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Waiting with Purpose: When the Hope Feels Delayed

by Angela Miller, Program Manager There are seasons in life when timelines feel clear and expectations feel grounded. And then there are seasons when what we thought would happen… doesn’t…

The Book That Introduced Itself Before It Was Even Released 

Raising Truth Seekers is here — and the story of how it arrived is very on-brand.  On April 29, around 4pm, I checked my email and saw the notification I’d been waiting fo…

Waiting with Purpose: When the Hope Feels Delayed

by Angela Miller, Program Manager

There are seasons in life when timelines feel clear and expectations feel grounded.

And then there are seasons when what we thought would happen… doesn’t.

Right now, I find myself in one of those places.

At 41 weeks and 5 days pregnant, we are waiting to meet our baby boy!

If you know me, you know we’ve held this reality loosely, understanding that babies can come early or late. We knew this. I’ve prepared for this. I help other moms as a birth doula understand this reality, waiting is part of the process.

But there’s a difference between knowing something in your mind… and living it out in real time.

Because when the due date passes—and then more days continue to pass—something begins to surface. As we wait there can bubble up various feeling and questions.

Questions like:
Will this ever happen?
Will I ever be on the other side of this?
How much longer will this take?
When will things finally shift?
Will I ever feel relief?
Will I ever feel happy again?

or

Maybe it’s:
Will I ever get the job I’ve been praying for?
Will this ministry ever grow?
Will this relationship ever heal?
Will this difficult season ever end?
Will I ever feel peace again?

Waiting has a way of revealing what is really beneath the surface.


Waiting Is a Physical Picture of a Spiritual Reality

One of the things the Lord has been showing me is how pregnancy and birth are such a powerful physical representation of spiritual waiting.

When you are pregnant, there is already life forming within you, even before you fully see it.

There is anticipation.
Preparation.
Expectation.

You make room in your home.
You prepare your heart.
You speak about what is coming long before it arrives.

Spiritually, many of us are living in similar places.

We are carrying prayers.
Longings.
Callings.
Dreams.
Promises we believe God has spoken.

Yet there is often a space between what we believe God has promised and when we see fulfillment.

A space where something is still being formed.

And just like pregnancy, spiritual waiting can feel beautiful one moment and stretching the next.

Moments of excitement.
Moments of exhaustion.
Moments filled with faith.
Moments where disappointment tries to or does creep in.

But just because we cannot yet see fulfillment does not mean God is absent from the process.

Something is still growing.

Something is still being prepared.


We Wait with Anticipation, Not Worry

Waiting invites us to choose what posture we will hold while we wait. Sometimes it doesn’t feel like we have a choice though and we easily slip into something that’s worrisome.

It is so easy to wait in our flesh.

To expect certain outcomes.
To analyze every detail.
To try to mentally solve what only God fully sees.

The world often teaches us to wait with anxiety:
Trying to control outcomes.
Trying to force something forward.
Trying to figure out every nuance.

After all, our hearts often think:
If I can just understand it enough, maybe I can control it.

We search for answers everywhere.
We overthink.
We replay conversations.
We try to predict outcomes.

Sometimes we even look to other voices to counsel us before first bringing our hearts before the Wonderful Counselor—the Holy Spirit within us—and the truth of Scripture that grounds us in Perfect Truth!

But Scripture invites us into a way of waiting that is completely opposite of the world.

We wait with anticipation, not worry.
With surrender, not control.
With trust, not the pressure to figure everything out.

“Wait for the Lord; be strong, and let your heart take courage; wait for the Lord.” — Psalm 27:14

Anticipation says:
God is moving even when I cannot yet see it.

Worry tries to carry tomorrow before it arrives.

And Scripture reminds us:
“Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself.” — Matthew 6:34

We are also reminded:
“His mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is your faithfulness.” — Lamentations 3:22–23

Anticipation trusts that God already holds tomorrow in His hands.

We do not have to figure everything out.

Even though our hearts often want to.


We Wait with Hope, Not Despair

There can be moments in waiting where disappointment tries to creep in, especially when timelines stretch longer than expected!

I’ve experienced that personally in these final weeks of pregnancy.

Every sign that labor might be beginning can quickly turn into another day of waiting.

And in those moments, I’ve had to continually bring my heart back before the Lord.

Because despair says:
Nothing will ever change.

But hope says:
God is still faithful in the process.

Biblical hope is not wishful thinking.

It is confident expectation rooted in the character of God.

And just like in this current season of pregnancy, I know I will not be pregnant forever.

There is an appointed time for us to meet our baby boy.

In the same way, God sees the fullness of the timeline we cannot yet see in our everyday waiting for what we long for.


We Wait with Joy, Not Striving

One of the greatest temptations in waiting is striving.

Trying harder.
Pushing more.
Forcing outcomes that only God can fully bring forth in His timing.

And often, as soon as we start hearing:
I have to…
I need to…
If I don’t make this happen then…

Those are indicators that we need to bring our beliefs back before the Lord and receive His perspective.

That is one of the reasons Serenity Retreat exists:
To create space for God to speak into those deeper places.

