The 250-acre church nurturing faith and free spirits in the foothills of Pennsylvania
In its 300-year history as go-to haven for religions on the run the Quakers, the Amish, the Huguenots it is unlikely that Pennsylvania has attracted a community as colorful, and spiritually diverse, as the Four Quarters Interfaith Sanctuary.
Hidden in the states southern foothills, the sanctuary bills itself as a safe and sacred ceremonial space for the modern practice of ancient religion. An eclectic, 250-acre oasis, it includes a Native American Sweat Lodge, drum and dance circle, hilltop labyrinth, dozens of altars for worship and hundreds of campsites. And at its spiritual center, the Alleghenys answer to Stonehenge 47 multi-ton stones semi-circling an open-air altar. The stones were all raised by hand and are still growing by two stones a year thanks to a three-day, sweat-filled, community-wide tug of war called Stones Rising.
There are a half-dozen or so full-time residents of the sanctuary who live under monastic vows of poverty and service, but their community of support swells into the hundreds for their many Earth-religious ceremonies, such as Beltaine, Samhain and Yule. Though the variety of faiths on display at Four Quarters can appear disparate members religious roots range from Afro-Caribbean and Neopagan, to Gaian and Druidic they are nearly all nature-based, putting these forested foothills at the center of their spirituality.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/in-sight/wp/2015/05/06/the-250-acre-church-nurturing-faith-and-free-spirits-in-the-foothills-of-pennsylvania/