Living Apart Together…

Back in March, at the start of the pandemic and the shelter-in-place edict, none of us would have thought that months later we would still be here – social distancing and uncertain about when we would return to life even as we knew it.

As the health crisis unfolded, we instinctively switched to survival mode, resolved to find alternative ways to keep going. Our homes became both a quarantine fortress and our place of work. Companies and organizations quickly changed their daily operations as they tried to adjust. Parents and teachers turned to homeschooling. Many, understandably, struggled to make it through the day; while scores of others selflessly showed up to serve. Incomprehensibly, too many succumbed to the virus and lost their lives.

And, in the midst of the pandemic, our hearts further erupted at the sight of new, unwarranted and continuous killing of our Black brothers and sisters. While the country and even the world came together to cry “enough”, the poisonous effects of such inhuman cruelty – anger, grief, pain, fear, mistrust, despair – have undoubtedly already attached themselves to many a soul.

How are you doing, really?

It may have been months since 2020 took a detour but many of us have yet to come up for air, even less sit still to tend to our souls. We are submerged in a sea of emotions, which is even amplified for those who are living alone, cut off from regular human connection.

“Where do we go from here?” is a question many have asked these past few months. I don’t purport to have the answer; I am, however, certain that any step forward must come from a place of self-awareness and wholeness. Just as we must come to term with the fact that we are all connected and we are more alike than we are different.

With that in mind, I offer this opportunity for us to intentionally slow down to care for our souls and to do life together. Whether you need time in community, a safe space to lament or a moment of rest from your new normal, I propose that we connect during the month of August to engage through guided discussions, contemplative reflections and to recharge for the days ahead.

The list of offerings, for both men and women, and the registration button are below. Please sign-up as you feel led. I look forward to connecting with you, and until then, I pray that you and yours are safe and well!

In His grace,
Christine


“Let him who cannot be alone beware of community.
Let him who is not in community beware of being alone.”

— Dietrich Bonhoeffer


2f565826-2b0e-480a-83eb-8f8b80de4753

Living Apart Together
Free Online Soul Care Pauses
Virtually on Zoom [10:00am-11:00am]
Zoom Link will be Emailed Following Registration

Saturday, August 1: Holy Interruption
Saturday, August 15: Soul Care in Times of Crisis
Saturday, August 29: As We Wait…

“It’s better to have a partner than go it alone…And if one falls down, the other helps…(Ecc. 4:9-10 The Message)



Sabatica-BlueDress PicChristine A. Dorvil is Founder and Director of Sabătica. She is a retreat leader and holds a certificate in Spiritual Transformation from the Transforming Center in Chicago where she studied for two years and was mentored by Ruth Haley Barton. Christine is passionate about spiritual formation, restoration and soul care. She holds an MBA in Finance and is pursuing a Masters of Divinity in Old Testament and Hebrew. She is a Fellow of the New York City Leadership Center and serves as Executive Director for the Alliance for Thriving Communities.

 

Do You Ever Feel Like Running For Your Life?

From time to time I do.

I also know of someone who actually did. Elijah. He was in such a state of desperation and was so fearful that he fled into a cave. One minute he was on top of his world; the next, he was being hunted and on the verge of losing everything, including his own life.

It is unclear that Elijah foreknew his hiding place would be the site of his own Bethel. Be that as it may, instead of being where he would succumb to his despair, the cave was the meeting ground for a divine encounter and where his life was saved and restored. Elijah may not have had a well-thought-out plan but The One whose master plan supersedes all plans, showed up and deployed both familiar and supernatural resources to care for Elijah’s body, spirit and soul.

God met Elijah and didn’t beat around the bush — he went straight to the matter. “Elijah what are you doing here?”, He began. He didn’t judge Elijah for being in the cave, instead, he helped him awaken to his truth, to process and release his worries to God. Fortunately, the prophet didn’t sugarcoat his emotional turmoil and disappointments. He opened up and told God exactly how it was — unlocking the door for his own healing and restoration.

What followed were moments of physical rest and nourishment.  Elijah slept and was supernaturally fed until he regained his strength. The journey went on for a while but all along, God kept on speaking with Elijah, guiding him through his own soul assessment and renewal. At the end, Elijah symbolically stood at the entrance of the cave and there was re-commissioned to his calling and purpose.

