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Retreat (spiritual)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The WinShape Retreat Center inRome, Georgia
An aspiringseminarianprays during a vocational discernment retreat in the chapel ofBlessed John XXIII National SeminaryinMassachusetts

The meaning of aspiritual retreatcan be different for different religious communities. Spiritual retreats are an integral part of many Buddhist, Christian and Sufi communities. There are many different types of spiritual retreats such as wellness retreats, mindfulness retreats, spa retreats, adventure retreats, detox retreats, yoga retreats, and religious retreats.[1][better source needed]

In Buddhism, meditative retreats are seen by some as an intimate way of deepening powers of concentration and insight.

Retreats are also popular inChristianchurches, and were established in today's form bySt. Ignatius of Loyola(1491–1556), in hisSpiritual Exercises.Ignatius was later to be made patron saint of spiritual retreats byPope Pius XIin 1922. ManyProtestants,CatholicsandOrthodox Christianspartake in and organize spiritual retreats each year.

Meditative retreats are an important practice inSufism,the mystical path ofIslam.The Sufi teacherIbn Arabi's bookJourney to the Lord of Power (Risālat al-Anwār)[2]is a guide to the inner journey that was published over 700 years ago.

Buddhism

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Young monk in meditation retreat,Yerpa,Tibetin 1993

A retreat can either be a time ofsolitudeor acommunityexperience. Some retreats are held insilence,and on others there may be a great deal of conversation, depending on the understanding and accepted practices of the host facility and/or the participant(s). Retreats are often conducted at rural or remote locations, either privately, or at a retreat centre such as amonastery.Some retreats for advanced practitioners may be undertaken indarkness,a form of retreat that is common as an advancedDzogchenpractice in theNyingmaschool ofTibetan Buddhism.

Spiritual retreats allow time forreflection,prayer,ormeditation.They are considered essential inBuddhism,[3]having been a common practice since theVassa,or rainy season retreat, was established by the founder of Buddhism,Gautama Buddha.InZen Buddhismretreats are known assesshin.

Christianity

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Catholicism

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Wodzisław Śląski"Retreat House" ofRoman Catholic Archdiocese of Katowice

The Christian retreat can be defined most simply as a definite time (from a few hours in length to a month) spent away from one's normal life for the purpose of reconnecting, usually in prayer, with God. Although the practice of leaving one's everyday life to connect on a deeper level with God, be that in the desert (as with theDesert Fathers), or in a monastery, is nearly as old as Christianity itself, the practice of spending a specific time away with God is a more modern phenomenon, dating from the 1520s andSt. Ignatius of Loyola's composition of the Spiritual Exercises.[4]The fasting of Jesus in the desert for forty days is used as a biblical justification of retreats.[5]

The retreat was popularised in Roman Catholicism by theSociety of Jesus(Jesuits), whose founder,St. Ignatius of Loyola,as alaymanbegan, in the 1520s, directing others in making (participating in) the exercises.[4]Another form the Exercises came in, which became known as the nineteenth "Observation", 'allowed continuing one's ordinary occupations with the proviso of setting aside a few hours a day for this special purpose.'[6]The spiritual exercises were intended for people wanting to live closer to God's will for their life. In the 17th century, retreats became much more widespread in the Catholic Church.[7]

Retreats were not originally seen as suitable for women, but in 1674Catherine de Francheville(fr), supported by the Breton JesuitVincent Huby(fr), founded a retreat house for women inVannes.This developed into a community of laywomen, who also founded a daughter house inQuimper,but were dispersed by the French Revolution. Some however came together to found schools, and additional communities were established in England, and later in Ireland, Belgium, the Netherlands and Italy. These developed in the course of the 19th century, under the name ofLa Retraite(fr), into a religious Congregation of nuns. The active involvement of the sisters in retreats was curtailed later in the 19th century, but blossomed again after the Second Vatican Council, involving among other activity an extension of the community into Chile, South Africa, Cameroon and Mali.[8]

Manresa Retreat Centre,Pickering, Ontario

Following the growth of theCursillomovement in Spain in the 20th century, similar retreats have become popular, either using licensed Cursillo material or independent material loosely based on its concepts, leading to the development of thethree day movement.

Anglicanism

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Spiritual retreats were introduced to theChurch of Englandby priests of theAnglo-CatholicSociety of the Holy Crossin 1856, first for clergy, and then also for laity.[9][10][11]These retreats lasted five days.[7]The Society of the Holy Cross's first retreats were held in secrecy.[10]The practice was spread by Anglo-Catholic priests such asFrancis Henry Murray,[12]: 99 Alexander Forbes,[12]: 73,127 andThomas Thellusson Carter.[12]: 186 TheOxford Movementfurther spread the practice of retreats to many devout men and women, borrowing upon Catholic practices. Their retreats were typically 3–4 days, and featured much silence and prayer.[7]

At the end of the 19th century, and in the first years of the 20th century, retreats began to spread among the working classes and beyond those of notable devotion. These retreats were lessasceticin character, and included more conversation and leisure. They typically lasted 1–3 days.[7]

Evangelical Christianity

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Linden Valley Baptist Conference Center inLinden, Tennessee,United States

InEvangelical Christianity,times of spiritual retreat were encouraged by the development ofcamp meetingsof the 19th century, in order to promote spiritual renewal, far from the city and in nature.[13]These camps were an opportunity to pray, sing and listen to sermons for several days.

