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Archive for the ‘Walk to Emmaus’

Loyola University Removes Crucifix from Ressurection Center after Transformation to a “Retreat and Ecology Campus”

April 22, 2012 By: Cal Skinner Category: Bull Valley, Crucifix, Cursillo, Loyola University, Loyola University Retreat and Ecology Campus, Ressurection Center, Walk to Emmaus

The crucifix and alter that used to hand in the Chapel at Resurrection Center in Bull Valley. Neither are there now.

Resurrection Center in Bull Valley ran into trouble after state-backed borrowing to build an addition.

The Catholic order that owned it put it up for sale.

After several missteps, Loyola University purchased the property.

It was re-named the Loyola University Retreat and Ecology Campus.

This is the location that the Northern Illinois Emmaus community used to hold its Thursday evening through Sunday afternoon short courses in Christianity.

Based on the Catholic short course called Cursillo. the Walk to Emmaus is sponsored by the Methodist Church, but thoroughly ecumenical.

This weekend and next weekend the Emmaus community is again holding retreats out in Bull Valley.

But, there is a significant change in the chapel.

The crucifix is gone.

Replacing the crucified Christ hanging from the ceiling is a small cross at chest height affixed to the center back wall which would be appropriate for any Protestant church.

Not a crucifix.

Just a cross.

I’ll admit that some Protestants attending retreats at Resurrection Center had problems with worshiping in a chapel with a crucifix, but, considering the weekend’s theme is God’s love for us in sending his son to sacrifice himself for our sins, most overcame any original trepidation.

At Saturday night’s Emmaus service, this Methodist has to admit to missing the representation of Jesus on the cross.

Message of the Day – A Tee Shirt

November 21, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: Message of the Day, Moses, Parting the Waters, T-Shirt, Tee Shirt, Walk to Emmaus

Who says Christians don't have a sense of humor?

I found this tee shirt on a Walk to Emmaus training session.

It shows Moses as a child sitting in a plastic kiddy pool parting the waters.

Message of the Day – A Tee Shirt

October 03, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: Message of the Day, T-Shirt, Tee Shirt, Walk to Emmaus

Yesterday at our Walk to Emmaus training session, I saw this tee shirt worn by a Popular Grove man. it’s message and layout were different enough to catch my eye.
The front says,

“Talk. Learn. Do. Rethink Church.org.”

The back is filled with words associated with Christianity.

Right on top is one of my favorites, “Justice.”

Others include

  • What
  • If
  • We
  • Return
  • Church?
  • Building
  • Action
  • Neighbors
  • Minds
  • Hearts
  • Serve
  • Give
  • Relevant
  • Community
  • Christ
  • Impact
  • Jesus
  • Hope
  • Change
  • Love
  • Do
  • Outbound

The United Methodist Church printed it.

Crystal Lake’s Job

August 15, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: Bible, Devil, God, Thomas Burleson, Walk to Emmaus

The oldest book in the Bible is said to be Job.

Job is a faithful servant of God.

The Devil cuts a deal with God to allow him to do anything in order pry Job away from God.

God is so confident in Job’s faithfulness that he allows the test.

Everything is taken from Job.

His family, his riches, his reputation.

Last Sunday, the Chicago Sun-Times featured the Lakemoor tragedy of Thomas Burleson as its front page story.

The front page of the Chicago Sun-Times, August 8, 2010.

The words of the Centegra emergency room doctor to him start the story:

Thomas,
I’m Sorry,
Your Family
Has Been Killed

That was August 21, 1999, the day that a drunk McHenry man named Walter Depner, drove across the median strip on Route 120 and totaled not only Burleson’s Volkswagen Microbus, but his life.

Although the Burleson family attended our First United Methodist Church of Crystal Lake, I think they went to an earlier service.

I read about the tragedy, of course, but didn’t make a person connection until I heard him give a practice Walk to Emmaus talk in our Wesley Hall. I was on the team, but can’t remember my role.

I sensed Burleson had given the talk or one similar to it before, because he made it through better than I made it through Chicago Sun-Times reporter Stefano Exposito’s story last week.