This is also what is humbling about pregnancy…

At a certain point, there is very little you can do except trust the process.

You cannot force life to mature before its appointed time.

Spiritually, many things in our lives are the same way.

Some seasons of life require surrender not striving.

Joy in waiting does not mean every moment feels easy.

It does not mean happiness is always the immediate destination.

It means we trust that God is present in the process of our character refinement.

It means we learn to recognize that even here—
in the trial,
in the painful moments,
before the breakthrough,
before fulfillment,
before answers come,
before the season changes—

God is still good.

And that is a truth we can always count on. And even if you don’t believe that God is good, He can still speak to you about that very doubt, if you’re willing to listen.


When God Reshapes What We Long For

This past week, I stepped into a couple of Transformation Prayer Ministry (TPM) sessions for myself, inviting the Lord into the deeper places this waiting was exposing in my own heart. The Lord allowed me to experience His truth and my anxious or burdened heart turned into a restful heart.

And I was reminded that sometimes there are prayers we pray that God does fulfill exactly as we hoped.

And there are other times when He lovingly reshapes something within us.

Because sometimes what we long for may not yet be fully aligned with His purposes, His will, or the deeper character formation He is accomplishing within us.

God is not withholding from us when things feel delayed.

He is often aligning us more deeply with His heart, His timing, and His purposes.


An Invitation for You

If you find yourself in a season where something feels delayed—where hope feels stretched or questions feel louder than answers—you are not alone.

And more importantly, you are not abandoned in the waiting.

Because the things that surface while we wait—the fear, disappointment, striving, anxiety, discouragement, or loss of hope—are often the very places God wants to meet us most deeply.

At Serenity Retreat, this is what we make space for.

A space to slow down.
To process what is beneath the surface.
To invite God to speak truth to the root of what is happening in your heart as you wait.

Whether through a Transformation Prayer Ministry session or one of our Retreat experiences, there is an invitation to stop carrying everything alone and allow the Lord to minister directly to those deeper places within you.

So if you are in a season of waiting, perhaps the invitation is not simply to endure it—

But to encounter God within it.

To wait with anticipation, not worry.
With hope, not despair.
With joy, not striving.

Because waiting, in the hands of God, is never wasted.

He is still present.
Still speaking.
Still faithful.
And still forming something eternal within you.

The Book That Introduced Itself Before It Was Even Released 

Raising Truth Seekers is here — and the story of how it arrived is very on-brand. 

On April 29, around 4pm, I checked my email and saw the notification I’d been waiting for: the books had arrived. I ran to the door, ripped open the top box, and held in my hands what had been ten years in the making — Raising Truth Seekers. 

All I could do was cry. Every early morning and late night had been worth it. I started leafing through the pages… and froze. 

No. It can’t be. 

Every right-hand page read: Raising Truth Seekers Copy. 

I had forgotten to remove the word “Copy” from the title in Atticus before uploading the file to Amazon’s KDP. The joyful tears were immediately replaced with embarrassment and shame. My thoughts started to spiral: I can’t sell these books. What will everyone think of me? I’ll be a laughing stock. I’m just not even going to go to the conference. 

I sat in my pity party, texting my good friend about the terrible mistake I had made. He tried to make me feel better, but I was pretty inconsolable. 

I noticed how late it was, so I jumped in my car to get to FedEx before they closed to pick up the poster for my book table. At least that should look good. Ugh. The font was way too small. I couldn’t even deal with it, so I headed through traffic to make a stop at Kroger before going home to continue the pity party. And what every proper pity party needs is a full jar of almond butter — my “crack.” (You can read more about that in Chapter 13.) 

I knew what I needed to do…yet, I did not want to do it. 

I wanted to stay mad at myself. Somewhere on the Grand Parkway, almond butter as my destination, the intensity of what I was feeling became impossible to ignore. So, reluctantly, I walked myself through the prayer process I’ve been using for the last dozen years. 

What I found surprised me. The frustration wasn’t just about the mistake. It was doing double duty — keeping me from something much more uncomfortable underneath: embarrassment and shame, and the question of why I was feeling it so intensely. 

I asked God what He wanted me to know. And He showed up. 

He gently pointed out that my frustration wasn’t going to accomplish what I thought it would. And then He said something that stopped me cold: He had allowed this for His purposes. 

That got my attention. That’s when the idea came — to share this story with the readers. But I knew there was more. I just wasn’t ready to look at it yet. 

I laid in bed that night, certain that sleep wouldn’t come until I got to the bottom of this, so I faced it. I sat with the embarrassment and shame and let myself feel the weight of the words that had swirled in my head earlier: What will everyone think of me? I was almost embarrassed that I was still having those kinds of thoughts after all these years of starting to understand the New Covenant and walking in His finished work. 

As I stayed with what I was feeling, I landed in a memory from high school. The details matter less than the words I heard that impacted me: What will the neighbors think? There it was — the same emotion. Shame. A familiar question with a familiar companion. 

Then I found myself in another memory, a moment after I was married where I felt that same familiar shame. As I sat with those emotions, something became clear: a lie I had been carrying at the heart level: I don’t measure up. I can’t hit the mark. 

