I go to Pacem in TerrisPacem in Terris (Peace on Earth) is a Hermitage Retreat Center in Isanti, Minnesota, founded in the Franciscan tradition, called to serve God’s people through prayer and by providing the opportunity to retreat into the silence and solitude of a simple hermitage environment. seeking God in solitude and silence in a private cottage in the woods. There are walking trails through the forest and a meadow near a bog-like lake. Retreatants are welcomed by the lush beauties of spring and summer, the brilliant transformations of fall, and the exquisite, silent whiteness of winter.
Everything invites simplicity and a return to essentials. There are electricity and running water in the main retreat house, but only propane gas for heat and lights, an indoor commode, and bottled water in the hermitages.
Each small house is named for a Christian saint and has an attached screened porch furnished with a chair, a footrest, and a table—a place to be in the woods day and night, listening and watching. A large picture window looks out into the forest.
Entering the hermitage, I see a bed, a rocking chair with an afghan, an altar with a cross and icons, a candle and an open Bible, a washing bowl with bottles of water, and linens. Opening the closet, I discover a poncho and an umbrella, a big hat with floating net to protect against insects, a flashlight, coffee, tea, sugar, matches, and cleaning supplies. Someone has prepared everything a hermit/pilgrim needs.
When I arrive, I am given a basket containing two loaves of homemade wheat bread, one date bran muffin, two oranges, two bananas, two apples, and half a pound of Wisconsin cheddar cheese. All can be resupplied with a note left in the mailbox on the front of the hermitage by 1:00 pm. Dinner is available in the main house and includes conversation with other pilgrims/hermits, but I’ve come for solitude.
I’ve gone to Pacem in Terris for twenty years, watching it grow from three hermitages to sixteen individual dwellings and three handicap-accessible hermitages in the main retreat house.
When it’s time for retreat, I pack up my things: Bible, journal, books, drawing or painting materials, knitting, weather-suitable clothes, and a cooler with a few provisions. I begin the retreat as I climb into my car for the hour’s ride into the countryside. I’ve done a lot so far, and now it’s time to let go—to place myself and all that will be into God’s care. I ask God to order my heart and mind and prepare me for these days away—days of opportunity to listen.
Even though I always intend at some level to “let God lead,” this time I was surprised. Part of my long-term pattern is to write in a journal when I’m on retreat. Even though I write often at home, a retreat presents an opportunity to explore more deeply with God—to write prayers and questions and have lengthy written conversations with God on paper—mostly one way. No writing on the wall has appeared yet in my retreat hermitage.
When I reached for my journal, it was as if there were a gentle invitation to let it be—not to write. Could this be God? I wondered. I settled into the rocking chair to look out the picture window . . . no writing. It wasn’t long before I realized this felt like a kind of Sabbath. I was not there to work. I was there to rest. If God wanted to show me anything, I was available to listen. I was surprised by how much “hurry,” “work to do,” and “taking charge” dropped away when I complied. I had not realized how the writing could be a way of taking charge rather than a way of letting go.