Not having touched base with Burleson recently, I don’t know if he has carried through on his seminary studies, but it is clear that God has blessed him with a new family and continued supportive friends.

He undoubtedly would object to my comparing him to Job, but I think it is something of a fit.

But, the last sentence of the story, concerning endurance, are

“I think I’m more joyful than happy.”

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If you are interested in more information on attending a Walk to Emmaus weekend, just drop me an email. The next one is the weekend after the election.

Bull Valley’s Resurrection Center to Remain Retreat

May 26, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: Loyola University, McHenry County Conservation District, Resurrection Center, Walk to Emmaus

Resurrection Center

The Daily Herald reveals that Resurrection Center is being purchased by Chicago’s Loyola University.

The purchase allows Loyola to establish a beachhead in the sixth largest county in Illinois.

The price for the 98 acres, zoned by the McHenry County Board as a senior retirement community, is reported to be $6.4 million.

The new name will be “Loyola University Chicago Retreat and Ecology Campus.”

Not only the biology department will benefit use the property, so will its Center for Urban Environmental Research and Policy.

And, Loyola plans to make an impact on those of us who live in McHenry County.  That’s what the following press release says:

Loyola University Chicago Purchases

Resurrection Retreat Center in McHenry County, Illinois
Acquisition to Benefit Students Academically and Spiritually

CHICAGO, May 25, 2010 — Loyola University Chicago, the nation’s largest Jesuit, Catholic university, announced today that it has purchased the 98-acre Resurrection Retreat Center located at 2710 South Country Club Road in Woodstock, Illinois, from the Congregation of the Resurrection.

Buildings seen from afar.

The retreat center, which the University plans to name the Loyola University Chicago Retreat and Ecology Campus, will be used for a number of different purposes and features 100 guest rooms, a chapel, a full-service dining area, and meeting space.

The acquisition of the retreat center will allow the University to expand its student retreat programs, which currently only accommodate a small portion of first-year students.

The Chapel at Resurrection Center.

In addition to plans to offer retreat opportunities to all first-year students, the University also plans to introduce retreat-program opportunities for sophomores, juniors, and seniors as well.

“Making the University a sanctuary for self-reflection is an important part of the University’s strategic plan,” said Robert Kelly, vice president for student development.

”Offering retreats allows us to provide a significant experience for our students. Building a strong tradition of retreats geared towards their developmental needs supports the spirit and principles of a transformative education and will enable us to provide a premier undergraduate experience unmatched by any other Jesuit college and university.”

The University also plans to use the center to introduce an Outdoor Adventure Program.  The program will

  • provide students, faculty, and staff with opportunities to experience outdoor activities that are designed to promote positive lifetime skills and leadership development;
  • encourage personal and interpersonal development; and
  • increase environmental awareness by providing high-quality leisure education, outdoor, educational, and experiential programs.

On the academic side, the University’s biology department and Center for Urban Environmental Research and Policy (CUERP) will also benefit from the purchase.

With 20 acres of natural habitat that includes ponds, streams, woods, and prairie land, the property offers a unique learning opportunity for students and faculty interested in the sciences.

Students enrolled in classes like ecology, environmental sciences, wetlands biology, conservation biology, restoration biology, and others will have the opportunity to conduct field research on the land and work with the McHenry County Conservation District to restore the natural habitat.

This fall, CUERP will conduct a field course with students designing, planting, and maintaining an organic garden on the grounds, with intent to expand into a small sustainable farm that students, as well as local community members, will participate in.

Long term, the University would like to offer courses for the community on making compost, permaculture, bee keeping, seed collecting, and organic gardening.

”This acquisition makes a lot of sense for our University, and we are thrilled that we had the opportunity to make this land a part of Loyola University Chicago,” said Wayne Magdziarz, vice president of capital planning. ”Our students, whether through retreat opportunities or field research, will clearly benefit from this new space.”

The University also plans to make the retreat center available to external groups and organizations in the future. More information will be available when the University officially opens the center this fall.

About the Resurrection Retreat Center

Originally built in the 1970s as a novitiate for the Congregation of the Resurrection, the building was later converted to a retreat center in the 1980s by the Congregation. After adding an additional wing and 50 rooms to the center in the early 2000s, the retreat center eventually closed in 2009.

