Close Menu
FarAwayJobs
    What's Hot
    Study Abroad

    Students share experiences with adversity abroad through culture shock event – Grand Valley Lanthorn

    Study Abroad

    ‘With 65% of youth workforce, study abroad industry poised for explosive growth in India’

    Remote Work

    142 Actionable B2B SEO Statistics For 2025

    Important Pages:
    • Free AI Resume
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Free AI Resume
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    FarAwayJobs
    Free AI Resume Builder
    • Remote Work

      Why Air Quality is Important

      The Generative Engine Optimization Blueprint: SEO in the Age of AI

      The Remote Work Top 10: Essentials Worth Buying

      Topical Authority Guide + Free Tool [2025]

      SEO Vs GEO: Key Differences To Make You Smarter

    • Remote Teams

      9 Remote 9 Interview Questions Every Interviewer Should Ask

      7 Ways to Build a Resilient Remote Team

      7 Reasons to Plan a Virtual Team Retreat

      7 Signs a Candidate Is a Good Fit for Your Team

      Top Recruiting Tips for Remote Companies

    • Management

      Report: 80% Say Salary Isn’t Keeping Up With Inflation

      Synchronous and Asynchronous Communication for Remote Teams| Remote.co

      Getting to Know Your Virtual Team: 10 Strategies

      10 Tips to Succeed as a Fully Remote Company

      How to Hire Contractors for Your Remote Team

    • Business

      Remote Work Predictions for 2018

      Remote Work: More Than a Perk for Pros with Chronic Conditions

      10 Tips for Running a Remote Business

      Starting a Company? Why You Should Go Remote

      How Remote Work Leads to More Loyal Employees

    • Offshoring

      7 ways an accounts payable BPO can benefit your company

      The complete guide to hiring a virtual phone assistant

      What is an IVR call center? (workflows, benefits, tools)

      The 2024 guide to omnichannel contact centers

      24 virtual assistant websites to find skilled VAs in 2024

    • Productivity

      How to measure what really matters

      The role of AI in performance management: Lead with trust

      Location-based productivity data you can trust

      the missing layer in productivity data

      4 productivity myths leaders should stop believing

    • Abroad

      Can You Intern Abroad in Latin America?

      Taylor’s Spring Semester in Athens

      These 6 College Students Did a Study Abroad Program in Spain

      Top Places to Study Abroad in Central and Eastern Europe

      Study Abroad vs. Exchange Program: What’s the Difference?

    • Job Search

      Job Hopping: Benefits And Disadvantages

      Remote Job Search Tips from Deb Haas

      Andrew Gobran (Doist) on Career Values and Remote Job Search Strategy

      24 Remote Jobs for Pregnant Women To Work-From-Home

      Make Your Remote Job Application Stand Out in 2025

    • Job Board
    FarAwayJobs
    Home » Not a Tame Pilgrimage – Catholic World Report
    Study Abroad

    Not a Tame Pilgrimage – Catholic World Report

    Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp
    Not a Tame Pilgrimage – Catholic World Report
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp

    Chris Baker, founder and director of Altum L’alto Pilgrimages (ALP), pointing to various sites. (Image courtesy of the author)

    In The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, the fifth of C.S. Lewis’ Narnia series, the mysterious Aslan is famously referred to as “not a tame Lion.” Itself a story of a pilgrimage-like journey, Aslan tells the Pevensie children at the end of the book that the point of their relationship with him in Narnia is so that they can know him better in their own world.

    Today, chartered buses and tour-guides often tame the experience of European pilgrimages for Catholics. Yet, like the Narnian voyage, which begins unexpectedly and involves both dangerous adventure and pleasant comradery, this need not be the case.

    Chris Baker, founder and director of Altum L’alto Pilgrimages (ALP), a small Catholic pilgrimage and outdoor adventure company based in Italy, says that the seed of his “business was planted one day at Saint John Lateran when a priest was talking about how we should be finding ways to give life to others.” Chris’s goal is anything but providing a “tame pilgrimage” experience.

