have so often been the crucifer but here the weight of the wood on my shoulder bore down on me. And the people just carry on their busy lives in the bazaar just as they did on the first Good Friday! It was helpful to have the Taize chant to keep our concentration as we moved from station to station. At one there were some very noisy kids in a house nearby. At Calvary in the church of the Holy Sepulchre I read the passage about Jesus dying and Liz read the 14th station at the tomb. We queued up to venerate at Calvary and a German party pushed in and were very rude to Dom Brendan who said this was a holy place to no avail. We had an excellent pizza near the 3rd station and Liz was invited to see the chapel there. We went to the convent church of Ecce Homo to see the Antonine fortress pavement with games played by the Roman soldiers.
Then go on to the church of the Holy sepulchre mass and communion in the Calvary chapel where stations ended. Early morning, organ bursting forth, a moment of great faith. Sunday November 16th. 4.15 a.m. wake up call. We walked from the Jaffa Gate through the nearly deserted bazaar to the Holy Sepulchre church where we had 30 minutes to look around. The Copts were praying and at 5.30 a.m. the Franciscans began a Latin Mass with organ near the tomb. This church seems to symbolise the terrible divisions in Christianity. I have been often asked about evidence of this division and we did see a chapel which had been burnt out in fighting. The key to this mighty building is held by a Muslim family. Many Protestants find the Garden tomb gives them a better idea of the Resurrection scene but this church has to be seen when filled with liturgy. Our mass at 6 a.m. in the Calvary chapel was a high point of the whole journey. Just as we received communion the organ swelled to its full glory! It was a moment of great faith - He is risen! After Mass we were advised to go straight to the tomb as the daytime queue usually has at least a 2 hour wait. The Copts pulled me back from passing their tent-like chapel tacked on the back of the 19th century tomb. The tomb itself is strangely moving. We saw Revd Beverley Mason and friends from St John's, Upper Norwood doing the stations!
Bunyan Pilgrim’s progress – reaching the other side, all the trumpets, Remembrance Day. Laying down the burden.
After this it was noised abroad that Mr. Valiant-for-truth was taken with a Summons by the same Post as the other, and had this for a Token that the Summons was true, That his pitcher was broken at the Fountain. When he understood it, he called for his Friends, and told them of it. Then said he, I am going to my Fathers, and tho’ with great difficulty I am got hither, yet now I do not repent me of all the Trouble I have been at to arrive where I am. My Sword I give to him that shall succeed me in my Pilgrimage, and my Courage and my Skill to him that can get it. My Marks and Scars I carry with me, to be a witness for me that I have fought his Battles who now will be my Rewarder. When the day that he must go hence was come, many accompanied him to the River-side, into which as he went he said, Death, where is thy Sting? And as he went down deeper he said, Grave, where is thy Victory? So he passed over, and all the Trumpets sounded for him on the other side.
— John Bunyan, Pilgrims Progress
Bring us, O Lord God,
at our last awakening into the house and gate of heaven,
to enter into that gate and dwell in that house,
where there shall be no darkness nor dazzling, but one equal light;
no noise nor silence, but one equal music;
no fears nor hopes, but one equal possession;
no ends nor beginnings, but one equal eternity;
in the habitations of Thy glory and dominion world without end.
- John Donne
Give out sheets and introduce prayer walk. Mention books, cards and not taking them away! Also the items to read. Keep silence in room.
Gather at 3.30
Pass round bookmark and talk about the window Praise , Hands that flung stars into space, the day thou gavest. Play end of Dream of Gerontius and mention Dom Alan Rees.
Sharing time
End with the pilgrim’s prayer and the psalms
Take: CDs, photos, photocopies, lighter, candles, display material, books, this sheet
Play Guide me O thou great redeemer during which everyone who wishes to lights a candle on the central table.