I offered that belief to the Lord. He wasted no time. 

He reminded me that His opinion is the only one that matters — and that He sees me as a 10 out of 10. When I checked that belief again, it no longer felt true. The Holy Spirit had persuaded my heart of what my head had known for years. For the first time, they were saying the same thing. 

This is my way of life now. Sometimes, like this week, it takes me longer to be willing to look at my own stuff. But other times I can recognize it quickly and find myself actually grateful for the trials God allows. Because they keep leading me back to Him. 

Oh, and the almond butter? I stood in that Kroger aisle staring at the very jar I’d been so compelled to buy. I could have put it in my cart with zero condemnation. Instead, I paused. Did I still feel compelled? No. I didn’t even want it anymore. And I walked away. 

It really is true: it’s not what you do, but why you do it. 

The corrected file was uploaded to KDP the next morning. And those books I thought I couldn’t sell? Each one went out with a testimony card tucked inside — a story that wouldn’t exist without the mistake. God really does waste nothing. 

And that, friend, is exactly what this book is about. 

I want to be honest with you: I did not raise my children using TPM. Raising Truth Seekers is the book I wish I had had. It’s the vision I received over a decade ago — that parents could have a tool to help their children get to the root of what’s happening on the inside, not just manage behavior from the outside. That they grow up knowing when and how to run to Jesus for His truth and perspective.  

That vision is now a book. And the story of how it arrived — “Copy” and all — is just one more proof that this message is bigger than my ability to mess it up. 

None of this would exist without the extraordinary generosity of the Serenity Retreat Board, whose support made it possible to gift a pre-release edition to participants at our Ring the Bell Fundraising Event on October 3 — the same evening we celebrated Serenity Retreat’s 25th Anniversary. And what a gift it was to watch the completed edition make its official debut at Convention 220 on May 1. 

If you know a parent, a grandparent, a ministry leader, or a small group who needs this message — please pass it along. Every share helps it find the people it was written for. 

Raising Truth Seekers is available now on Amazon 

Paperback  ·  Family Faith Press  ·  ISBN 9798255539055 

Thank you for being part of this story. No matter if you have prayed for me, given me encouragement, offered me the privilege to mentor you in a session, teach you in a course, or if you have shared your testimony, God has used it all to form this book in me.  

With much gratitude, 

Barb Rolen 

Program Director, Serenity Retreat 

A Mother—and Daughter’s—Restoration Journey 

by Claire Benington 

“Before they call I will answer; while they are still speaking I will hear.” Isaiah 65:24  

In the dark days of marriage, abuse, divorce, and motherhood through it all, I can now see that even when I felt completely alone, God was moving — putting people, resources, and invitations in my path. This is an excerpt from my life’s story, one in which Serenity Retreat has provided hope and a safe place to heal for me and for my most cherished gift — my daughter.

A Dear Friend, Stephen Ministry, and Serenity Retreat

In the last months of 2024, God sent me a new friend, Ava Foster, a lifelong Episcopalian, who became a lifeline. She listened, believed me and in me, and served as my Stephen Minister — a trained lay caregiver who walked beside me through my pain and acrimonious divorce. She sat with me, prayed with me, and gently reminded me that God’s heart was for my freedom, not my bondage. Through Ava, God gently and persistently called me to come into the light. It was she who opened the door to Serenity Retreat and to Transformation Prayer Ministry (TPM). 

“For at one time you were in darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Walk as children of light.” Ephesians 5:8

Serenity Retreat Bellville is a place set apart — quiet, beautiful, and saturated with prayer and the grace and glory of God and His son, Jesus Christ.  It is a place where God speaks and transforms through TPM.  TPM is Serenity’s gentle, Spirit-led process that helps uncover the lies we come to believe and hold about ourselves, others, and God, and invites Jesus to speak His truth into those very places. 

As I began TPM, God’s light started to shine into places I had kept in shadow for years. Bit by bit, the fog lifted, truth was revealed, and clarity grew. What I had been living through was not “normal conflict”; it was calculated and deeply harmful—and God’s heart was not in it. 

Even after my first experience with TPM, which was at The Preserve, Serenity’s Houston location, I knew something profound had shifted.  I heard God’s truth and felt the power of His love and light in a way I had not in years, so I went back a second time. 

I shared with Barbara Rolen, Program Director of Serenity Retreat, how I felt transformed by hearing God’s truth and feeling His love.  I thirsted to learn more.  She told stories of people of all ages—including teens—who had experienced the healing work of TPM. In that moment, I then knew Serenity Retreat was not just for me. It was also for my daughter, Wren.   

A Mother–Daughter Retreat 

Mothers pass down faith, strength, and love.” (2 Timothy 1:5) 

As a deeply spiritual mother, one of my deepest wounds was seeing someone diminish God and His glory in my child’s eyes.  

I wanted her to experience something completely different: a place where God’s presence felt gentle and safe, where questions were welcome, where tears were honored, and where truth and faith did not come with fear of punishment or manipulation. 

So I invited Wren to come with me to Serenity Retreat Bellville. Like many teenage girls, she gave me a bit of an eye roll and wasn’t thrilled about being away from friends and missing dance, but after thinking it over, she agreed. 