God’s blueprint for total well-being works — acknowledge where you are, face your truth, tend to your whole self [body, mind and spirit], all-the-while abiding in Him. We must choose to remain centered, to make soul care and sabbatical rest a way of life or fear having to run into a cave. For, as Dallas Willard said, “If you don’t come apart for a while, you will come apart after a while.”

Thankfully, the issues of your life and your well-being are not lost on God. Whether you regularly make space for Him or occasionally find yourself longing for a hiding place, in His grace, He will surely meet you where you are. He will walk you through it and as He did with Elijah, he will restore your soul.

There is nothing wrong with wanting to hide for a little while. You don’t even need to have a perfect plan. You simply need to accept the invitation and make space for God.

In His grace,
Christine


 

Sabatica Fall 2018 (4)

FIND-OUT-MORE-BUTTON


Katie_castle-9 copyWe are excited to announce that during this Fall retreat, we will be introducing and creating space for communal worship. We are equally thrilled that Katie Nelson Troyer, a worship leader with a passion for God’s heart, a teacher and talented musician will be ushering us into that sacred space Friday evening.

Wisconsin-born songbird Katie Nelson made the road her home for eight years. She toured the country performing music from her albums Alabaster Worship (2003), Do You Know Who He Is? (2005), and Speak To Me (2007). After a long battle with health complications and consequent songwriting dry spell, Katie is happy to be healthy and has returned this winter with a new album entitled Lavender & Lace: An Anthology of Queens. In addition to writing and performing original music, Katie spends much of her time leading worship for local churches and mentoring other musicians. She and her husband Scott Troyer, live in Greenwich where they enjoy creating music, cooking together, and gardening.



Sabatica-BlueDress PicChristine A. Dorvil is Founder and Director of Sabătica. She is a retreat leader and holds a certificate in Spiritual Transformation from the Transforming Center in Chicago where she studied for two years and was mentored by Ruth Haley Barton. Christine is passionate about spiritual formation, restoration and soul care. She holds an MBA in Finance and is pursuing a Masters of Divinity in Theology and Hebrew. She is a Fellow of the New York City Leadership Center and serves as Executive Director for the Alliance for Thriving Communities.

In Times of Chaos or Peace

I had just left my sister’s apartment and was about a mile away from home. The light had just turned green for me; I started to move and make my turn when another driver drove into me. By the time I realized what was about to happen, the impact had occurred. In that instant, it was as if everything had stood still. I heard the car crashing into mine and inexplicably, I was enveloped in a great covering of peace and felt as if I had been scooped up into safety. Instead of the usual “seeing your life pass in front of your eyes” experience, my mind oddly wondered about how many other accidents and impacts God had rescued me from.

When the car had stopped and I came to myself, the air bags had deployed and the fume they emitted was everywhere. Shortly after, a young man stopped his car, walked over to my side and asked if I was okay. As my door was all damaged, he went around trying to help me out. Minutes later, the ambulance and the police officers arrived on the scene, then it was lights on – action. All of a sudden, it got much louder and very chaotic.

I was being bombarded with questions and then my body started to respond with pain. My pressure and heart rates naturally went through the roof. Then off to the hospital, followed by more questions, a battery of tests and hours into the next day, I was released to go home but what followed were intense headaches and disorienting pressures in my head; then it was off to more doctor’s visits, more imaging tests, coordinating with insurance company, work, transportation, etc.…Then all the warning bells started to go off — I was about to lose it. I found myself at a place where I urgently needed to decide whether I would allow that event to turn my life upside down or take a step back and refocus my mind.

As hard as it may be to distance oneself from something that is directly affecting one’s life, that was exactly what I decided to do. So, I took a pause, quieted myself down and proceeded to:

Count My Blessings — First and foremost, I am alive. Things could have been a lot worse. Some couldn’t believe the extinct of the damage to my car and I, first hand, suffered the effects of the impact on my body. Yet, despite the physical injuries and alteration to my routine, my soul has been sustained.

From the night of the accident to now, I have had angels walking this out with me. My sister and her friend met me on the scene and spent the night at the hospital with me. I had the most caring first responders and the days that followed, friends and colleagues were in queue to bring meals, drive me around; and for the nearly three months, He has provided in so many other ways.

