
Reverence.
“…to be in awe of, wonder about, be open to, and give attention to (and even honour) The Bigger Picture and our place in it.”
It’s that “wow” that brings you to your knees (literally or figuratively) when you stumble across beauty or are startled with insight in the ordinary, everyday things of life.
Reverence gives us glimpses of the bigger picture and our place in it, cracking open our small, bordered worlds in the process. It makes us grateful for life ‘as is’ and fuels a grounded hope that we could make this place ever more beautiful (thanks to the poet Maggie Smith for that image).
And while reverence is usually associated with religion, it isn’t only for the religious. It’s for anyone and everyone aching for more: more connection, more awe, more courage in order to make this place more beautiful every day.
Reverence matters.
At Big Stone House we teach and practice reverence.
“The Big Stone House isn’t just a place, it’s a way of being…”
A piece of news for y’all: Angie Arendt and Peter McGaugh sold Big Stone House (the place) and re-located to Arizona in 2024.
This move doesn’t stop the work, practice, and community of Big Stone House, though. The good work that Peter and Angie began long before they moved into this beautiful, big, old, and storied stone house continues on: Peter and Angie continue to lead conversations, teach classes and build communities of practice and care in Arizona…and online, too (actually, most of their work is online), doing what they can to make the places people live and work a bit more human, a bit more holy.
You’ll find Angie on Substack there days, too: The Bigger Picture is the name of her column. Check it out. And follow along, if you are so inclined.
Also: Angie is still a regular on Meanderings with Trudy: The PauseCast. Pour yourself a cup and listen in when you can. It’ll be good to have you there (the link here is to an episode on The Enneagram and Connection).
One more thing: even though they happened in the past, a couple of past offerings are still listed on this website (below) and photos are in the scroll above to give people a glimpse of Peter and Angie’s style. Look for Sitting on Sundays to make a return soon…and more.
A Bonus Four Week Session of Sitting on Sundays begins March 3.
10:00 to 11:00 a.m. (Eastern Time). March 3, 10, 17 and 24, 2024. Online (Zoom). Maximum of 25 participants.
Read more and/or register by clicking the link below. We hope to see you there.
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The name ‘Sitting on Sundays’ is incomplete, we know. While these sessions do take place on Sundays and we do sit together (across the screen, that is), this one-hour once-a-week gathering is often described more like a “mashup between a Quaker meeting and an AA meeting with a hootenanny thrown in every now and again,” to quote one participant. “This practice gives me hope for the world. More than that, it gives me hope for myself and the people around me…and that’s no small thing. I wish everybody had something like this to be a part of. We’d all be better off for it.”
We agree. The title is pretty simple. But then again, so is the practice. Don’t let that fool you, you: these one-hour, once-a-week sits are about as good for the soul as anything we’ve ever experienced.
Curious to know more? Click the link below and join us if you can to grow a bit more reverence no matter where you are in the world (it’s online, after all).
This past January we offered An Introduction to the Enneagram.
And we’ll do it again soon. If you’d like to know more, click the link below to read about that session.
The Enneagram gives us a glimpse at why people do what they do, say what they say, see things the way they see things…but that’s just the beginning.
In “An Introduction to the Enneagram,” you’ll get some good insight on those ‘what’ and ‘why’s.’ More than that, though, you’ll see (and experience) how this new-old resource cracks us open to awe and wonder, connection and curiosity…or, to put it more succinctly: it is plants seeds of reverence.

