The Bishop DeFalco Retreat and
Conference Center was dedicated on December 12, 1982.
Throughout its history the center has welcomed thousands
of guests annually.
The center is named after Bishop Lawrence M. DeFalco,
the fifth bishop of the Diocese of Amarillo. It was
his desire that a retreat center be built to serve the
needs of the people in the Panhandle. He wanted it to
be a source for spiritual renewal. Bishop DeFalco announced
the retreat center project shortly before his untimely
death in 1979.
The project was picked up by his successor, Bishop Leroy
Matthiesen. It was under this bishop’s supervision
that the center was built. For the first 16 years of
its existence, members of the Redemptorists Order staffed
the center.
The winding drive leading to the center symbolizes the
course of life’s journey. Spiritual pilgrims travel
a path that leads to God. Sweeping upwards, the graceful
lines of the center reach to the heavens and declare
the Lord’s glory by way of the cross. The adobe-like
exterior and stucco trim capture the feel of both the
Texas Panhandle and the Hispanic culture of the Southwest.
The large chapel at the retreat center is circular;
a symbol for wholeness and eternity. The walls enfold
the assembly as if to signify the tender embrace of
God. This worship space is distinctive from the other
sections of the facility, which are rectangular. This
designates the chapel as a “special” place,
a sacred place.
The courtyard is an oasis for weary travelers. Here
one is reminded to “’Come by yourselves
to an out-of-the-way place and rest a little’”
(Mk 6:31). Amid lush greenery and myriads of flowering
blossoms one can renew and be refreshed by the splendor
of God’s creation.
Although the Bishop DeFalco
Retreat and Conference Center was built and is sponsored
by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Amarillo, it welcomes
people of all faith traditions. The facility is also
used by not-for-profit, educational, health, social
service, and civic groups, all in keeping with the mission
and values of the center.
Presently the retreat and conference center receives,
not only, people from all over the West Texas Panhandle
but from throughout the Southwest. It also hosts conferences
that draw people from across the nation.
Bishop DeFalco’s dream has become
a reality.
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