At Serenity Retreat, I stepped back, focused on my own healing and relationship with God, and gave her space to have her personal experience. Just being there — in the natural beauty of the property, the thoughtful spaces, and the presence of warm, Godly people, there seemed to be an instant sense of peace about her.  A peace and perhaps serenity, that I had not seen in years.  

In the stillness of that private place, during TPM, she had space to be her authentic, vulnerable, whole self.  She could bring her fears, hurt, confusion, and questions — everything she carried on her heart — to the Lord.  She didn’t have to perform or be “the kid in the middle.” She was allowed, and in fact encouraged, to be simply Wren, deeply loved by God through and through. 

True to her nature, afterwards, she didn’t share in detail with me, but I could easily see that God was whispering His truth into her heart. I imagined His words: 

You are not the problem… 

You are not too much…

You are enough and perfect as you are… 

I, your Father, am not like the version of Me you’ve been shown — I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your soul. (Matthew 11:29)

As a Christian mother, there is nothing more sacred than watching your child encounter the true Jesus — the One who protects, heals, and restores — who never condemns and controls.   

This is where — in this still, divine, appropriately-named place — God whispered His truth into both of our souls. As His daughter, and especially as a mother, I am deeply grateful for the sanctuary we have found in Serenity Retreat.

“Be still, and know that I am God.”  (Psalm 46:10) 

To every woman and mother who needs encouraged today — He is faithful. If you need space and a place to connect with Him — consider Serenity. May God bless you and your precious children.   

Happy Mother’s Day! 

A Mother’s Day Blessing

  • To every woman who has ever mothered a child, a friend, a dream, or a hurting heart, including her own,
  • To the mothers who are joyful and the mothers who are exhausted,
  • To grandmothers, spiritual mothers, stepmothers, foster and adoptive mothers,
  • To the women who long to be mothers, and the women who have lost children,
  • To the women quietly holding families together in the shadows of confusion, conflict, or hidden abuse.

May you hear this:  God see you.  God hears you.  God values and loves you. 


*all names have been changed for privacy

When He Does What Only He Can Do

A reflection on a recent evening with Celebrate Recovery — and what happens when two communities discover they’ve been speaking the same language. 

Collaborating Ministries

When Skip Koshak invited me to speak at Celebrate Recovery, he asked if there was a worship song I’d like sung before I shared. God picked it for me: Spirit of the Living God, by Vertical Worship. 

It’s a fairly new song to me — but from the moment I heard it, I couldn’t wait to sing it with fellow brothers and sisters in Christ who are on a truth-seeking journey, just as I am. The lyrics speak of hungering to hear God’s voice, wanting to know Him more and more, hanging on His every word. From the very first stanza, something settled in the room. I sensed a kindred spirit among us as we worshipped together — knowing that every person there carried the same longing: God, show up. Not in a general, theological sense. Personally. In the specific places where I’m still stuck. 

And then came the bridge: “When You do what only You can do — it changes us. It changes what we see and what we seek.” 

That is what I came to talk about. And what I didn’t know yet was that before the evening was over, Skip himself would become the most powerful illustration of exactly that. 

The Question Nobody Talks About 

Because here’s what I’ve come to understand after years of walking with Jesus and years of sitting with people in their pain — most of us believe God can change us, or we at least have hope that He can. That’s not usually the question. 

The question is how. 

How does He actually get into those deep places? The ones that don’t respond to trying harder, praying more, or white-knuckling through another week? 

I told them about the gap — the one James calls being double-minded. Knowing something in your head while believing something entirely different in your heart. I lived in that gap for a long time. Decades, actually. And I didn’t even realize there was a name for it. I just thought something was wrong with me. 

Honoring What CR Is Already Doing 

Before I said a word about Transformation Prayer Ministry, I wanted to honor what Celebrate Recovery is already doing — because these 12 Steps are a gift. 

Step 1 — admitting we’re powerless — is the moment we stop pretending we can manage what was never ours to manage. It’s radical honesty. It acknowledges our need for God. 

And Step 2 — believing that God can restore us to wholeness — that’s not just sobriety. Not just better behavior. Wholeness. I like to call that having God’s perspective, which results in transformation. 

Here’s what I told them that night, and I’ll say it here too: I think a lot of us have quietly settled for something less than that. We’ve gotten better. We’ve gotten cleaner. But there are still rooms inside us we haven’t been able to let God into yet — not because we don’t want to, but because we don’t know how. 

What I came to share was something that helped me find those rooms. 

It Started With a Banner on a Wall 

My church in Baton Rouge had a banner with Galatians 5:1: “It is for freedom that Christ has set us free.” One ordinary Sunday I read those words and just… broke down. Not watery eyes — uncontrollable, ugly crying. Right there in my seat. 

And I was confused by my own tears. Because I was sitting under incredible teaching every week. I knew who I was in Christ. I was even teaching it to children as the Children’s Director. 

And yet my experience felt like chains draped around me. 

That day in church I gave God permission to expose me. Because I didn’t just want to know the truth — I wanted to experience it. 