About Loyola University Chicago

Committed to preparing people to lead extraordinary lives, Loyola University Chicago, founded in 1870, is the nation’s largest Jesuit, Catholic university. Enrollment is more than 15,800 students, which includes more than 10,000 undergraduates hailing from all 50 states and 82 countries. The University has four campuses: three in the greater Chicago area and one in Rome, Italy. Loyola also serves as the U.S. host university to The Beijing Center for Chinese Studies in Beijing, China. Loyola’s 10 schools and colleges include arts and sciences, business administration, communication, education, graduate studies, law, medicine, nursing, continuing and professional studies, and social work. Loyola offers 71 undergraduate majors, 71 undergraduate minors, 85 master’s degrees, and 31 doctoral degrees. Loyola is consistently ranked among the top national universities by U.S.News & World Report, and the University was named a best value in its 2010 rankings. In addition, Loyola is among a select group of universities recognized for community service and engagement by prestigious national organizations, such as the Carnegie Foundation and the Corporation for National and Community Service. For more information about Loyola, please visit LUC.edu.

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I am particularly excited about this turn of events because it raises the possibility that the Walk to Emmaus retreats could return to Resurrection Center.

Quiet Pleasures on Crystal Lake

May 31, 2009 By: Cal Skinner Category: Crystal Lake, Fisherman, Fishing, Gate 3, Gate 7, Rowing, Walk to Emmaus

Yesterday about 7:20 I drove on Lakewood’s South Shore Drive to Andy’s Family Restaurant for my Walk to Emmaus reunion group.

I saw women practicing rowing on the quiet waters off of Beach 7.

Off Gate 3 Beach were two fishermen casting.

Two reasons besides the water itself I like living near Crystal Lake.

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Men’s and women’s Walks to Emmaus are coming up. There are basically short courses in Christianity. They run from Thursday night to late Sunday afternoon.

In Barrington a Men’s Walk will be held June 11-14 and a Women’s Walk June 18-21.

In Plano there will be a Men’s Walk from Sept. 17-20, followed by a Women’s Walk from October 1-4.

Drop me a line, if you are interested. The email button is on the lower right hand side of the page.

Other articles about Walks to Emmaus:

From ”Head to Heart”

When God’s Messenger Came To My Door (As a Carpenter, No Less)

Of Jonah and God

Weekend at Resurrection Center

The Carpenter’s Helpers

“Detention for Jesus” – Making High School Kids Strong for Christ

Hannah Beardsley Middle School Principal Ron Ludwig Reaches Out to Fellow Christians to Help Crystal Lake Kids

Message of the Day – A “De Colores” Bumper Sticker

Message of the Day – Irregular

April 13, 2009 By: Cal Skinner Category: Choir, Emmaus Reuion Group, First United Methodist Church, Irregular, Katrina Jackson, Message of the Day, Walk to Emmaus, Wave

It was before the Maundy Thursday night service at the First United Methodist Church of Crystal Lake.

I was taking pictures of the choir, which was scheduled to sing five songs during the service.

Why my Andy’s Family Restaurant Emmaus Reunion Group buddy Rick Dunn saw what I was doing, he couldn’t resist reacting.

So, we have the irregular photo of the Celebration Singer, which Katrina Jackson conducts.

It looks as if Dunn is trying to start a wave among choir members, but they didn’t follow his example. I guess it helps to be in the front row if that’s what you want to do.

Below is the choir with all of its members being regular, singing

“How Great Is Our Lord.”

Click to enlarge any photo.

Message of the Day – A Tee Shirt

April 01, 2009 By: Cal Skinner Category: Dog, Emmaus Reunion Group, Message of the Day, Passing Gas, Walk to Emmaus

I saw this tee shirt at Andy’s Family Restaurant at my Saturday morning Emmaus Reunion group.

It has a dog passing gas.

It says,

BLAME THE DOG

Not surprisingly, it was worn by a man. I HAD to go out to the car and get my camera.