    Chris Baker, founder and director of Altum L’alto Pilgrimages (ALP). (Image courtesy of the author)

    Combining personal love of adventure and the Catholic faith as well as skills learned at Wyoming Catholic College (WCC), American Chris Baker leads adventure pilgrimages which integrate hiking, biking, kayaking, rafting, and other outdoor activities with pilgrimages to holy places. Before starting ALP, Chris “had been studying in Rome and working for a study abroad program for several years.” In his own travels, adventure was always the “preferred mode and some kind of religious site was always the destination.” Working with exchange students, however, he realized that they were getting consistently “superficial experiences of Europe” instead of the “countless incredible experiences” he knew from his own travels.

    “I started to offer trips for them,” he told me. “I never had any plans to start my own company until one day everything hit me at once—the idea, the mission, the name, and so on.” The seed had been planted when he “started to think more and more about what form of life I could give to others from my particular life, person, and situation at the time” because of hearing a sermon on that topic in the Lateran Basilica in Rome.

    Originally from Louisiana, Chris spent several high-school summers at a camp in the mountains of North Carolina. Then he had the opportunity to study abroad in Taiwan for part of his senior year of high school. “I think those adventures really disposed me to set out for Wyoming Catholic College,” he stated. “The amount of time I was able to spend in the wilderness and the friendships I made there” were among the most important aspects of his experience WCC, from which he graduated in 2012. Additionally, “the BA in Liberal Arts and my time at WCC helped me in my own life’s pilgrimage. Having four years at WCC to study, pray, and explore really oriented my life towards its proper goals and naturally set the journey towards achieving them in motion.”

    Wanting to hear more of how Chris facilitated other’s pilgrimage and adventure experiences, I reached out to a few friends from WCC who had participated in his trips.

    “Not only do we present our prayers on sacred ground, but we spend ourselves making the journey there,” said Grace Kirwan (‘21). “For instance, we hiked for two full days along the way of St. Francis to arrive in Assisi and pray at the tombs of Sts. Clare and Francis.” Pilgrimage, then, is a more holistic experience than “traveling for education”, of which I recently wrote: this can be done in an aloof way, with the mentality of a scientist observing unusual phenomena. Rather than the cool mind of a scientist, going “on pilgrimage really means to step out of ourselves in order to encounter God where he has revealed himself, where his grace has shone with particular splendor and produced rich fruits of conversion and holiness among those who believe,” as Pope Benedict XVI put it.

    “One of my favorite memories from the trip was a church we stayed near that began and ended the day ringing out ‘Immaculate Mary’ from the bell tower. Although we were only there a few nights, we got to know the local priest and the cook pretty well despite the language barrier,” Maria Baron (‘21) reminisced. “I could have talked myself out of going—the cost is great, the travel is unpredictable at best, and the language and food are unfamiliar,” said Grace. “I am so grateful I was able to bear these discomforts for the overwhelmingly greater privilege of embarking on this exciting journey and being immersed in something greater than I could have expected.”

    Grace recalled C.S. Lewis’ comment from The Four Loves that, “If I am sure of anything I am sure that [Christ’s] teaching was never meant to confirm my congenital preference for safe investments and limited liabilities…” Grace said she tried to approach her pilgrimage with a similar disregard for “playing it safe”, since “Lewis goes on to ask whether one would choose one’s spouse or friend in this spirit of caution, and how much more we ought not let this be our attitude in our relationship with God.”

    (Image courtesy of the author)

    Cistercian monk and author Thomas Merton commented that “the geographical pilgrimage is the symbolic acting out of an inner journey. The inner journey is the interpolation of the meanings and signs of the outer pilgrimage. One can have one without the other. It is best to have both.” Grace Kirwan had been on “the type of pilgrimage which involved riding the charter bus to each of the destinations, hopping out for a picture and tour, and getting back to the bus for the next leg of the journey.”