About two weeks later, God brought a type of structured prayer into my life that I didn’t know I needed. And meeting Jesus using that prayer known as Transformation Prayer Ministry changed everything. 

The Check Engine Light 

Here is the core idea behind Transformation Prayer Ministry — TPM for short. 

Our behaviors, our habits, our hang-ups? They’re not the root problem. They’re symptoms. Underneath every pattern that keeps us stuck is a lie-based belief — something we were persuaded to believe is true through an experience, often in a moment of pain. And we’ve been living from that belief ever since, treating it as if it were fact. 

You know the check engine light on your dashboard? When it comes on, you don’t tape over it and keep driving. That light is telling you something is happening under the hood that needs attention. 

TPM teaches us to think about our negative emotions the same way. That anxiety that won’t quit. That anger that flares up faster than you can explain. That hollow feeling that creeps in on even a good day. Those aren’t enemies to manage. They’re invitations. 

They’re indicators that there’s a lie underneath — one that God wants to get to. 

Here’s how I framed it that night: the 12 Steps will bring you to the door of that belief. Steps 4 and 5 — that searching and fearless moral inventory — that’s you finding the door. TPM is what happens when you open it and invite Jesus in. 

And this is important: TPM doesn’t do the work. We are not the healers. We are not even trying to be. When the Holy Spirit persuades us of the truth and His perspective — the lie no longer feels true. Mind-renewal has taken place. And where the mind is renewed, transformation follows. Every time. That’s His work, not ours. And that transformation feels a lot like healing. 

What This Actually Looks Like 

I shared some personal stories that evening — including one you may have already read here on the blog. (If you haven’t, the gondola story is right here — it’s worth three minutes of your time.) 

What I hadn’t shared publicly before that night is this: just days before I stood in that CR room, God gave me a second layer of that same story I hadn’t seen before. The belief wasn’t just “I am completely alone.” It went deeper — all the way to “I will always be alone.” That’s not loneliness. That’s hopelessness. And He met me there too. 

That is what TPM as a lifestyle looks like. Not a one-time breakthrough — a continuing conversation with the God who keeps going deeper. 

You don’t have to wait for a retreat or a crisis or a gondola. Your negative emotions are already the invitation. They’ve been there. The question is whether we’ll keep taping over the check engine light — managing our emotions, numbing them, white-knuckling past them — or whether we’ll follow them to what God wants to show us. 

Step 11 says we “sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God.” A TPM prayer session is one of the most intentional ways I know to do exactly that — not just talking at God, but getting quiet enough to actually hear Him speak into the specific belief that’s been keeping you stuck. 

Two Ministries. One Mission. 

What I saw in that CR room — and what I see every week at Serenity Retreat — is the same longing. The same honest acknowledgment that we cannot fix ourselves. The same posture of surrender toward the One who can. 

Here’s what I love about these two ministries together: CR does the courageous work of getting honest — naming the patterns, the wounds, the places where life has come unraveled. And TPM is what happens next. It’s a structured way to bring exactly what that honesty surfaces directly to God in prayer and let Him do what only He can do. 

Neither ministry puts itself in the role of doing the transformation. Both are clear: only God can do this. CR’s Twelve Steps are a framework for surrender — for getting ourselves out of the way so God can move. TPM is a lifestyle of doing the same thing, one belief at a time, in the quiet of a prayer session. 

Different structures. The same DNA. 

A Long Time Coming 

Skip had been telling me for years that CR and TPM complement each other. For years, I listened — and for years, I hadn’t acted on it. It was his persistence that finally moved me, and I am so grateful he didn’t give up. That evening at Celebrate Recovery wasn’t a spontaneous invitation. It was the fruit of one man’s long conviction that more people needed to know what was available to them — and his willingness to dedicate hours to both ministries to make that happen. Skip’s heart is simply this: he wants more and more people walking in God’s full truth and perspective. And he is putting in the work to see it happen. 

So when I stood up to speak that night, I wanted to close with a story that showed exactly what that kind of freedom looks like from the inside. Skip and his wife Pam had graciously allowed their story to be included in my book, Raising Truth Seekers — and it was their testimony I chose to share in that room. 

Not long ago, Skip was a man on the defensive. He carried a deep belief that he had to protect himself — that his wife wasn’t truly for him, wasn’t capable of putting his interests first. His wife carried her own weight too. She believed she had to become something before she could lower her guard. Trust had eroded. Arguments were common. Their ability to navigate life as partners — and as parents — had started to disappear. 

His wife found TPM first. As Skip watched what began to happen in her, he decided to pursue it himself. And as the Holy Spirit began revealing truth in the places where false belief had taken hold, something extraordinary happened in their marriage. 

Here’s how Skip describes himself now: “I am now more tenderly present, more willing to connect deeply, and more trusting in God to protect me.” 

I couldn’t have planned a more fitting ending to the evening: the man who invited me to speak, whose own transformation was the closing story, sitting right there in the room to hear it. 

What Skip Has Always Known 

Skip has watched both of these ministries long enough to see what they share at the core. Here is how he describes it: 

“I have long believed that TPM is a great complementary tool with the Twelve Steps. I am grateful that Barb was able to provide an overview of TPM and indeed, of Serenity Retreat, in order to raise awareness of the tool and the ministry in the Celebrate Recovery community.” 