Various church associations have also establishedcampgroundsorconference centersin isolated locations, which provide retreat times for children and adults.[14]

Sufi retreats or spiritual khalwa

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The translation ofkhālwa(fromArabicالخلوة) is seclusion or separation, but it has a different connotation in Sufi terminology in which it refers to the act of self-abandonment in desire for the Divine Presence. [15]In complete seclusion, the Sufi continuously repeats the name of God as a highest form ofremembrance of God meditation.In his book, Journey to the Lord of Power, Muhiyid-Did ibn Arabi (1165-1240 A.D.) discussed the stages through which the Sufi passes in hiskhalwa.

Ibn Arabi suggested: "The Sufi should shut his door against the world for forty days and occupy himself with remembrance of Allah, that is to keep repeating," Allah, Allah... "Then," Almighty God will spread before him the degrees of the kingdom as a test. First, He will discover the secrets of the mineral world. If he occupies himself with dthikr, He (God) will unveil to the secrets of the vegetable world, then the secrets of the animal world, then the infusion of the world of life-force into lives, then the "surface sign" (the light of the Divine Names, according to Abdul-Karim al-Jeeli, the book's translator), then the degrees of speculative sciences, then the world of formation and adornment and beauty, then the degrees of the qutb (the soul or pivot of the universe-see #16) Then he will be given the divine wisdom and the power of symbols and authority over the veil and the unveiling. The degree of the Divine Presence is made clear to him, the garden (of Eden) and Hell are revealed to him, then the original forms of the son of Adam, the Throne of Mercy. If it is appropriate, he will know his destination. Then he will reveal to him the Pen, the First Intellect (as it is called by Sufi philosophers), then the Mover of the Pen, the right hand of the Truth. (The "Truth" as defined by al-Jeeli is that by which everything is created, none other than God most High.)[citation needed]

The practice of khalwah is regularly followed by the Sufis, with the permission and the supervision of a Sufi authority.

The Sufis base the assigning of forty days ofkhalwaperiod on the forty days Allah had appointed for Musa (Moses) as a fasting period before speaking to him, as mentioned in different chapters in the Qur'an. One of them is from surat al-Baqarah.

Khalwais still practiced today amongst authorized Sheikhs, such asMawlana Sheikh Nazim Al-Haqqani,Lefka,Cyprus.

Meditation

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Meditationcourses or retreats, either in a group or solo, are a common part of manymeditationtraditions.[16][17][18][19]

See also

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References

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  1. ^- 12 Different Types Of Retreats You Can Experience
  2. ^Ibn Arabi(1981).Journey to the Lord of Power: A Sufi Manual on Retreat.Rabia Terry Harris (trans.). Inner Traditions.ISBN978-0-89281-018-5.
  3. ^What is a retreat?at Padmaloka.org
  4. ^abO'Malley, J W 1993, 'The First Jesuits', Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts p. 4
  5. ^Desert Living2009, page 52
  6. ^O'Malley, J W 1993, 'The First Jesuits', Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts p. 129
  7. ^abcdStone, Darwell (1919). "Retreats". In Hastings, J.; Selbie, J.A.; Gray, L.H. (eds.).Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics.Scribner. p. 744.
  8. ^La Retraite– history
  9. ^McIlhiney, D.B. (1988).A Gentleman in Every Slum: Church of England Missions in East London, 1837-1914.Princeton Theological Monograph Series. Pickwick Publications. p. 25.ISBN978-0-915138-95-1.Retrieved11 January2020.
  10. ^abBodington, C. (1905).Devotional Life in the Nineteenth Century.SPCK. p. 176.Retrieved11 January2020.
  11. ^Walsh, W. (1899).The Secret History of the Oxford Movement.His Synthetic philosophy. C.J. Thynne. p.57.Retrieved11 January2020.
  12. ^abcYates, P.E.H.N.; Yates, N. (1999).Anglican Ritualism in Victorian Britain, 1830-1910.Oxford University Press.ISBN978-0-19-826989-2.
  13. ^Brett Grainger,Church in the Wild: Evangelicals in Antebellum America,Harvard University Press, USA, 2019, p. 58-59
  14. ^Samuel S. Hill,The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture: Volume 1: Religion,University of North Carolina Press, USA, 2006, p. 177
  15. ^Landolt, H., "K̲h̲alwa", in:Encyclopaedia of Islam,Second Edition, Edited by: P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel, W.P. Heinrichs. Consulted online on 06 August 2022 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1573-3912_islam_SIM_4178>.
  16. ^Dhamma Giri - Vipassana International Academy
  17. ^"How an intensive ten-day meditation retreat could transform your life".The Independent.18 August 2015.
  18. ^Dunford, Jane (13 January 2018)."The best yoga, mindfulness and fitness breaks for 2018".The Guardian.
  19. ^"10 of the world's best meditation retreats".CNN Travel.25 June 2013.

Further reading

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  • Cooper, David A. (1999).Silence, Simplicity & Solitude: A Complete Guide to Spiritual Retreat.SkyLight Paths Publishing.ISBN978-1-893361-04-1.
  • Liteman, Merianne; Campbell, Sheila; Liteman, Jeffrey (2006).Retreats that Work: Everything You Need to Know About Planning and Leading Great Offsites.Wiley.ISBN0-7879-8275-X.
  • Whiteaker, Stafford (2004).The Good Retreat Guide.Rider.ISBN1-84413-228-5.
  • Zangpo, Ngawang (1994).Jamgon Kongtrul's Retreat Manual.Snow Lion Publications.ISBN978-1-55939-029-3.
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Media related toRetreats (spiritual)at Wikimedia Commons