In the spring of 1994, my son Rowan was invited to a triple birthday party at the home of some Orthodox friends, the Gori's in Connecticut. It was a mini-reunion for some New England Youth Rally-ers When I went to pick him up, Bev Gori suggested that we host a youth event at our church in Claremont, New Hampshire. Rowan said "It won't work; the kids in our parish don't go to a rally and aren't interested in retreats." Though our parish used to hold a summer family camp, and we have numerous family events; picnics, impromptu skating or swimming parties, work Saturdays and house blessings, there had not been a youth group that could offer any real social alternative to the school peer cultures. Nor did there seem to be an impetus in this direction, or, Rowan felt, the requisite skills or experience that make a church youth event the inspiring experience of fellowship and sharing in Christ that it ought to be.
In
October we did it again, this time at our St. Xenia Retreat House in Vermont,
and again Mike came to help us. Seventeen
teenagers attended, and we packed them into our little retreat house (with gas
lights, no electricity, and no plumbing) like sardines.
Throughout that year we held gatherings every couple of months, taking
over the leadership ourselves (both youth and adults).
Friday
Evening: We gathered at Church for dinner and discussion, led by Fr.
Andrew. Came home to the Retreat
House (nearly an hour away) for snacks, hanging out, prayer and (usually rather
late) bed.
Saturday: Got up early for prayer, breakfast and more discussion.
We usually followed up on the ideas Father had presented the night before,
through both large and small group discussions.
This was a good time for the young people themselves to give brief talks
they'd prepared.
We
then had lunch, played awhile, then had more discussion or a hike, swim or sledding.
In
the evening we went back to church for Vespers, dinner and more discussion with
Father Andrew; came home for snack, evening prayers, and, around midnight, bedtime.
Sunday: We went to church, followed by lunch, some free time, and a
wrap-up discussion.
Topics
for the gatherings have included "Martyrdom," "Our Legacy"
(on the gift of our tradition), "Living in the World," "Great
Lent," "Feasting," and "Paganism."
Usually we would decide at one gathering what the topic would be for
the next one, and various people would offer to prepare something for it.
Week
Of Service
Our
year was crowned by a nine-day Week of Service in July 1995, attended by about
twelve young people who tirelessly gave themselves to a variety of service projects
all over northern New England. They
cleared away briars and landscaped the retreat house (with flowers and shrubs
donated by local nurseries), planting a bed of Impatiens in the shape of an
Orthodox cross. They cleaned a
shelter for the homeless; cleared brush at Holy Resurrection Church in Berlin
(spending the night with Father Sergius in the rectory); reclaimed an old apple
orchard planted by Robert Frost at the Frost Place in Franconia; planned and
led an overnight retreat for a dozen nine-to-ten-year-olds; and climaxed their
labors by responding the last evening to the need of a family (now catechumens
in our parish) who had been given twelve hours to move.
They helped pack and move the family until two o'clock in the morning!
The
projects for the week of service were chosen mainly because they were there
to do and came to us through members or friends of the parish.
We tried to focus on one work
project each day, varying the kinds of work as much as possible, and including
one fun activity each day (swimming, hiking, a cookout at Echo Lake and fireworks
viewed from the top of Bald Mountain in the Franconia Notch).
We also got in some discussion about service, obedience to a task, and
a wide range of other subjects as they came up.
We spent quite a bit of time on the road in a borrowed mini-van and a
small RV, sang a lot, and kept up a daily prayer cycle.
At
our most recent gathering, held in the fall of 1995 and attended by over thirty
young people, Father Andrew told the kids that it was important not to think
of these experiences as being for ourselves, but rather as opportunities to
strengthen ourselves to give to others as God calls us to do.
The time had come, he felt, to begin to harvest some of the fruits of
our time together and for the young people to take the seeds home and plant
them in their own parishes. This
has already begun to happen. In
December, veteran Holy Resurrection retreat participant Clare Gori, with her
parents and priest, Father John Dresko, held a wonderful youth gathering in
New Britain, Connecticut.
Along
the way we also held a retreat for the nine-to-twelve-year-olds on "Forgiveness,"
attended by a few children from other parishes.
But we have followed up on the great interest of these younger kids less
than we should have. This is the
group just beginning to be challenged to choose a lifestyle and relationships
that may draw them farther and farther from their faith, and it is at this age
that it seems most important to show young people that their church is a place
where they can grow and flourish and deepen into relationships with their peers
in ways that also deepen them in their relationship with God.
Thus I feel a special commitment to this group that I hope we will be
able to honor. If we wait too long,
we will lose some of them. My own
son would never have gone to a Youth Rally if he'd had to wait till he was thirteen.
One
fruit of our labors has been greater involvement in the church by some of the
young people of our own parish and a renewal of the life of our church school.
Another has been the great hope for the future of the Church that the
young people from other parishes have inspired by their faithful participation
in the life of our parish. And
I would hope that another fruit will be the carrying of that same hope and awakening
to other parishes, as other parishes have brought it to us.
the church, and second that we have in no way "infantile-ized" the
youth who come here or treated them as in any way alien to or apart from the
life of the Church. We have not
constructed "awesome" experiences by contemporary standards, but rather
by the timeless standard of the Church or the simple standard of the world as
God made it -- the Vermont woods or New Hampshire mountains on a moonlit night,
a long muddy road in March, or a steep hill covered with slipper snow.
We have taken the young people seriously as Orthodox believers, as we
have expected them to participate and remain attentive in sometimes very long
talks and discussions. The younger
ones even surpassed our expectations in their attentiveness.
We have assumed that they have come together to know God better and to
know and love God in one another, even when, to all appearances, this is not
at all why some may have come. While
we have always had fun, our time together has focused on understanding and living
our faith, and the joy of our gatherings has been the joy of being able to love
God and love one another -- friends and peers, young and old -- at one and the
same time. The absence of opportunity
for this is a great sadness for a young person, even though many do not know
this until they experience its presence.
A youth gathering, we have found, does not require adequate space or showers or proximity to the church or elaborate plans or skilled adults or a good church organization. Rather it requires a few loving adults and willing kids, willing to work hard together and bump into each other for a short time in close quarters, and to respect and come to know themselves and one another in Christ.
Issues Yet To Be Addresses
As
we think about planning another gathering, we realize we will want to address
some issues that have emerged into clarity over the past year and a half:
As
a result of the local efforts described in this article, the New England Diocese,
at its 1996 Annual Summer Youth Rally committed itself to holding at least one
of these "gatherings" in each deanery annually.
Additionally,
at the Holy Resurrection Parish, one Saturday each month has now been designated
"Youth Service Saturday." The
young people of the parish, and a number of adults, come out on that Saturday
to help those in the parish and others with specific jobs and needs.
Xenia Sheehan is Youth Coordinator at the Holy Resurrection Church, Claremont, New Hampshire
Taken from the OCA Resource Handbook for Lay Ministries
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Department
of Youth, Young Adult, and Campus Ministry |
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