Surrender to the Greater Plan — It is clear as day that God isn’t the originator of the tragedies and heartbreaks we experience in life. He, however, often uses them to reveal Himself to us and/or to perfect His character in us. These tragedies can be excruciating and suffocating but sometimes they serve as wake-up calls. They can become opportunities for us to evolve, to strengthen our faith and for God to vindicate His name. For His Word is yes and amen. His Word does not return to Him void.

Holding On to What I Know is True  — After realizing I was at my breaking point, I turned to what I knew would bring me solace – to what would feed my soul; namely, time in silence, contemplation, worship and community. I was grateful for the disciplines I had been introduced to and which I had been keeping through the years, for they’d been tested and have been pathways that led me to Shalom — the peace that is complete and which surpasses all understanding.

“Blessed be the Lord, my rock, Who trains my hands for war, and my fingers for battle…”

Move Onward and Upward — When one’s life gets sidetracked unexpectedly and one is physically incapacitated, falling prey to emotional discouragement is quite easy. I will admit that at first, I was irritated, I asked “what now” and I felt drained. It all seemed unfair and at some point, I just wanted to stay in bed. Yet, I also knew that I had to keep fighting; I needed to stand firm and not simply agree with how things were. I needed to keep my eyes on the end result, on the Eternal One and make a pact with myself to choose life every day.

What is your chaos? What are the noises that are making you dizzy and rendering you incapacitated?  

Maybe you are a mom rushing through the end of Summer, trying to get your kids ready for the upcoming school year. Maybe it is running to and from multiple jobs in order to keep afloat. Maybe the noise come from disfunction at work or your place of worship. Maybe it’s dealing with false accusations, sudden losses or trying to discern what to do next.

From time to time, difficulties will come out of nowhere and smack us right in the middle of the face. There will be instances when they will even take the wind out of our sails. Yet as I’ve learned through the years, these are the times when we need to defer to our emergency response plan and revert to our warrior stance.

What is your emergency plan? How do you first respond when the storms erupt? 

When chaos erupted unexpectedly, after reining in my emotions, I woke up to the reality that any resolution or subsequent step to remedy the situation, required that I make an attitude adjustment and be ready to decide; for whatever rescue plan I had, began with my decision. As, Viktor Frankl, one of my favorite authors, once wrote “Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms—to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances. And as Moses, in Deuteronomy 30 reminded us, everyday we are presented with two options — life and death — and it is up to us to decide which one we’ll choose.

I have set before you life and death…Now choose life, so that you and your children may live and that you may love the Lord your God, listen to his voice, and hold fast to him. For the Lord is your life.

I must admit that although the command to choose life is pretty clear, making the choice is not always or naturally an easy task. Nevertheless, if you are at an impasse where you don’t recognize your life anymore or you are struggling to be in your right mind or to get back on your feet, don’t give up just yet.

You may have heard of the great Elijah, who despite his many prophetic exploits and great standing with God, fled to a cave after Jezebel threatened his life. As read in 1 Kings 19, Elijah wasn’t only fearful but he also started to look down on himself. He saw such little value in his life and his abilities that he sat down and prayed for death to come. Yet, even in Elijah’s weakness and despair, God showed him grace and deployed His own emergency response plan for him. He sent him nourishment for his body, guided him back to restoration and when the time came, summoned Elijah back to finish the course set before him.

Furthermore, Moses didn’t just give us the command to choose life [to live, to be healthy, to prosper, to find justice, to be joyful, to have peace]; he also gave us the steps to help us do so, namely — to love the Lord, listen to His voice and hold fast to Him. And, thankfully, even in those instances when we respond differently or, like Elijah, opt to run away, God still shows up — after the wind, the earthquake and the fire — in a gentle whisper, to strengthen, remind us who we are and send us on our way.

If somehow you find yourself in the middle of a chaotic situation, I pray you find immediate relief and respite. If you are enjoying a season of peace, thank God for that and continue to hold fast to Him. As Moses instructed and as Elijah demonstrated, in time of chaos or peace, may you choose to listen to His voice, to continue to fight [intentionally & with a strategy] and may you choose to stay the course.

