Tri-State
Tres Dias History |
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Tri-State Tres Dias History
Tri State Tres Dias (TSTD) is an Evansville, Indiana community devoted to providing a Christian renewal experience for members of protestant denominations. Intended benefits of the experience include personal spiritual growth for the individual and deeper involvement of the individual in his/her home church congregation. The parent organization with which TSTD is associated is Tres Dias International. The history of the community is evolutionary, as described below. History of the Tres Dias Movement Tres Dias traces its ancestry through Cursillo,
which had its beginnings amid the turmoil and destruction of civil warfare
and of the Second World War, which left Spain with empty churches and
a sense of aimlessness and diminished dreams. Late in the 1940's, a sense
of revival was stirring within the Roman Catholic Church. Small groups
of friends in various Catholic action groups began to share their faith
regularly to help one another. Pilgrimages were organized whereby men
and women could rededicate their lives toward Christian ideals. Bishop
Juan Hervas, who was active in action groups and renewal activities with
the men on the island of Majorca, and Eduardo Bonin, who was involved
with organizing pilgrimages, met through these sharing groups. They began
to see how the church could benefit and the lives of people could be changed
through studying and sharing their lives in Christ. The Cursillo movement was confined to Spanish speaking countries until the late 1950's when a group of men from the Spanish Air Force, who were in training in Texas, and were in a Reunion Group, conducted the first Cursillo in the United States. Among the Spanish-speaking people the movement began to spread across the United States. The first English speaking Cursillo was held in the early 1960's. Protestants who attended the weekends, saw the need to make the experience available to other Protestants. Various denominations developed their own renewal programs modeled after the Roman Catholic Cursillo de Christiandad. For various reasons (see the history of Tri-State Tres Dias, below, for an example) a need for an ecumenical protestant three-day renewal experience was felt. This led to the development of the interdenominational Tres Dias. |
History of Tri-State Tres Dias
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