    Her experience with Altum L’alto was different. “We don’t always take the easiest, most efficient way. Rather, we take the way of the pilgrim, which sometimes means journeying past the point of comfort and convenience to get to our destination. Nevertheless, while we sometimes expend our energy and strength on the way, we also replenish and refresh ourselves with good food, lively conversation, and heartfelt prayer, drinking deeply of the refreshment our Lord offers all those who leave behind their lives to seek Him.”

    “The way WCC kept prayer and the spiritual life at the center of its education and formation has been an important influence on me in terms of how I attempt to structure my own life and work,” Chris commented, adding “I would always recommend that someone goes to WCC no matter what field they are interested in pursuing.” Altum L’alto Pilgrimages is an interesting example, then, of how planting the seed of love for adventure and beauty can blossom in apostolate; of how the liberal arts education can lead to the most versatile and unique career paths which are nonetheless oriented to the restoration of Christian culture.

    Maria Baron found that “the pilgrimage served as a measure for ‘normal life’, a brief experience of the good life.” The words of Aslan in The Voyage of the Dawn Treader can also be applied to the soul’s experience of God on pilgrimage: “by knowing me here for a little, you may know me better there,” that is, in normal, every-day life. If you are looking for a journey, an adventure, and an encounter with the Lion of Judah, none of which is “tame”, you might consider casting into the deep with Altum L’alto Pilgrimages.

    (Image courtesy of the author)

    If you value the news and views Catholic World Report provides, please consider donating to support our efforts. Your contribution will help us continue to make CWR available to all readers worldwide for free, without a subscription. Thank you for your generosity!

    Click here for more information on donating to CWR. Click here to sign up for our newsletter.




    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp

    Related Posts

    Study Abroad

    Can You Intern Abroad in Latin America?

    Study Abroad

    Taylor’s Spring Semester in Athens

    Study Abroad

    These 6 College Students Did a Study Abroad Program in Spain

    Study Abroad

    Top Places to Study Abroad in Central and Eastern Europe

    Study Abroad

    Study Abroad vs. Exchange Program: What’s the Difference?

    Study Abroad

    When is the Best Time to Do a Study Abroad Program?

    Study Abroad

    These College Students Studied Abroad in the Czech Republic

    Study Abroad

    Top Places to Study Abroad Outside of Europe

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    Study Abroad

    UMass students barred from studying abroad in wake of arrests at October sit-in

    AMHERST — At least one of three UMass Amherst students denied the chance to study…

    Study Abroad Advisory Services Market

    Farida’s Year Abroad in Cannes

    ‘Students must seek help, make right decision on studying abroad’ | The Guardian Nigeria News

    Top Insights
    Study Abroad

    McKailyn’s Summer Abroad in Seoul

    Study Abroad

    8 places you can find UT students studying abroad this summer | Entertainment

    Remote Work

    Remote work faces a chill as job cuts rise

    Job Search

    Top Companies Hiring for Part-Time, Remote, Work-From-Home Jobs

    Study Abroad

    AIFS Abroad Signs CANIE Accord

    Most Popular
    Study Abroad

    Study abroad culture shocks: Limerick, Ireland

    Job Board

    Labor Shortage Can Be Fixed by Letting Asylum Seekers Get Work Permits Sooner, Business Leaders Say

    Job Board

    Parole Benefit Processing Resumes After Court Ruling

    Categories
    • Business (61)
    • Job Board (303)
    • Job Search (62)
    • Management (55)
    • Offshoring (57)
    • Productivity (133)
    • Remote Teams (59)
    • Remote Work (280)
    • Study Abroad (1,998)
    Our Picks

    Study Abroad Grant Program Reintroduced to Senate

    Study Abroad

    ChatGPT Search Is Here: What It Means For SEO

    Remote Work

    Niki’s Summer Abroad with AIFS in Salamanca

    Study Abroad
    FarAwayJobs
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • Job Board
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    © 2025 FarAwayJobs.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.