Sola gratia,

Christine

Sabătica “Unplugged” at The New York Botanical Garden {4.7.18}

There is something rather soothing and reviving with being surrounded by beauty and vibrant colors, especially after months of Winter. I don’t know about you but I’m excited about Spring and everything it brings along — warmer weather, flowers, time outside — and can’t think of a better way to kickstart the season and slow down then with a day at the New York Botanical Garden.
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

NYBG Cuban Orchid Show

Please join us Saturday, April 7th as we do just that. We will hop on the train in Stamford and head to the NYBG for a day of fun adventure and beautiful time of rest, including:

– Private Guided Tour of this year’s Orchid Show
– All-garden pass
– Lunch

– Meditation & Reflection

All for $80, excluding transportation

Our private tour starts at 11:00 am and we’ll need to arrive at the garden no later than 10:45am. Please consider and plan your departure time accordingly! For your convenience, we are also working on providing transportation options; please check back in for any update.

There is still time — reserve your spot TODAY!

gold_register_button1

Thank you for slowing down and pursuing beauty with us. We look forward to seeing you at the NYBG. Remember to wear your comfortable shoes, invite a friend and bring your camera!

Selah,
Christine

Photo Credit: C. Dorvil


“Beauty and grace are performed whether or not we will or sense them.
The least we can do is try to be there.”
— Annie Dillard

SABĂTICA SUPPER: Celebrating Community {12.8.17}

Maybe you’ll be hosting for Thanksgiving or will be traveling to celebrate with family and friends. Either way, the festivities will surely place a demand on your energy and emotions. Perhaps you just need a break. So, how about you join us December 8th for a relaxing yet recharging night in community.

Join us for a special Sabătica Supper centered around celebration.  We will take time to be present, to break bread and celebrate being in community.

This gathering is limited to 14 guests and will be hosted in New Canaan. It is a great opportunity to be in community with friends — old and new — and perhaps to spend a special time with a loved one.  Please mark your calendar, get a sitter and confirm your attendance either by submitting your payment via PayPal to cdorvil@sabatica-llc.com, in cash or by check made to Sabătica by December 1st.

CONTRIBUTION: $30 per person

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Address, directions and menu will be emailed to you after your confirmation is received.

“No one person can fulfill all your needs. But the community can truly hold you. The community can let you experience the fact that, beyond your anguish, there are human hands that hold you and show you God’s faithful love.” –Henri Nouwen

Eucharistia: 30 Days of Gratitude

eucharistia2017 (2)

Eucharistia is the Latin form of the Greek word Eucharist which signifies gratitudethanks or praise offering. It is derived from the word charis which means favorgrace; and related to the Greek word chairein which signifies to rejoice.

Eucharistia is a praise offering — a celebration of the small things, God’s Everyday Grace.

As we begin this month which commemorates Thanksgiving Day, we invite you to use the next 30 days to go a little deeper and to be more intentional with cultivating a life of gratitude. With that in mind, we offer the following practices as a starting point.

During the month of November, we invite you to:

  • gratefully notice God’s presence and gifts throughout the day
  • practice an abundance mentality; counting the blessings of life
  • gratefully give and share all you are and have as a sign of your thankfulness to God
  • express gratitude to others; the habit of saying “thank you,” “I am so grateful,” “you are so kind” and so forth
  • keep a gratitude journal of the myriad gifts God has brought you [*]

As you start to pay attention to your everyday graces and begin to enjoy the fruits of such practices, consider encouraging someone else by sharing your experience on our Instagram or Facebook feed by telling us how you are practicing gratitude and/or what you are thankful for. Please submit your post with the hashtags #30dayEucharistia #Thanksgiving2017 and #Sabătica.

We pray that at the end of the 30 days, you will continue to count your blessings; we pray you will continue to live with a grateful heart.

Sola Gratia,
Christine

*Contributed by Adele Ahlberg Calhoun

Standing With Open Hands…

I laid on the hardwood floor partly praying, mostly surrendering. It had been several months since I had lost my job. I was running out of money and found myself wrestling with the fact that I might need to make certain decisions that left me feeling indignant, embarrassed and feeling like a failure. I laid on the floor after having done all I could; I took a deep breath and opened my hands to God. I was still actively looking for work but that moment, I let it all go – the fear, the shame, even the hope of quickly returning to work. That instant, I gave myself permission to be okay, even if that meant taking a detour; even if I were to lose it all.