And then he said this — and I think it’s the clearest summary I’ve heard of what both of these ministries are really after: 

“Both ministries are committed to digging deeply, exposing lies and inviting the only One Who can bring Truth, the Holy Spirit. I look forward to further exploring opportunities for these ministries to collaborate in God’s effort to liberate and transform His people.” 

Liberate and transform His people. That’s the goal. Not of TPM alone. Not of CR alone. That’s the goal of the Kingdom — and God, in His kindness, uses more than one path to get us there. 

Could This Be for You? 

If you’re part of a Celebrate Recovery community — or any recovery ministry — and something in this post has stirred something in you, I want you to know there’s a next step available. 

A TPM prayer session isn’t counseling. It isn’t a program. It’s simply a structured space to bring what you’ve been carrying to the Lord and let Him speak into it. Our prayer ministers at Serenity Retreat would love to walk alongside you. 

And if you’re new here and wondering whether any of this is for you — you don’t have to have it all figured out. You just have to be willing to let God into one room. 

We go where we’re invited. If you’d like Serenity Retreat to come and share about TPM with your organization or ministry community — just like we did with Celebrate Recovery — we’d love that conversation. 

Schedule a prayer session — https://serenityretreat.com/book/ 

Learn more about TPM — https://serenityretreat.com/training/tpm101/ 

Invite us to speak — [email protected] 

Coffee, Conversation, and Transformation

By Paige Loveless 

Two years ago, I purchased a copy of Transformation Prayer Ministry Principles-Purpose-Process and embarked on the six-week TPM introductory course.  It was a wonderful experience that reinforced for me what “a present help in time of trouble” is our God. 

I began sharing what I was learning with my friends and particularly with a group of women I meet with every week. It was obvious the information regarding this way of cooperating with God in the transformation process was making an impact. 

In recent years I have periodically hosted what I call a kaffeeklatsch in my home. (Official definition: a place where coffee is served and important things are said.) And indeed, important things have been said by each and every one by the invited speakers. It’s a rich blessing for the attendees and for me too, in expressing hospitality in this way. 

Once I realized the great value of TPM to the body of Christ, I planned to invite Barbara Rolen, Serenity Retreat Program Director to be a kaffeeklatsch speaker. We finally were able to do that this year on February 28. It was a beautiful morning of hearing Barb present the basics of TPM and sharing powerful examples from her own life.  

Everyone in attendance expressed their appreciation for the blessings and encouragement they received. I think the great value in this was that it was confirmation that God really is big enough and willing enough to reach us in the deepest part of our being, leading us to and persuading us of the Truth. And believing the Truth changes everything!   

Two of the women will soon begin gathering regularly to go through the TPM manual together. Several expressed a desire to go to Serenity Retreat. I have had impactful conversations with several of the attendees to reinforce or clarify some aspect of TPM to the level of my current understanding. I’ve been renewed in intentionally referencing the TPM principles, purpose and process routinely with the group I am facilitating weekly and in private conversations.  

Paige extends her heartfelt thanks to Barb, for making time in her busy schedule to prepare her presentation and make the trek to Boerne and for the fruitful morning it produced. 

Could Your Living Room Be Next? 

Paige didn’t need a ministry degree or a large venue. She needed a coffee pot, a heart for her friends, and a willingness to say, “I found a new way to communicate with God that has changed my life — and I’d love for you to come hear about it.” 

If you’ve experienced the impact of TPM and have been wondering how to share it with people you love, hosting a kaffeeklatsch — or brunch, or backyard gathering — might be exactly the open door you’ve been looking for. 

We’d love to help you make it happen. Reach out to us at Serenity Retreat to explore how we can support you in bringing this conversation to your community. 

Contact us: 713.649.7729  [email protected] 

One Hundred Years of Serenity

A Prayer for an Age of Extremes

by Tiffany Pardue, Retreats Director

I have been saturated in the news lately.

Massacres, wars, civil wars, imminent wars. The release of files implicating world and pop culture leaders. More prominent Christian leaders exposed in sin and betrayal. The polarity surrounding immigration, ICE, Israel, Iran. Unending reports of sex trafficking, gross perversions, murders. The double-talk and lack of justice — especially for children. 

And beneath the headlines: the traumas, griefs, heartaches, and uncertainties of my own life. The same true for those for whom I care, and those we serve at Serenity Retreat. Likely also for you?

As I journaled my wrestles to the Lord this week, I found myself repenting — not for caring, and not for being informed, but for overconsumption. For receiving and attempting to sift truth from a dozen voices before first being still with Him. For allowing the volume of information to reduce my ability to hear what He has to say.

I committed again to bring my thoughts and questions first to Him before diving deeper or processing with others. To remember that discernment is born not from endless input, but from intimacy. 

In those moments of turning, something unexpected surfaced. The first line of the Serenity Prayer.

God, grant me the serenity
to accept the things I cannot change,
courage to change the things I can,
and wisdom to know the difference.

So I looked up the prayer and read it in its entirety. Tears.