Resurrection Center Days as Retreat Center Numbered

June 15, 2008 By: Cal Skinner Category: Jim Ivers, Resurrection Center, Walk to Emmaus

Long-time Bull Valley retreat center Resurrection Center is closing up shop as we know it.

Four years ago, the organization borrowed $5 million to build more modern overnight facilities. It was more like a motel and less like a college dormitory. The dining and meeting rooms were also enlarged substantially.

The debt load has proven to be unmanageable for the Country Club Road retreat center.

Most of my experience with the facility has been with the Walk to Emmaus, a three-day interdenominational short course in Christianity sponsored by an evangelical part of the Methodist Church.

My introduction to its chapel was when newly-installed Rockford Bishop Thomas Doran came to Bull Valley to give one of my Desmond nieces first communion.

When I heard that our group would not be able to hold our fall retreat there, I called Director Jim Ivers and asked for details.

“We had expanded our facility (for) about $5 million,” Ivers said, “and we have tried to increase our occupancy over the last four years.

“We have not been able to get it to the place where we can handle the debt.

“The debt service is about $35,000 and our revenue has only been able to cover our operating expenses.

“So, he continued, “the Congregation of the Resurrection, our owners, is doing a feasibility study of what they might be able to do with the property and the building.”

What are they looking at?

“They are looking at faith-based senior living, condominiums, apartments. That planning is happening at levels above myself.

“No more conferences,” Ivers said. “Whether we will be able to do day events once the rennovations are completed, that’s one of the things we are looking to do. We won’t have any overnight accommodations.

“We are also looking at whether we can do retreat programs at other churches, schools, other retreat centers.”

Currently, the organization serves off-site retreats. It hopes to expand in that direction.

The $5 million in “bonds was issued with a banking organization,” Ivers said.

They have not fallen behind in their payments.

“It was a place where young men would spend a year in prayer and study,” Ivers told me.

“September 21st will be our last day,” he said.

The public can get a look at the facility at the Pro-Life Victory PAC pig roast on

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The picture of Resurrection Center’s Chapel was taken just after sunrise.

Resurrection Center Days as Retreat Center Numbered

June 14, 2008 By: Cal Skinner Category: Jim Ivers, Resurrection Center, Walk to Emmaus

Long-time Bull Valley retreat center Resurrection Center is closing up shop as we know it.

Four years ago, the organization borrowed $5 million to build more modern overnight facilities. It was more like a motel and less like a college dormitory. The dining and meeting rooms were also enlarged substantially.

The debt load has proven to be unmanageable for the Country Club Road retreat center.

Most of my experience with the facility has been with the Walk to Emmaus, a three-day interdenominational short course in Christianity sponsored by an evangelical part of the Methodist Church.

My introduction to its chapel was when newly-installed Rockford Bishop Thomas Doran came to Bull Valley to give one of my Desmond nieces first communion.

When I heard that our group would not be able to hold our fall retreat there, I called Director Jim Ivers and asked for details.

“We had expanded our facility (for) about $5 million,” Ivers said, “and we have tried to increase our occupancy over the last four years.

“We have not been able to get it to the place where we can handle the debt.

“The debt service is about $35,000 and our revenue has only been able to cover our operating expenses.

“So, he continued, “the Congregation of the Resurrection, our owners, is doing a feasibility study of what they might be able to do with the property and the building.”

What are they looking at?

“They are looking at faith-based senior living, condominiums, apartments. That planning is happening at levels above myself.

“No more conferences,” Ivers said. “Whether we will be able to do day events once the rennovations are completed, that’s one of the things we are looking to do. We won’t have any overnight accommodations.

“We are also looking at whether we can do retreat programs at other churches, schools, other retreat centers.”

Currently, the organization serves off-site retreats. It hopes to expand in that direction.

The $5 million in “bonds was issued with a banking organization,” Ivers said.

They have not fallen behind in their payments.

“It was a place where young men would spend a year in prayer and study,” Ivers told me.

“September 21st will be our last day,” he said.

The public can get a look at the facility at the Pro-Life Victory PAC pig roast on

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The picture of Resurrection Center’s Chapel was taken just after sunrise.