Hands-Emergent_Leader_Servant_Leadership

The months of unemployment — my liminal space – served as an incubator for additional character development. During that time, I was reminded of several life-changing truths, including the following:

  • Prayer should come from a place of faith and not of fear – Have your prayers ever sounded like this… “God, I don’t want to face this; please don’t let such and such happen” or “I don’t want to go through that and seem…?” If there is one thing I learned these past few months it is that when our focus is on what we fear the most, our fear becomes our reality. Surrendering requires that we take a stance of faith – in our thoughts, in our prayer, in our actions; for, the fear that consumes us and on which we set our mind will inevitably become true.
  • The experience of loss can be a great litmus test of our faith – A loss may occur on various forms – loss of a job, a house, a relationship, the passing of someone dear — and may generate various degrees of anguish. We may think we know how we would react when faced with such loss or adversity but in reality, we won’t know until we find ourselves in those situations. It is then we will testify of our beliefs and faith. It is in the testing of our knowing that we are awakened to our strengths and to those areas where we are still questioning. It is absolutely normal and important that we should acknowledge our losses and struggles. Yet, just as important, we must be resilient and resolved to grieve them, to push through and to remain anchored to what we know to be true.
  • There is rest in the midst of the storm – That moment on the floor when I consciously decided to relinquish control of the situation, I was overtaken by  a peace that surpassed my understanding. Once again, Abba took on my yoke and my burden became light. And, the days that followed gifted me with a  renewed mind and just as David exclaimed in Psalm 62, I found an inner rest that could have only come from God.

When you face stormy seas, I will be there with you with endurance and calm; you will not be engulfed in raging rivers. If it seems like you’re walking through fire with flames licking at your limbs, keep going; you won’t be burned. Isaiah 43:2 (The Voice)


Is there something in your life for which you need to open your hands? What have you been holding on to that ought to be surrendered? You don’t have to do it alone! There is provision for it all, if only you would open your hands.

In His mercy!
Christine

Gather me to be with you…

O GOD, gather me now to be with you as you are with me.

Soothe my tiredness;
quiet my fretfulness;
curb my aimlessness;
receive my compulsiveness;
let me be easy for a moment.

O LORD, release me from the fears and guilts which grip me so tightly;
from the expectations and opinions which I so tightly grip,
that I may be open to receiving,
to learn something refreshingly different.

O GOD, gather me to be with you as you are with me.
Forgive me for claiming so much for myself
that I leave no room for gratitude;
for confusing exercises in self-importance
with acceptance of self-worth;
for complaining so much of my burdens that I become a burden;
for competing against others so insidiously
that I stifle celebrating them and receiving your blessing
through their gifts.

O GOD, gather me to be with you as you are with me.
Keep me in touch with myself,
with my needs,
my anxieties,
my angers,
my pains,
my corruptions,
that I may claim them as my own
rather than blame them on someone else.

O LORD, deepen my wounds into wisdom;
shape my weakness into compassion;
gentle my envy into enjoyment,
my fear into trust,
my guilt into honesty,
my accusing finger into tickling ones.

O GOD, gather me to be with you as you are with me.

– Ted Loder

Sabătica Supports: Children’s Rescue Mission (CRM) – Honduras

When the Honduras trip was announced in August, I was already a couple of months into my unemployment. My heart jumped at the opportunity but my mind quickly brought me back to my reality. Yet, somehow, I couldn’t shake the desire to join the team. At the core of my interest was an innate love for service and a perpetual response to the great commission but also a strong pull to get away, to see humanity through fresh eyes and to posture myself to encounter the One who never fails to appear and meet me in the field.

img_0039

Not quite sure how to proceed, I decided to attend the first pre-mission meeting. There, I met several of the prospective team members and Miguel Giron, the Founder and Director of the Children’s Rescue Mission, the organization with which we would partner in Honduras. I had already visited CRM’s website and social media platforms but after hearing Miguel share about his work and vision, I was compelled to place a demand on my faith and to take a leap. So, at the end of the meeting, I took an application and what followed was nothing less than a divine intervention  and doors opening for me to get to Honduras.