At the bottom of the page was the author’s name, Reinhold Niebuhr.
The year: 1926.

One hundred years ago.

What a decade. What a century.

Curious, I read about him and returned to the 1920s. He penned his prayer in a time described as “an age of extreme contradiction.” Unmatched prosperity and cultural advancement existed alongside intense social unrest and reaction. A decade marked by women’s suffrage and the Great Depression, that bore urbanism and modernism, as well as the Ku Klux Klan, Prohibition, nativism, and religious fundamentalism.

Extreme contradiction. Cultural advancement alongside deep corruption. Religious fervor alongside profound moral compromise.

It all feels sadly familiar.

Notable reports — and notable silences — from mainstream and alternative news sources regarding everything from global trafficking rings to local and international conflicts.
Notable reports — and notable silences — from church leaders, ministries, denominational heads, and influencers regarding perversions within the Church.
Notable reports — and notable silences — from governments at every level.

Everyone seems to be pursuing a moral or religious high ground. Whether the issue is familial, political, scandal, or cultural upheaval, conviction is loud. Humility is rare.

Many of us are in-our-bones tired. 

Rocked from the last bombs.
Weary of sorting truth from manipulation.
Grieving what has been lost or defiled.
Watching love grow cold.
Wishing those in authority would do more.
Considering what more we could have done or can do.
Angry as deception, lethargy, evil and injustice persist.

Lord, have mercy.

The full Serenity Prayer goes beyond its familiar opening. It speaks of living one day at a time. Enjoying one moment at a time. Accepting hardship as a pathway to peace. Identifying with Jesus. Trusting that God will make all things right if we surrender to His will. Then it speaks of happiness — reasonable and supreme, forever.

Just, yes. Amen. Such a simple, infinitely profound prayer. What I think I appreciate most about returning to it and digging a little deeper now is understanding that this prayer was forged in turbulence. 

Serenity, then, is not denial, disengagement, or indifference. 

Serenity is ordered trust.

It is the refusal to let darkness dictate the condition of our inner world. It’s the courage to act where God assigns responsibility, and the humility to release what He has not. It’s heavenly wisdom formed not by acquiring knowledge, but received by sitting-walking-standing with Him.

“Be still, and know that I am God.”  —Psalm 46:10

This psalm wasn’t written in a holy vacuum. In it, the nations are raging, and kingdoms, tottering. Stillness, then, is not escapism. It’s allegiance, choosing where to anchor when the earth shakes.

And that is where I find myself in this season, anchored at Serenity — serving, learning, and healing every day. To retreat is not escape from reality, it’s returning to Truth. It’s receiving when the enemy is doing its most to take. It’s a military strategy, but I’ll save that for another time. 

The world in 1926 needed this prayer, and we need it now. To mark its centennial, how about reading the Serenity Prayer aloud: 

The Full Serenity Prayer

by Reinhold Niebuhr (1926)

God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change,
courage to change the things I can,
and wisdom to know the difference.

Living one day at a time,
enjoying one moment at a time;
accepting hardship as a pathway to peace;
taking, as Jesus did,
this sinful world as it is,
not as I would have it;
trusting that You will make all things right
if I surrender to Your will;
that I may be reasonably happy in this life
and supremely happy with You forever in the next.

Amen.

Now will you join me in practicing it? 

To limit our intake.
To guard our inner lives.
To endure hardship and expect happiness.
To confess where we have partnered with fear.
To acknowledge our thoughts and take them to the Lord. Our feelings, too — TPM is amazing for that. 
To take courage and act as He speaks.
To accept where He asks for surrender.
To trust that justice ultimately rests in His hands.

We are living in an age of extremes, also an age of salvation. Perhaps the most courageous thing is to respond and say “yes”. Yes to His leadership. His limits. His wisdom. His peace. His way.

We cannot quiet the nations, news, or naysayers, but we can quiet our souls.

And we can be happy.

Happy is the one whose help is the God of Jacob, whose hope is in the Lord his God, the Maker of heaven and earth, the sea and everything in them. He remains faithful forever —Psalm 146:5-6


For help with unrest, frustration, or pain, we invite you to take time away at Serenity Retreat in Bellville, and/or a cost-free hour at a time in Transformation Prayer Ministry. Click here to schedule a session or retreat today. Be blessed!

Jesus-loving Ladies of 2026 looking like the 1920s — celebrating the 4th Anniversary of The Gathery in Bellville, Texas.

Collaborating For More: Group Retreats, Now With TPM®!

by Tiffany Pardue and Barbara Rolen, Retreats and Program Directors

While Christian groups have gathered to experience the Lord at Serenity Retreat Bellville for years, God is doing is something new and exciting with Transformation Prayer Ministry (TPM). 

Here’s What’s New  

This fall, in planning meetings with group retreat leaders, discussions about what it might look like to incorporate TPM sessions increased. Leaders began showing an interest in our prayer ministers providing TPM to their groups—from 10, to 15, even 17 at a time! With our typical Personal Healing Retreat format, that’s just not feasible.  

