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Province of France
Noëlle Favet, rscj
Learning to navigate reinforces a spiritual undertaking
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Many re-discover the Spirit's action in their lives while adjusting the sails to the prevailing wind?
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"Life
at Sea - A Way into Prayer" is a programme of the Ignatian Youth
Network of France; people of Ignatian spirituality: Jesuits, Sisters
and laity, all work on it together.
It isn't always easy
for young people, whether students or those who already have a career,
to take the plunge and go to a spiritual centre to discover a form of
prayer, or experience the riches of a time of retreat. In such a noisy
world, so full of distractions, daring to face up to silence, solitude
and confrontation with God and with oneself is no simple matter! Nor is
it easy for those whose days off are limited, to give up a week of
refreshing, much-needed holidays, and shut themselves up in a retreat
house! So what's the alternative?
"Life at Sea - A Way into
Prayer" is a programme which tries to respond, at least partially, to
these expectations. Its aim is to give young people (between 18 and 30)
a taste of Ignatian prayer, to show them how to set about this business
of prayer, while enjoying all that the sea has to offer, in a rambling
cruise aboard a sailing-boat. So every July, twenty-four people embark
for a week on three sailing-boats, to ramble around the islands and
coasts of Brittany. An integral part of the retreat is the
apprenticeship of sailing, of living on board and getting to know the
marine environment. The boat dictates a certain simplicity of life; you
learn how dependent you are on the elements (winds, tides, sun or
rain), and on the community life that you simply can't avoid when eight
people are living on a boat 9 metres long. The beauty of the setting
also lends itself to contemplation, and you easily learn to be silent
and remember all the wonderful things the Creator has done. Learning to
navigate also reinforces the spiritual undertaking. Many re-discover
the Spirit's action in their lives while adjusting the sails to the
prevailing wind; while casting off, many have understood that you
sometimes have to let go so that you can launch out into the deep. And
how could you fail to think of discernment when you have to take your
bearings, set the course and stick to it?
Mornings begin in
the big group with the presentation of some aspect of sailing: what
does it mean to "embark, weigh anchor, set the course?" These sea
metaphors are the backdrop for the day's spiritual attitude: learning
to accept God's gift, which has no strings attached; being ready to let
go, to cut loose from what hinders our freedom; discovering our
personal landmarks and learning to choose. A short time of personal
prayer, in the method of the Exercises, is then suggested; guided at
first, it becomes progressively more personalised, and each one learns
to use the means proposed by the team of directors. Then, back to the
boats for the day's cruise! While sailing, an hour's silence is
suggested, and a time for sharing after looking back on one's life. The
evening ends with a time of prayer or reflection in teams or in the big
group, according to possibilities. And so the voyage itself sets the
rhythm for each one's personal itinerary, and for the life of the
group. Halfway through the journey, a day on an island gives everyone a
chance to take their bearings and pluck up courage to have a more
personal talk with the person accompanying them. There is no need to be
a great "pray-er", nor a great sailor, to enter into this process. You
only have to want it, and to be bold enough!
I've taken
part three times in the direction of this retreat, and I have never met
a single participant who was disappointed by the programme. Some, after
this first initiation, overcame their fear of silence and solitude, and
found the courage to go into a retreat centre; others have appreciated
the joys and riches of Ignatian prayer or of spiritual direction, and
have pursued this path. Others again have found a new face of the
Church and have sought to renew their links with it. Many have asked to
repeat the experience. And so a second scheme has been drawn up,
offering a further step in the spiritual process and in the experience
of navigation.
Several Religious of the Sacred Heart in the
French Province take part in the direction of this retreat. It's always
a joy for us to be able to sail together (even if we are not on the
same boat!) and to bear witness to a single charism, which the
retreatants very soon pick up. There is no need to be an expert in
navigation; it's enough to have a taste for adventure and to accept the
basic conditions of the experience. The harvest always reaches the
hundredfold, far outweighing the weariness and service.
So
let's allow ourselves to be borne along by the Spirit, as we think out
new ways of giving young people the God-experience they are seeking in
their lives today!
Noëlle Favet, rscj
Province of France
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