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Weekend Retreat: Silence, Nature and Community

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La Diglette, Fourneau Saint Michel, Belgium Fourneau Saint Michel

Weekend MAGIS Retreat: Silence, Nature and Community Treat yourself to a little break… This weekend offers you a space to slow down, pray in silence, reflect and share with other young adults. We will meet in La Diglette, a retreat house nestled in the beautiful woodland of Fourneau Saint Michel (ca. 1,5 hours from Brussels). We will live simply by preparing our meals together, taking turns. Our common language will be English. This weekend is for you if you… feel the need to take a break would like to reflect on your life would like to deepen your faith or reconnect to it you are looking for an introduction to “adult” prayer you feel the need to make a decision You can look forward to… silence and time for yourself, guided and individual prayer sessions with the Bible community experience the possibility of a personal conversation (spiritual accompaniment)   For: Students and young professionals, aged 18–35 years Place to be: La Diglette – La Diglette 1, 6870 Saint-Hubert Co-ordinated by Julia Schwarzer and Daniel Weber SJ. Julia is a postdoctoral researcher in Ancient Church History at KU Leuven; Daniel is a Jesuit and student of Political Science at ULB Brussels. […]

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Photo exhibition: An exploration of Christian places of worship in Belgium

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Chapel for Europe Rue Van Maerlantstraat 22-24, Brussels

Photography exhibition: History, aesthetics and communities. An exploration of Christian places of worship in Belgium. What is a Christian place of worship in Belgium? This exhibition seeks to answer this seemingly simple question. Taking a historical and ecumenical perspective, and examining photographs (reproductions of Belgian churches, monasteries and abbeys) and pieces of liturgical furniture, the exhibition explores the diversity of Christian worship through the spaces that host it. Although Belgium is a country (formerly part of the Netherlands) where religious iconography became confessional at an early stage and was used as a weapon of identity during the Protestant reforms, it has also been the heart of institutional Europe since the mid-20th century, making it a cosmopolitan observatory that is particularly representative of the diversity of Christianity and its churches since the early modern period. In the light of Belgian history, the exhibition questions and analyses the involvement of architectural aesthetics and communities in the definition and fulfillment of Christian worship, from the turmoil of the Reformation (which led to new relationships with space and images of worship among Christians) to the present day, where the aesthetic importance of the place of worship as a building may be diminished or even […]