Welcome
Introductions and ask about pilgrimages undertaken or planned
Give out psalms sheet
Say together the 2 pilgrimage psalms (alternating verses) and the pilgrimage prayer we used on the Belmont Abbey Holy land pilgrimage
A pilgrim (lat. peregrinus) is one who undertakes a pilgrimage, literally 'far afield'. This is traditionally a visit to a place of some religious or historic significance; often a considerable distance is traveled. Examples include a Christian or Jew visiting Jerusalem or a Muslim visiting Mecca. No religion has laid greater stress on the duty of a pilgrim than Islam in the Hajj.
•
An Indian pilgrim in Gangasagar in West Bengal, India
Pilgrims are common in many religions, including the faiths in ancient Egypt, Persia in the Mithraic period, India, China, and Japan. The Greek and Roman custom of consulting the gods at local oracles, such as those at Dodona or Delphi, both in Greece, is widely known. In Greece, pilgrimages could either be personal, or state-sponsored.[1]
In the early period of Hebrew history, pilgrims traveled to Shiloh, Dan, Bethel, and eventually Jerusalem, leading the way for the other Abrahamic religions to include the practice. The great Islamic pilgrimage to Mecca (now in Saudi Arabia), is obligatory for every able Muslim, and other Islamic devotional pilgrimages, particularly to the tombs of saints, are numerous. The early Christians made pilgrimages to the scenes of the Passion of Christ in Jerusalem. Even after Jerusalem had been occupied by the Saracens, the liberty of pilgrimage, on payment of a tax, was secured by treaty; the necessity of protecting pilgrims, however, gave rise to the medieval military orders, such as the Knights Templar.
While religious pilgrims usually travel toward a singular destination, a physical location is not a necessity. One group of pilgrims in early Celtic Christianity were the Peregrinari Pro Christ, (Pilgrims for Christ), or "white martyrs," where pilgrims left with the intent to wander.[2] This sort of pilgrimage was an ascetic religious practice, leaving home and the clan for an unknown destination, in complete trust of Divine Providence. These travels often resulted in the founding of new abbeys and spreading Christianity among the pagan population in Britain as well as on continental Europe.
The idea of the day is to look at where you are on your pilgrimage. Do you know the destination? How close do you find yourself to that destination? I want to include some movement in the day. There will be silent meditation at 12.30, lunch and then another talk at 2 with a long break and gathering for tea at 3.30 and finish at 4.15.
You can undertake a pilgrimage without leaving your home. Reading, praying, thinking, imagining. But essentially a journey is involved. Takes you out of routine.
Very ancient – Stonehenge, standing stones on Orkney, Greeks, Asia. In the Bible we find many journeys but little use of the word pilgrim. Abraham, Moses and the Exodus, Babylonian exile, the return to Jerusalem. Our Lord and his family travelling to Jerusalem every year and using the psalms we have just said – these psalms were said at the start and end of the pilgrimage and Our Lord would have sing them on the night of his Passion.
Many Christian sites – Holy Land, Turkey, Greece, Canterbury, Walsingham, Rome, Santiago da Comastella, Lourdes, Fatima, Medjugore. Marian emphasis.
I also want to mention going backwards like visiting my old school and visiting my headmaster. The unexpected. Being a cultural pilgrim – Elgar’s birthplace, Dickens’s home. Shakespeare.
But this morning I’d like to focus on Mt Sinai. Anticipation, expectations, difficulties. Camel, money, night time, falling over, being helped and then alone but not alone, reaching the top alone, being reunited, stumbling down the hill, exhaustion, St Catherine’s. Physical rather than spiritual.
The spiritual uplift comes later – achieved climbing the mountain, reflection on the readings.
Sharing the experience – mention Ross Kempsell and his pilgrimage. Life changing experiences. Life can never be the same again.
Spiritual high points – glimpses of Heaven. Colin Mawby Ave verum, Archbishop Nichols, Truro. On the other hand Rome during Holy Year!
Use Benedictine chant to introduce meditiation for 20 minutes, Michael Main prayer card.
