Things are looking different around the Presbyterian Student Center lately. We have a new parking lot, complete with new sidewalks, lights and updated landscaping that looks pretty impressive from the road. Another thing that is about to change, given a couple of months, some hard volunteer work and God’s blessing, is a small, unassuming circular area on the back end of our property here at 1250 South Lumpkin Street.
As part of my ministry project for the academic year, focused on prayer and mediation, I have committed to helping senior student Hayley Callaway complete a long-held dream of hers to have a prayer labyrinth at the PSC. For those who have never heard of a prayer labyrinth, it is a centuries-old prayer tool that is used to simulate a pilgrimage. Long ago, christians who couldn’t afford to make a pilgrimage to Jerusalem used labyrinths, and today, many use labyrinths to simulate one’s pilgrimage toward God throughout life. Usually circular, the labyrinth consists of a single path that winds in serpentine fashion around the circle, eventually bringing its pilgrim to the center of the labyrinth, which symbolizes union with God. In the center, pilgrims can take time to pray and reflect on their personal walk of faith.

We’ve formed a Planning Committee with a handful of other students (a full list of these members is found at the bottom of this page), and we have already crafted a comprehensive vision for the labyrinth. Our students have decided to use a seven-circuit pattern for our labyrinth, which can be seen above, and we are going to define the lanes through the artful re-use of glass bottles, inverted and placed in the ground, similar to those in the picture you can see on the right. The lanes will be filled in with pea gravel, which will make the labyrinth barefoot-friendly and allow for good drainage, and in the center we plan to have a number of small benches, as well as plaques with verses of scripture and poems, to facilitate meditative reflection. The labyrinth will be encircled by a small fence to mark it off as sacred space, and we hope to add a tree or two for shade and greenery. Construction of the labyrinth is planned for April 2011, so mark your calendars! We have a lot of fund-raising and materials collecting (bring us your glass bottles!) to do in the meantime, and we will need the help of PSC community members and friends to make this dream a reality! Please contact me, Mitch Roper, or any of the students listed below to find out how you can help us with this joyful project.
Students on Labyrinth Planning Committee:
Hayley Callaway
Kyle Mackey
Ben Sheppard
Jonathan Torres
Justin Van Wicklen




