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The Lakeshore Interfaith Institute.... The Lakeshore Interfaith Institute is an outreach program of Mothers Trust/ Mothers Place, a non-profit 501C (3) religious orderorganization and interfaith community. We strive to cultivate understanding and peace through deepening our spirituality as individuals and as a global community. Interfaith in philosophy and practice, our programs foster spiritual reconciliation and compassionate service; while enriching the intellectual life through scholarly study, experiential learning, and spiritual exploration. The Interfaith Institute, located at Mother’s Trust / Mother’s Place is a community of monastic residents, clergy, dedicated individuals, and an interfaith spiritual community, working together for the common good of people from various faiths, religions and spiritual backgrounds. The Institute maintains a strong commitment to the integrity of each religion and faith tradition, and believes that each can better remain true to itself by honoring the truths inherent in all traditions. The Interfaith Institute believes in the validity of all religions as paths to Truth. We strive to foster the harmony of body, mind and spirit while celebrating the wholeness and oneness of all. Community members welcome all at Mother’s Place and do their best to make it a center to heal, to educate, to transform and to enlighten. What is Monasticism? Monastics are members of a religious organization, who vow to live under strict set of rules requiring moral and spiritual self sacrifice and dedication to the goals of the organization. After successful completion of the organization's training program and probationary period, make a long-term commitment to the organization. At Mothers Place the monastics final vows of Sannyas were given after 14 years of strict training. The sannyasin trustees have been together for 33 years. Monastics normally live together as a part of a community and are held to a significantly stricter level of austerities and private prayers, while participating in activities such as worship services, religious study, care of aging, outreach programs and services, and administration and ministry. Each monastic works or serves on behalf of the religious educational and outreach programs and services of the organization.
What is Interfaith? Interfaith is an expression of spiritual concern and love that serves as a bridge for members of all religions and spiritual teachings to reach out in understanding and communion with each other. Interfaith affirms and supports the underlying goodness of each person and the healing of our planet. Interfaith does not seek to blend or homogenize religions. Rather Interfaith honors the sacredness and uniqueness of each faith and then creates ways by which the many paths can meet on common ground. Differences between various religions and philosophies need not divide and separate but can instead enrich our lives and deepen our capacity to love. Interfaith study and dialogue is a bridge to honor the differences in World Faiths and the Common Ground in Human Dignity and Spirit. One of the many goals of the Lakeshore Interfaith Institute is to create an interfaith community, of monastics, clergy and laity, who celebrate and embrace diversity, while searching for common ground at the heart of the World’s Great Wisdom Traditions. Such a community, we believe, can be a transforming force for human harmony, compassionate service, world peace, the wellness of all creation, and the flourishing of a global civilization with strong spiritual roots. Explore the Sacred Ways of the World's Wisdom Traditions Certification Course 2006 The governing metaphor for our course of study together this year is that of Pilgrimage. Individually and as a community of pilgrims, we will be journeying into the sacred wisdom of the world’s major faith traditions, and into our own sacred center as well. Like pilgrims everywhere, we will do best to travel lightly, leaving behind as many of our assumptions and other kinds of baggage as possible, so that we will be truly open to what wisdom and experiences speak to our hearts and minds. Such an experience has the potential of being formative and transformative on many levels, particularly as we integrate what we are learning into our thinking, imagining, feeling, and living. Each of us will do this in our own unique way, and we will also find that we have much in common as we go on this pilgrimage together. Presentations Our guides will be our visiting faculty and the books we read, along with our own inner spiritual guidance and each other’s wisdom. Each afternoon from 1:30 to 5:00 p.m. our visiting faculty persons will offer a presentation and engage in dialogue with us, concluding with a spiritual practice, ritual, meditation, or something else of their choice from their own tradition and practice. This will give us an experiential encounter with their wisdom tradition, and something we can, if we choose, use ourselves during the coming month of exploration of the tradition that has been presented. We have asked our presenters to respond to the following questions as part of their presentation. We will be alert to how they do this, and follow up with our own questions, insights, etc. The Questions given to our Visiting Faculty are: 1) What are the most important teachings and practices of your tradition? 2) How does your spiritual tradition impact your culture with regard to rites of passage i.e. birth, death, coming of age, marriage etc.? 3) How does your tradition honor women and the feminine in Divinity? 4) How does your tradition treat the distribution of gender roles and the education of young people? 5) Are there sacred texts, prayers, music, art, or spiritual practices which you would want to share with us and have us explore for our spiritual growth and deeper understanding of your tradition? |
