The center stone of Richmond Hill’s Jerusalem Mile was finally laid on June 13th, 2008. The family of Dabney J. Carr III asked that a fund be established to build the Jerusalem Mile at Richmond Hill in Carr’s name. Dabney Carr was a teacher in the Ruah School of Spiritual Guidance, and also served as a spiritual director for many of the students. The Jerusalem Mile is a fitting tribute to this deeply prayerful man.
The Jerusalem Mile was the name given to some labyrinths used for meditation
and built in the Middle Ages. The concept was that pilgrims who could not make the
journey to Jerusalem during their lifetime could pray and reach Jerusalem in the spirit
by walking this labyrinthine path. Richmond Hill's installation of a copy of the labyrinth at Chartres Cathedral, itself a center for pilgrimages, will be called the Jerusalem Mile in honor of this tradition. This example of the widest accepted prayer labyrinth in the Church has eleven circuits which are spread through four quadrants, and is symbolic of Christ's cross. Grace is symbolized by the never-ending path to the center and back, allowing the pilgrim to walk the path at his own pace, stop for prayer and meditation as needed.
"The labyrinth is not a maze. There are no tricks to it and no dead ends. It has a single
circuitous path that winds into the center. The person walking it uses the same path to
return and the entrance then becomes the exit. The path is in full view, which allows a
person to be quiet and focus internally. Generally there are three stages to the walk:
releasing on the way in, receiving in the center and returning; that is, taking back out into the world that which you have received. There is no right way or wrong way to walk a labyrinth. There are many ways to describe a labyrinth. It is a path of prayer, a walking meditation, a crucible of change, a watering hole for the spirit and a mirror of the soul.”
http://www.veriditas.net/about/labyrinths.html
Summer Camp on the Hill
This Summer, we are inviting eight Metro
Richmond churches to join together to
provide a summer camp for rising third and
fourth graders in four Church Hill
elementary schools. During each week of
a four week session, two ten-person delegations,
one from a predominantly black
church and one from a predominantly
white church, will join together to staff the
camp. To get more information go to the Summer Camp on the Hill page.
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