Feathers of Hope Study Guide - Sharon Garlough Brown - E-Book

Feathers of Hope Study Guide E-Book

Sharon Garlough Brown

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Beschreibung

Sharon Garlough Brown's novel Feathers of Hope follows Wren Crawford and her great-aunt, Katherine Rhodes, companions in sorrow and hope. As Katherine prepares to retire as the director of the New Hope Retreat Center, she faces personal and professional challenges while Wren takes the next step in her journey with depression by offering compassionate care to the residents of the nursing home where she now works. This eight-week study guide offers an opportunity to reflect on how the experiences of the characters in the novel resonate with your own experience. Daily Scripture readings and reflection questions are accompanied by an invitation to the practice of visio divina (meditating on art) through weekly prompts related to works by Vincent van Gogh. With simple spiritual practices, this guide provides a space for individuals and groups to process Katherine's retreat teaching as well as the themes of Feathers of Hope.

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SHARON GARLOUGH BROWN

Contents

Introduction
Week One: Chapters One Through Four
Week One Group Discussion
Week Two: Chapters Five Through Twelve
Week Two Group Discussion
Week Three: Chapters Thirteen Through Fifteen
Week Three Group Discussion
Week Four: Chapters Sixteen Through Twenty
Week Four Group Discussion
Week Five: Chapters Twenty-One Through Twenty-Seven
Week Five Group Discussion
Week Six: Chapters Twenty-Eight Through Thirty
Week Six Group Discussion
Week Seven: Chapters Thirty Through Thirty-Three
Week Seven Group Discussion
Week Eight: Chapters Thirty-Three Through Thirty-Six
Week Eight Group Discussion
About the Author
More Titles from InterVarsity Press

INTRODUCTION

Feathers of Hope is a book that invites reflection, not only on the retreat content Katherine Rhodes offers but on the journeys the characters make as they seek to respond faithfully to God’s love and grace. Though this study guide is formatted to be completed in eight weeks, I hope you’ll take this journey at an unhurried pace, giving yourself ample time to process, pray, and respond to whatever the Holy Spirit reveals to you.

Each week contains five days of Scripture readings and reflection questions, with a sixth day for review. You’re also invited each week to pray with a painting or sketch by Vincent van Gogh (search online for the listed title, date, and museum location). You can decide whether to read Feathers of Hope first in its entirety and then return to do a slow study with the guide, or to read it a section at a time as you explore the daily questions. Some chapters have multiple days.

I recommend keeping a travelogue of your journey. Even if you aren’t in the habit of using a journal, you’ll benefit from having a record of what you’re noticing as you move forward. Not every question will resonate with you. That’s okay. You don’t need to answer every question every day. But do watch for any impulse to avoid a question because it agitates you or makes you feel uncomfortable. Perhaps that’s the most important one for you to ponder. You may also find that the characters’ journeys tap deep things for you that aren’t addressed in the questions. I encourage you to stay with what stirs you as you reflect and pray.

Some questions and themes are repeated as you journey with the guide, and you may be tempted to say, “I already answered that.” Listen with fresh ears. Is anything new emerging? Shifting? Coming into sharper focus? Use the questions as launching points for your journaling.

Included in the guide are group discussion questions. Though I long for every reader to have the opportunity to share the journey with even one trustworthy traveling companion, I know community can be a challenge both to find and practice well. I encourage you to be brave and invite others to join you in this study.

As you travel with this guide, I hope the characters will become windows and mirrors for seeing yourself and God more clearly. May the Lord direct your steps and give you courage. And may he enlarge your capacity to receive his love, comfort, and grace so you can offer these generous gifts to others.

Peace to you,

Sharon Garlough Brown

May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.

ROMANS 15:13 (NIV)

WEEK ONE

Chapters One Through Four

VISIO DIVINA:WORN OUT (1882, PENCIL ON PAPER, VAN GOGH MUSEUM, AMSTERDAM)

Visio divina (“sacred seeing”) is similar in practice to lectio divina (“sacred reading”). In lectio divina we are invited into a slow and prayerful pondering of Scripture, paying attention to the words or phrases that stir us and lead us into conversation and communion with God. In visio divina we are invited into a slow and prayerful pondering of visual images (paintings, photographs, sculpture, etc.), noticing the details that catch our attention and draw us into conversation and communion with God.