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Interfaith Pilgrimage and Sacred Tour to Chicago: (a favorite of students of the Institute!) For six months, students will have met together, sharing insights, dreams, visions and studies. Now they will retreat together for closer bonding, spending a few days together visiting the holy places of many faiths and sharing insights with practitioners of these faiths. This pilgrimage to sacred places in Chicago is a wonderful opportunity to put newly acquired interfaith skills into actual practice. We will be visiting Temple, Synagogue, Basilica, and Mosque and be able to savor, first hand, the unique ambience and cultural mystique of the traditions we have studied on a more academic level. We will be able to interact with practitioners of different faiths on their own cultural ground, and participate in worship services and meditations of many of these traditions. In past years we have taken part in the Holy Eucharist at a Greek Orthodox basilica, a Shabbas service at a synagogue and have toured a Zoroastrian Temple. These opportunities lend a profound depth of experience to our already ambitious interfaith journey. Sharing the lovely home of our hosts, Mr.Jogi and Mrs. Indra Makhija, trustees of Mothers Trust/Mothers Place and Friends of Mothers Trust, we will have the chance to eat, talk, laugh, pray, and meditate together over this joyous weekend and life time wonder! Students should also know, there will be a Sacred Pilgrimage to India, this year as well--
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Reading List: LakeShore Interfaith Institute World Wisdom Course: 2006 (throughout the course): 1. Religions of the World: Huston Smith 2. The Worlds Wisdom: Sacred Texts of the World Religions: Philip Novak 3. The Mystic Heart: Discovering a Universal Spirituality in the Worlds Religions: Wayne Teasdale *These three books will be used throughout as base texts
NATIVE AMERICAN SPIRITUALITY 1. Black Elk Speaks: John Niehardt 2. Spirits of the Earth ( Guide to the Native American Nature Symbols, Stories and ceremonies) Bobby Lake-Thom 3. The Sacred Tree (Reflections on Native American Spirituality) Isbn 0-941524-58-2 4. The Way of the Earth: T. C. Mcluhan 5. The Earth Shall Weep: James Wilson 6. The Mishomis Book: Edward Benton-Banai 7. A little Matter of Genocide: Ward Churchill 8. American Holocaust: Stannard
HINDUISM --VEDANTA 1. Srimad Bhagavad Gita Swami Tapasyananda isbn 81-7120-094-X 2. The Upanishads: Christopher Isherwood; *Primary scripture of Hinduism 3. The Cosmic Revelation (The Hindu Way to God) Bede Griffiths 4. The Spiritual Heritage of India Swami Prabhavananda ISBN 87481-022-1 5. Inspired Talks Swami Vivekananda 6. The Living Goddess: Linda Johnsen (Mythology) 7. The Ramayana: retold by Krishna Dharma; also William Buck rendition (Epic) 8. The Mahabharata: retold by Krishna Dharma; also William Buck rendition (Epic)
TAOISM: 1. The Tao of the Tao Te Ching (Translation and Commentary)* Michael LaFargue 2. The Way of Chuan Tzu: translated by Thomas Merton* *Primary Scripture of the Taoist tradition 3. The Shambala Guide to TAOISM (ancient Chinese Spiritual tradition) Eva Wong ISBN 1-57062-169-1 4. The Taoist Experience (Anthology) Livia Kohn, editor 5. Wen Tzu (Understanding the Mysteries--Further teachings of Lao Tzu) Thomas Cleary, translator 6. The Tao of Pooh; The Te of Piglet: Benjamin Hoff (Taoism Lite)
JUDAISM 1. The Holy Bible: (Tanakh--the Hebrew Scriptures) 2. Jewish Literacy: Rabbi Joseph Telushkin 3. The Messianic Idea in Judaism : And Other Essays on Jewish Spirituality : Gershom Scholem 4. Kabbalah by Gershom Scholem 5. Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism: Gershom Scholem 6. Living Judaism (the complete guide to Jewish Belief, Tradition and Practice) Rabbi Wayne Dosic 7. A Jewish Theology: Louis Jacobs 8. What Do Jews Believe: David Ariel 9. The Story of God: Karen Armstrong
BUDDHISM 1. The Dhammapada Eknath Easwaran ISBN 0-915132-37-0 *Primary Scripture 2. Kindness, Clarity and Insight His Holiness Tensin Gyatso --The Fourteenth Dalai Lama -- ISBN 0-937938 3. The Heart of the Buddhas Teaching Thich Nhat Hanh ISBN 0-938077-81-3 3. Old Path, White Clouds Thich Nhat Hanh ISBN 0-938077-26-0 4. Buddha: Karen Armstrong
CHRISTIANITY 1. The Bible (New American; Revised Standard, or New RSV editions ----Study Bible with commentaries useful 2. Christ of the 21st Century: Ewert H. Cousins 3. The Historical Jesus--The Life of a Mediterranean Jewish Peasant John Dominic Crossan ISBN 0-06-061629-6 4. Meeting Jesus Again for the First Time: Marcus Borg 5. Second Simplicity: Bruno Barnhart 6. The Inner Eye of Love: William Johnston, S.J. 7. The History of God: Karen Armstrong 8. The Gnostic Gospels: Elaine Pagels
ISLAM 1. The Qur’an (Koran) many translations and commentaries available *Primary Scripture 2. Islam: Karen Armstrong 3. Major Themes of the Koran: Fazlur Rahman 4. The Essential Rumi (Introduction by Huston Smith) Coleman Barks -- translator ISBN 0-965-064871 5. The Essential Sufism: James Fadiman and Robert Frager 6. The Sufis: Idries Shah 7. Islamic Spirituality Foundations: Crossroads Press 8. The Heart of the Koran: Lex Hixon 9. What Everyone Should Know about Islam and Muslims: Suzanne Haneef 10 The History of God: Karen Armstrong
COSMOLOGY 1. The Universe is a Green Dragon: Brian Swimme 2. The Mind Paradigm: Keith Chandler 3. Earth Dance: Elizabeth Sahtouris 4. Masks of the Universe: Changing Ideas on the Nature of the Cosmos Edward Harrison 5. The Elegant Universe: Brian Greene 6. The Hole in the Universe: K.C. Cole ***Presenters in each module will also recommend reading material for that module. |