Quiet Spaces: May-August 2013: A Creative Response to God's Love

Quiet Spaces: May-August 2013: A Creative Response to God's Love

by SallySmith (Editor)

Synopsis

Taking you into quiet spaces to meet with God...Published three times a year, each issue of Quiet Spaces provides four months' worth of inspiration for your quiet time, presented in fortnightly sections. This material can be used in daily portions throughout the week or all in one sitting as a 'quiet day', perhaps at the weekend. Within each section there are twelve elements comprising reflections inspired by different traditions, creative activities, liturgy, Bible reading and ideas for meditation. Also included is a chapter taken from As a Child by Phil Steer, which explores Jesus' words about becoming like little children and what this means for our faith journey. The Editor writes Welcome to the new-look Quiet Spaces. I hope it will help you in your spiritual journey. We have nine themes in this issue, each with material for two weeks. In choosing the themes, I have tried to bring a mixture of Bible-based material, classic writers on prayer, and the themes Quiet Spaces has been so good at exploring in the past. Our aim has been to provide variety in the themes we cover and in the approaches to those themes, so that everyone will find both the comfortable and the challenging, and through what you read, think, pray and experience you will find God, or, more likely, God will find you. How you use the material provided here is up to you. I would encourage you to be creative. Some may like to take one element of a theme each day, and for those who do that, we have built in a day 'off' each week, for doing something else, catching up on missed days, or revisiting something that has caught your attention. Some elements could take more than one session and you might feel it right to come back and finish them another day. You might need to look through before you start and plan your time as some elements will take longer than others. Some of you might have a longer period or even a whole day and be able to create your own Quiet Day at home using it; others may join with a few friends each week and use two or three elements together. For everyone I would say, pick the parts that draw you closer to God; sometimes this will be things that are familiar, other times it may involve trying something new, which can feel unsafe and scary. Place yourself in God's loving arms and allow him to be present to you in your prayer time. You may already have a particular quiet space at home where you pray. This can be a haven to turn to amid the busyness of life, and its stability can make entering into God's presence easier as it becomes part of the routine of the day. Or God can find us in the unexpected places, surprising us in daily life. We just need to be ready to hear and experience his voice. My main message to you as we start is that you have permission to use this resource in any way that draws you closer to God, as he invites you to come away to a quiet space with him. Sally Smith top: Back to top=top; In this issue: Jesus and prayer; Sally Smith 29 April-12; May Trinity: the power of three Helen Jaeger 13-26 May; Travelling with Daniel Cavan Wood 27 May-9 June; Grace Tony Horsfall 10-23 June; Pilgrimage Sally Welch 24 June-7 July; Parables Andrea Skevington 76 8-21 July; God's creation Sally Smith 22 July-4 August; God's love Claire Musters 5-18 August; Transformed by the Beloved Daniel Munoz 19 August-1 September; and, As a Child: Greatest Phil Steer top: Back to top=top. About the writers in this issue Sally Smith enjoys creating spaces that enable encounter with God through leading Quiet Days and creating prayer corners and stations. She has led prayer groups in her local church, works as a spiritual director and writes and produces education materials. Helen Jaeger is the internationally published author of five books: Paths Through Grief, As Night Falls, As Day Dawns, A Treasury of Wisdom (all Lion Hudson) and Simple (Scripture Union). She writes regularly for a variety of publications, including Woman Alive and for charities. Cavan Wood is a reader in the Church of England and a Head of RE in a Sussex school. He is married to Sarah and they have two children. He is interested in music, politics and cinema. He is the author of a number of books and articles connected with RE. Tony Horsfall is a freelance trainer and retreat leader based in Yorkshire, with his own ministry, Charis Training. He is an elder of Ackworth Community Church and has written several books for BRF, including Working from a Place of Rest, Rhythms of Grace, and most recently Servant Ministry. Sally Welch is a priest who lives and works in the centre of Oxford, working with families and young children in church. She is a writer and lecturer on spirituality, and is particularly interested in pilgrimage and labyrinths. She has made many pilgrimages both in England and in Europe. Andrea Skevington lives in Suffolk with her family. She writes for both adults and children, recently winning the Christian Book of the Year award (Speaking Volumes) for her retelling The Lion Classic Bible. She also enjoys storytelling for children and running creative writing seminars for adults. Claire Musters is a freelance writer and editor, mother of two, pastor's wife and school governor. Claire's desire is to help others draw closer to God through her writing, which focuses on marriage, parenting, worship and issues facing women today. Daniel Munoz is an Anglican priest based in Andalucia, Spain. Since 2010 he has been programme director and chaplain to the Los Olivos retreat centre near Granada. He has a special interest in Christian art and spirituality, particularly in the Christian mystic John of the Cross.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 144
Publisher: BRF (The Bible Reading Fellowship)
Published: 01 Mar 2013

ISBN 10: 0857460951
ISBN 13: 9780857460950

Media Reviews
I warmly commend Quiet Spaces to all who want to live deeply with God. Tony Horsfall I'm very glad to endorse the newly formatted Quiet Spaces resource from BRF, as it is nothing short of amazing in its breadth and depth. Following an overall theme each fortnight e.g. God's Creation, it uses prayer and poetry, psalms and liturgy, creative and practical spiritual exercises through imagination and art, story and meditations as well as retreat reflections, all as different ways to respond to and engage with the overall fortnightly theme for as much or as little as you are able. Never has the BRF motto of 'resourcing your spiritual journey' been so apt. Revd Trevor Miller, Northumbria Community Overseer
Author Bio
Sally Smith is a spiritual director in Southwell and Nottingham diocese, where she also leads quiet days for local and neighbouring churches and is part of a deanery group exploring spirituality outside the church. She was previously Resource Development Manager at the Stapleford Centre, and has a Diploma in Theological and Pastoral Studies.