img_9211

If you’ve ever been on a mission or humanitarian trip, you understand that the group dynamic differs with each team and mission’s purpose. Often, it’s proven to be rather testing to put a group of (often) strangers together for days, sharing assignments, meals, devotionals, rooms. However, this time around, there was no ambiguity; while most members of our team didn’t personally know each other prior to the first meeting, while we probably had our own personal yearning for the trip, it was quite evident that we were divinely selected for the task and intertwined by our personal faith and love for Abba’s people.

img_0569

We each had our own testimony – of how mountains were moved and oceans were parted in order to get to Teupasenti – too many to share in a few paragraphs. However, one of such testimonies of faith that began years before we embarked on the journey and which will continue to unfold and deepen long after we left Honduras was the one lived out by Miguel Giron. By faith, he answered the call to help and bring hope to the people of Teupasenti and other surrounding villages. By faith, he shared his vision and mission to the rest of us. It is also by faith that he keeps doing the work, trusting that needs will be met and that lives will continue to be transformed.

img_1219

The NBCC Missions team which comprised of eight members were in Teupasenti for eight days. We visited and walked through 5 villages, distributed food to and prayed with about 140 families. At the CRM feeding center, we fed scores of elderly one day and a large group of bright eyed, beautiful children another day. We held soccer games in some of the villages, painted nails, made bracelets, flew kites and gave countless hugs.  We had many conversations and had several impromptu encounters that broke our hearts wide open; encounters like the one we had with a little girl named Mariela. We first met her sitting in front of the grocery store where we went food shopping. There was something about her face, so precious yet desolated. Her clothes were dirty and her little feet were bare, covered in dust from walking miles from her home, which we later visited, in search of something to eat. We approached and talked with her for a while. We bought her some popcorn then with permission, walked her to a nearby vendor to get her a pair of shoes. As we were talking with the shop keeper, one of her brothers came over, at which time we found out that they were part of a family of nine. We got them both shoes. It wasn’t part of our “plan” but what follows was a true display of God showing up and inhabiting available vessels to pour out His love on His children.

img_9525

img_9559

img_9565

I was on the side, trying to take a few pictures when I was overtaken by the sight in front of me. Two of my teammates knelt down and selflessly leaned over to wash and clean Mariela’s and her brother’s feet. They didn’t think twice; they didn’t wait until all conditions were right, they used what they had in their backpacks to demonstrate God’s kind of love and start a chain of events that brought transformation to a family.

img_9572

img_9597

img_9632b

These special encounters were many. They were all around the corners, at the town square and even in the four walls of the “Mission” house. We had but a glimpse at all the human and spiritual needs that are ever present in Teupasenti and in the other villages being currently supported by CRM. More than identifying the needs, it was undeniably evident that Miguel Giron and his CRM team could not do it alone. It was clear that they needed ongoing and sustaining help to continue to run their programs which on any given day, touch hundreds of lives, crossing through generations.

img_0075

The primary assignment on this trip was to provide and distribute food and other necessary items to the local villages. We made the round once for each village but CRM does it on an ongoing basis. While preparing for the trip, we also learned and onsite saw for ourselves, that $20 US dollars could sufficiently feed a family of five for a whole week; providing rice, beans, oil, coffee, sugar, pasta, tomato paste, spices and a live chicken, as often included, among other things. $20 US dollars.

img_0103

CRM does more than feeding the hungry; they are anchored in the El Paraiso region as a beacon of hope. They purpose to affect change that lasts and in such pursuit, they invest in the future generation by operating a school that provides academic and vocational training for both the children and their parents. More than rescuing the children from poverty and its byproducts, they expose them to the Arts through music and dance and enable them to dream of a well-rounded life, providing more opportunities for them to later succeed and find fulfillment.

img_0810

CRM is a city on a hill, one that brings light to an entire region with diverse demographics – children, youth, elderly, men, women. As I observed Miguel Giron and his Honduran team, there is no doubt that they do what they do out of love and a genuine desire to improve the life of their compatriots and communities. While impressed and encouraged by their determination, excellent work and faith, I couldn’t help but also notice that the needs are great and their resources limited.