Each week, you can choose when and how often to pray with the art. To begin, find an online image of the work. Then ask God to guide your attention as you look at it. If you are new to the practice of praying with art, you might find the provided reflection prompts helpful.

The weary and bent elderly man, Adrianus Jacobus Zuyderland, lived at the Dutch Reformed Almshouse for Men and Women in The Hague. Vincent made several drawings of Worn Out before creating a lithograph of the work. He later changed the title of the lithograph to At Eternity’s Gate. (If you’re interested in reading how Vincent interpreted this image, visit www.vangoghletters.org and search for letter #288, November 1882.)

Begin by quieting yourself in God’s presence. Then let your gaze rove slowly over the sketch. What words come to mind to describe the mood of the drawing? What memories or feelings are evoked in you as you look at him? Which part of the drawing most captures your attention and invites you to linger? Why? How does this sketch mirror your own life or the lives of those you love?

Speak with God about what is stirred in you as you “read” the painting in prayer. What do you need from God right now?

WEEK ONE: DAY ONE

Chapter One

Scripture Contemplation: 2 Corinthians 5:1-4

For we know that if the earthly tent we live in is destroyed, we have a building from God, a house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens. For in this tent we groan, longing to be clothed with our heavenly dwelling—if indeed, when we have taken it off we will not be found naked. For while we are still in this tent, we groan under our burden, because we wish not to be unclothed but to be further clothed, so that what is mortal may be swallowed up by life.

Read the verses aloud. Which images or promises connect with your life or longings right now? Speak with God about whatever stirs you.

FOR REFLECTION

1. What does this opening chapter reveal about who Wren is? Which of her traits, gifts, or struggles stand out to you? Why?

2. The image of the molting cardinal catches Wren’s attention, both for her own life and for the people she serves. Think about your own experiences of gradual or dramatic loss and change. How does this image speak to you?

3. What would you put in your shadow box? What do these items declare about your passions, history, loved ones, or losses? (If you are participating in a group study, choose an item to bring with you to your meeting.)

4. What evidence of molting do you see in others’ lives? In your local community? In the world? How are you being prompted to pray? Offer your response to God.

WEEK ONE: DAY TWO

Chapter Two

Scripture Contemplation: Matthew 11:28-30

Come to me, all you that are weary and are carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me; for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.

Quiet yourself in God’s presence with a few deep breaths. When you’re ready, open your hands and release to Jesus any weariness or burdens that weigh you down. Keeping your hands open, receive from him the gifts he longs to pour out to you. Throughout the day, open your hands to release burdens and receive Jesus’ rest.

FOR REFLECTION

1. What evidence of molting do you glimpse in Kit’s life? In what ways do you identify with her?

2. What would you place in a file marked “transition”? Consider personal, cultural, and global upheaval and change. Which kinds of transitions are hardest for you to embrace? Why? Speak with God about what you notice.

3. Look at Vincent’s Worn Out sketch. Would you be more like Mara, ready to kiss and encourage the weary man, or like Kit, ready to sit alongside and share the silence with him? What do you need from others when you’re exhausted or despairing?

4. How confident are you in God’s love for you? For others? Is it easier to share God’s love with others or receive it for yourself? Why? Speak with God about any longings or resistance.

WEEK ONE: DAY THREE

Chapter Two

Scripture Contemplation: Isaiah 42:1-4

Here is my servant, whom I uphold,

my chosen, in whom my soul delights;

I have put my spirit upon him;

he will bring forth justice to the nations.

He will not cry or lift up his voice,

or make it heard in the street;

a bruised reed he will not break,

and a dimly burning wick he will not quench;

he will faithfully bring forth justice.

He will not grow faint or be crushed

until he has established justice in the earth;

and the coastlands wait for his teaching.

Slowly read the verses aloud. Which descriptions of the Messiah speak most deeply to you? Why? Speak with God about what you notice.

FOR REFLECTION

1. What kinds of needs or issues are you most passionate about? Why? How have your personal struggles, losses, and hopes shaped your engagement with others, individually and in society?