Teachers & Trainers Success Story

    How an Online Monastery Built 198 Retreats Reaching 11,000+ Participants Across 5 Countries

    AotA
    Abbey of the Arts
    Online Monastery · Contemplative Programs at Abbey of the Arts
    abbeyofthearts.com
    198
    Retreats on Ruzuku
    11,000+
    Participants
    5+
    Countries Reached
    10+
    Years of Programming

    The Backstory

    Abbey of the Arts, founded by Christine Valters Paintner, PhD, is an online monastery rooted in Benedictine, Celtic, and desert spiritual traditions. Christine is an author, teacher, and spiritual director based in Ireland. The Abbey offers contemplative programs that combine monastic wisdom with creative expression — poetry, photography, and artistic responses are central to the learning experience. The challenge was building a year-round online contemplative community that could maintain sacred rhythm across time zones while managing hundreds of enrollments per season.

    What Was Getting in the Way

    • Contemplative practice depends on sacred rhythm — releasing content too fast undermines the experience
    • Participants span multiple time zones (Australia to the US West Coast — some joining live at 2:30 AM)
    • Running multiple concurrent retreats each season requires serious operational coordination
    • Needed a platform that could support live Zoom gatherings alongside self-paced content

    What They Were Hoping For

    • Create a year-round online monastery with seasonal retreats, self-study programs, and ongoing community
    • Maintain contemplative rhythm in digital format — giving participants days to sit with practices
    • Reach spiritual seekers worldwide who couldn't attend in-person retreats in Ireland
    • Build operational infrastructure to manage hundreds of enrollments across concurrent programs

    How Ruzuku Fit In

    What Clicked

    The Abbey chose Ruzuku because it could support their distinctive program rhythm — content drip for daily contemplative releases, discussion spaces for poetry and art sharing, Zoom integration for live prayer services, and a clean interface that matched the sacred tone of their work. The platform's simplicity meant their coordinator Melinda could manage the full operation without needing a technical team.

    What They Built

    The Abbey built 198 programs on Ruzuku spanning multiple formats: self-study retreats like 'Dreaming of the Sea' and 'The Soul's Slow Ripening,' seasonal offerings tied to the liturgical and Celtic calendars (Advent, Lent, Samhain, Winter Solstice), book-based retreats extending Christine's published works ('Birthing the Holy,' 'A Midwinter God'), and the Sustainers Circle for ongoing community. Their program coordinator Melinda manages enrollments, scholarships, account issues, and participant support. Live Zoom prayer services and contemplative gatherings are integrated directly into the course experience. Participants share poetry, photographs, and artistic responses in course discussions — creating a contemplative community that transcends geography.

    The Tools That Helped Most

    Content drip for daily contemplative releases on a sacred rhythm
    Discussion forums for poetry, photography, and artistic sharing
    Zoom integration for live prayer services and contemplative gatherings
    Stripe and PayPal for international payments across 5+ countries
    Subscription/payment plans for the Sustainers Circle membership
    Gift registrations for participants to share retreats with friends
    Closed captions for accessibility across audio and video content

    What Changed

    Abbey of the Arts has built one of the largest online contemplative communities on Ruzuku — 198 retreats reaching 11,000+ participants from Australia, Ireland, the UK, Canada, and the US. Participants return repeatedly across seasons, with many self-describing as 'long-time users' of the Abbey. The coordinator model (Melinda managing the full operation) enables Christine to focus on teaching and writing while the platform runs smoothly year-round.

    MetricBeforeAfter
    Program ScaleLocal retreats in Ireland198 online retreats on Ruzuku
    Community ReachRegional participants11,000+ from 5+ countries
    Program RhythmOccasional in-person retreatsYear-round seasonal + self-study + live programs
    OperationsFounder-managedDedicated coordinator managing hundreds of enrollments/year

    Timeline: Built progressively over 10+ years. 198 retreats spanning self-study, live, seasonal, book-based, and subscription programs.

    "I've done numerous online programs with the Abbey with no problems. I am enjoying all of the Abbey of the Arts presentations so much."
    AotA
    Abbey of the Arts
    Abbey of the Arts participants Cheryl Thomsen and Olga Roesch, reflecting on their experience across multiple retreats on Ruzuku

    Lessons Worth Sharing

    1

    Sacred and contemplative programming works online when you design for rhythm — daily content drip lets participants sit with practices rather than rushing through material

    2

    A dedicated coordinator enables scale — Melinda manages hundreds of enrollments, scholarships, account merges, and participant support so Christine can focus on teaching

    3

    Seasonal programming creates natural recurring engagement — participants return for Advent, Lent, Solstice, and Samhain retreats year after year

    4

    International reach via recorded + live hybrid lets someone in Australia join a contemplative community based in Ireland

    5

    Multiple program formats (self-study, live, book-based, subscription) serve different levels of engagement within the same community

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