img_0228

By the end of our stay, I felt strongly convicted by the facts and reality of things. So much so that I didn’t want to simply take my personal experience back home, to move onward with my life and close my eyes on what I had witnessed in Honduras. I was being reminded of someone whose humanitarian work I admire and who once said that it was a sacred rite to compassionately witness someone’s desperation and convey that story to people who have the ability to change those circumstances. (A. Judd)

img_0338

The donations we took with us, for which we are all very grateful, came from a wide range of donors linked to our team members or our NBCC family. While our team of eight boarded the plane to Honduras, we took along everyone who contributed to the work we did. Everyone who partnered with us, both in prayer and financially, played a part in changing the circumstances for the families and individuals we met; for Mariela, the little girl covered in dirt who we approached and who, as we recently learned, is now a regular at CRM’s children programs, benefiting from their various services and certainly on her way to  a better future.

img_9955

If you are wondering whether you have the ability to change someone’s life, let me answer with a resounding yes. Understandably, when faced with the extent of such great needs, one cannot help but feel overwhelmed and possibly inadequate to help, but as I know first hand, every little bit helps; and as Mother Theresa once said, we don’t all have to do great things but can do small things with great love. So, as we prepare to begin a new year, as we pray for opportunities to serve, as we think about where to invest our resources, I encourage you to consider CRM and their invaluable ongoing programs [feeding, relief, education, empowerment, among others]. Any gift, big or small, will make tremendous difference and change someone’s circumstances forever.

img_0834

The time spent in Honduras breathed new life into my heart. More than that, I was reminded that regardless of where we are from — nationality, race or social status, we are all fundamentally more alike than we are different. Some may have greater means than others but when we hunger, hurt or rejoice, we all feel the same.

It’s been almost a month since the NBCC team and I returned home. Although we lived in close proximity and walked the same paths for eight days, we each had a very unique experience in Honduras. Nonetheless, we all can attest to the facts that our lives have been changed, that we all left our hearts in Teupasenti and are already looking forward to going back. Perhaps, you can join us next time.

Meanwhile, here is a quick glimpse at our week in Honduras via the the following link:  FLICKR

In His service,
Christine Dorvil


crm-logo

Website: www.crmission.org
Instagram: crmmissionhonduras
Facebook: Children’s Rescue Mission
Please Support: DONATE HERE

Sabătica Fall 2016 – Peace that Endures [Reflections & Pictures]

We are not at peace with others because we are not at peace with ourselves, and we are not at peace with ourselves because we are not at peace with God. –Thomas Merton


As we prayed and began to prepare for this year’s Fall retreat, the word PEACE kept on surfacing. Considering the current state of our cities, nation and world, overtaken by fear and despair, we took it as a clear indication of where our focus ought to be and a confirmation that our gathering needed not only to provide a space for serenity and respite but also to engage in practices that would harness an inner peace that could endure through layers of fear, global chaos and uncertainties. So, for two days we gathered and through selected teachings, various practices, rest and community, we pursued the peace that endures. What ensued was a beautiful lesson and testament of faith — faith to trust and proceed despite obstacles; faith to show up, to be vulnerable and to seek peace with ourselves, with others and with God.

For various reasons, this second Fall retreat was very significant to me, especially for the lessons it brought along. It didn’t go according to the original plan but as it unfolded and as everyone later shared about their experiences to and during the retreat, it was certain that it all transpired just as it was supposed to.

To every soul who attended, to our teachers and helpers who selflessly gave of themselves and to all of you, our friends reading this post, we pray for continued grace and enduring peace.

Here are some of the moments that were captured during the retreat.

img_9584img_9592
img_9596
img_9577


img_9587

img_9594
img_9604
img_9602
img_9564
img_9566

img_9650
img_9612 img_9616

img_9626img_9627img_9633img_9641img_9647
img_9652img_9075img_9072img_9668img_9101
img_9680

img_9108

img_9113img_9123
img_9676img_9607img_9605

img_9144
img_9150
img_9152 img_9153 img_9156 img_9158 img_9159 img_9160 img_9163 img_9169


img_9136img_9078img_9080img_9087img_9093img_9688


img_9682


img_9691

You will keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on you…”
— Isaiah 26:3


Sabătica Fall Retreat: {Peace That Endures}
Date: September 23-24, 2016
Location: Dolce Conference Center, Norwalk, CT
Retreat Leader: Peace That Endures, Lectio Divina, Meditation {Christine Dorvil},
Retreat Teachers: Pilates {Sarina Fiorita}; Painting {Vernice Holmes}; Aromatherapy {Dorota Matys}