2 p.m. Welcome newcomers and do brief summary of morning session.
Play Who would true valour see
Focus on Jerusalem.
Pass round photos of Stations and talk about the experience – carrying the cross in the cathedral, being moved. The Via Dolorosa where 4 people each took turns to carry the cross was most moving - unexpectedly so. I have so often been the crucifer but here the weight of the wood on my shoulder bore down on me. And the people just carry on their busy lives in the bazaar just as they did on the first Good Friday! It was helpful to have the Taize chant to keep our concentration as we moved from station to station. At one there were some very noisy kids in a house nearby. At Calvary in the church of the Holy Sepulchre I read the passage about Jesus dying and Liz read the 14th station at the tomb. We queued up to venerate at Calvary and a German party pushed in and were very rude to Dom Brendan who said this was a holy place to no avail. We had an excellent pizza near the 3rd station and Liz was invited to see the chapel there. We went to the convent church of Ecce Homo to see the Antonine fortress pavement with games played by the Roman soldiers.
Then go on to the church of the Holy sepulchre mass and communion in the Calvary chapel where stations ended. Early morning, organ bursting forth, a moment of great faith. Sunday November 16th. 4.15 a.m. wake up call. We walked from the Jaffa Gate through the nearly deserted bazaar to the Holy Sepulchre church where we had 30 minutes to look around. The Copts were praying and at 5.30 a.m. the Franciscans began a Latin Mass with organ near the tomb. This church seems to symbolise the terrible divisions in Christianity. I have been often asked about evidence of this division and we did see a chapel which had been burnt out in fighting. The key to this mighty building is held by a Muslim family. Many Protestants find the Garden tomb gives them a better idea of the Resurrection scene but this church has to be seen when filled with liturgy. Our mass at 6 a.m. in the Calvary chapel was a high point of the whole journey. Just as we received communion the organ swelled to its full glory! It was a moment of great faith - He is risen! After Mass we were advised to go straight to the tomb as the daytime queue usually has at least a 2 hour wait. The Copts pulled me back from passing their tent-like chapel tacked on the back of the 19th century tomb. The tomb itself is strangely moving. We saw Revd Beverley Mason and friends from St John's, Upper Norwood doing the stations!
Bunyan Pilgrim’s progress – reaching the other side, all the trumpets, Remembrance Day. Laying down the burden.
After this it was noised abroad that Mr. Valiant-for-truth was taken with a Summons by the same Post as the other, and had this for a Token that the Summons was true, That his pitcher was broken at the Fountain. When he understood it, he called for his Friends, and told them of it. Then said he, I am going to my Fathers, and tho’ with great difficulty I am got hither, yet now I do not repent me of all the Trouble I have been at to arrive where I am. My Sword I give to him that shall succeed me in my Pilgrimage, and my Courage and my Skill to him that can get it. My Marks and Scars I carry with me, to be a witness for me that I have fought his Battles who now will be my Rewarder. When the day that he must go hence was come, many accompanied him to the River-side, into which as he went he said, Death, where is thy Sting? And as he went down deeper he said, Grave, where is thy Victory? So he passed over, and all the Trumpets sounded for him on the other side.
— John Bunyan, Pilgrims Progress
Bring us, O Lord God,
at our last awakening into the house and gate of heaven,
to enter into that gate and dwell in that house,
where there shall be no darkness nor dazzling, but one equal light;
no noise nor silence, but one equal music;
no fears nor hopes, but one equal possession;
no ends nor beginnings, but one equal eternity;
in the habitations of Thy glory and dominion world without end.
- John Donne
Give out sheets and introduce prayer walk. Mention books, cards and not taking them away! Also the items to read. Keep silence in room.
Gather at 3.30
Pass round bookmark and talk about the window Praise , Hands that flung stars into space, the day thou gavest. Play end of Dream of Gerontius and mention Dom Alan Rees.
Sharing time
End with the pilgrim’s prayer and the psalms
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