Recipe for a Teen Retreat

By Mary Ann Bulko

The retreat described below has several purposes:

  1. 1. It is a regional retreat designed to bring together young people from many parishes, who could be reasonable expected to continue their friendships established at such a gathering.
  2. 2. The retreat is organized as part of a regular parish schedule. This involves adults and families in a given parish, enabling them to be actively involved in the retreat. The retreat participants are integrated into a normal parish situation, the are away of their individual and corporate responsibility to thier hosts, and they contribute to the ongoing liturgical life of a real community.
  3. 3. This format minimizes costs to participants (no facilities to rent) and therefore becomes viable for famlilies of limited financial means. It does, however, mean that the sponsoring parish must be prepared to extend its hospitality and provide willing organizers and just plain hard workers!

Ingredients:

  • a bunch of fresh (ripe that is) youth
  • a dash of adults to co-ordinate and oversee
  • a handful of cooks
  • a measure of housing hosts (proportionate to number of youth—e.g.: 3 to k youths per host)
  • a well-seasoned priest and parish
  • lots of love, patience, and desire for wholesome Christian fellowship

Preparation

At least two months in advance:

  • Step 1: Form a Teen Retreat Committee
  • Selected a day. Three days is a good retreat length because it gives an opportunity for settling into new surroundings and helps make new acquaintances easier.

Six to eight weeks before:

  • Step 2: Plan a theme
  • eg: 'Tomorrow,' 'Scriptures,' 'Growing Up.' Draw up an agenda of activities. A rough agenda should be prepared for the intial mailing, but can be more defined as details are worked out.

If you have a three-day retreat, the agenda may look like this:

Friday, (date) Saturday, (date) Sunday, (date)
6.00 pm - Registration 9.00 am - Morning prayer 9.30 am - Divine Liturgy
7.00 pm - Dinner
Breakfast
Breakfast
8.30 pm - Welcoming and theme
Main session on theme & topic
Closing remarks
9.00 pm - Party 1.00 pm - Lunch

1.00 pm - Departure

 
Afternoon outing
 
 

5.00 pm - Choir rehearsal

 
 
Dinner
 
 
Vespers & confession
 
 
Evening Session II
 
 
Fellowship
 

(Planning a choir practice as part of the weekend's events is very important. Teens should actively participate in the liturgical worship.)

Determine a cost per teen.

We requested $14 per person in 1982, which included five meals prepared at the parish hall, mailings, and admission to an ice skating rink. Expenses were adequately coverd by this amount with a small surplus left over which was donated to a youth-work related charity house in New York City. (Once you have an idea of the number of participants, you can plan financial arragements. Parishes, dioceses, or individuals can pay additional expenses incurred. This is left to the discretion of the co-ordinators. Some parishes paid full expenses for their particular retreat participants.)

Make a list of necessities the teens will have to bring with them.

e.g.: Sleeping bags, pillows, skates, Bibles, etc

At the same time

  • Step 3: Organize the publicity.
  • Make it known that you plan to host a Teen Retreat. Plan to contact each parish in your deanery/diocese, depending on how large a scale you are planning to encompass. Establish a personal mailing list of teens' names and addresses. Then contact each of them individually and directly. The list can be complied from local camp lists, other priests' lists, or from the old 'grapevine.' Request an RSVP for a week before teh event and a fee deposit in order to assure commitment and to make food purchases in advance. Additional time may be needed if reservations must be made for a particular activity, eg rental of a skating rink.
  • Include in your initial mailing the following:
    • Announcement of retreat and theme
    • Time, date, place, and cost
    • RSVP forms with deposit required
    • Agenda of activities and necessities to bring along
    • Medical form in case of illnesss/accident
  • Three to four weeks before.

    • Step 4: Begin to contact parishioners to volunteer as hosts for the teens or as cooks. Firm-up your agenda, making sure that leadership roles are clear, any printed materials are being taken care of, and that special activity reservations are made. Activities may include skating, visit to a museum or historical site, hiking, or a sports activity.

    A week before.

    • Step 5: After RSPVs are received, plan your housing arrangements and set times for pick-up and delivery of teens by your parishioners. ALl meals are more conveniently served at the church hall and homes are needed only for sleep and shoewrs, with some time alllowed for fellowship as well. (Parishioners might be more receptive and flexible if their obligation is not too demanding!).

    At the retreat.

    • Step 6: Work scedules can be arranged for the teens themselves to help in setting-up for meals and clean-up afterwords. (With some teens towering at six feet today, they certainly are capable of helping with the work.)

    Finally.

    • Mix gently worship, teaching, discussion, food, fellowship, and fun. You will have a deliciously successful retreat!!

    Mary Ann Bulko is a frequent contributor to The Orthodox Church newspaper, a member of the Section on Youth Ministry, Department of Stewardship and Lay Ministries, and lives in Poughkeepsie, New York.

    Taken from the OCA Resource Handbook for Lay Ministries