So, we sought the Lord and began to book group retreats that include one TPM session per participant. The response has been extraordinary—Serenity Retreat partnered with church small groups and ministry teams to provide TPM during group retreats is a Kingdom match made in heaven! 

The Experiment  

Our first group, Dream Makers, had ten participants, seven of whom received prayer. We scheduled two prayer minister teams to serve them, and when illness hit mid-retreat—we didn’t cancel, we pivoted. Four sessions were provided via Zoom to the group gathered at Bellville. Thank God that the Holy Spirit is not constrained by space or screens!  

Then came our second group, Restored Wives with 17 ladies. We brought in three all-star prayer minister and intercessor teams to provide TPM to 16 young mommas and wives over the course of 24 hours. You should have seen it!  

By the end of the retreat, they stood facing the pond, hands clasped and lifted high in celebration of Jesus and what He had done among them—collectively and in each of their hearts. So much restoration and love. 

The Lord has moved in ways we’ve never experienced through these group retreat collaborations. With all our hearts turned to the Lord for wisdom and guidance, 23 women have experienced TPM through this new format, almost all of them for the first time. That’s 23 women who have given the opportunity to have an encounter with the Lord resulting in more freedom and transformation. 

Why This Matters 

Here’s what we’re discovering: this format makes TPM accessible to groups who might not otherwise experience it. 

Let’s say your men or women’s ministry wants to introduce TPM to your leaders, but asking everyone to commit to a full individual retreat isn’t realistic. Maybe your small group has been walking through increasingly difficult circumstances and you know you need to create space for everyone to lean in together—a space where all can gather, and also experience quiet, sacred moments with the Lord, including a TPM session—you’re wondering how you can make this work for a larger group? Or perhaps the Lord is inviting your group of friends or ministry team to go deeper together in Him—and one TPM session per person feels like the perfect starting point. 

This new option? It’s opening doors and so many possibilities. 

It Takes a Small Army (of Prayer Ministers) 

I need to tell you something: this only works because of our prayer ministers’ hearts for this ministry. They want as many people as possible to encounter the Lord and walk in freedom! When we asked prayer ministers to serve these two groups—first two teams for the group of ten, then three teams for the group of 17—many said yes without hesitation. They all agreed it was such a joy to come together and serve so many women at once. Their willingness to serve, their hunger to see people set free, their faithfulness to show up—that’s what makes this kind of multiplication possible. 

Is This for Your Group? 

If you’ve been thinking about how and when you can bring your ministry team, small group, even family or friends to Bellville, and what it might look like to receive ministry together—this might be exactly what you’re looking for. 

We are thrilled to collaborate with you to create a Group Retreat experience tailored to your needs, with or without our new one-session-per-participant option. Email [email protected] to start the conversation and see what the Lord has in store for you and your people in2026! 

Grateful for All That God Is Doing 

This Thanksgiving, as we think of these 23 women, many whose lives have been deeply impacted and changed, we say THANK YOU.  

Thank you to our powerful, big-hearted prayer ministers, and thank you to every person who makes the space, investing time and resources to step out in faith, believing that God will encounter you with His truth. Thank you to all who are praying for Serenity Retreat, supporting this work, or cheering us on—thank you for being part of what God is multiplying here. And thank you, Jesus, for doing what only You can do!  

We have so many reasons to be grateful and so many to whom we give our thanks. God has been good to Serenity Retreat this year, and we are excited and expectant to see how He leads us through the holidays and into the new year, together. Happy Thanksgiving, Family!  


PRAYER MINISTERS – One prayer minister was so inspired by reading this post that she is ready to sign up to join the TPM explosion happening in Bellville. Anybody else want to join? Don’t let 16 sessions scare you, or even 5 sessions for one team. Prayer teams are not always compiled of the same ministers. Mentors and Intercessors serve as they’re available and then tag the next team.

Contact [email protected] to be added to the “Ready Retreat Team”. When the need arises, you’ll be contacted. If you can serve, great—if not, we’ll call you the next time. Thanks and we hope to hear from you soon!

The Three Ways TPM Changed My Life — and the One That Changed Everything

by a Mentee and Prayer Minister, R.S.

There are 3 main amazing things [Transformation Prayer Ministry] TPM has done in my life. There is a 4th thing too, which is the most important thing. Before TPM, I cried out to God for emotional healing and help with my big strong emotions. They were ruining my relationships and my life. 

EMOTIONAL LANDMINE

1. I was so emotionally damaged and traumatized when I started TPM that I had very few friends. The friends I did have were wonderful people, but I couldn’t really be a part of community because I had too many triggers.

I was like an emotional landmine field: so easily hurt. I would feel the emotions so strongly and for so long and didn’t know my way out of them. They made me physically sick. So, I would avoid groups of people, trying to avoid triggers. 

My testimony is that now I have a bunch of friends. I am being loved and accepted in community. I am hurt by far fewer things and I feel God’s love and truth abiding inside of me much more.

I also feel safe knowing that if a hard emotion does come up, I can take it to my Jesus in TPM. I trust him to transform me and make me well again through this amazing tool.

2. I am able to do things that I’ve always dreamed of doing. For example, I’ve always been a passionate actress, but I had such intense emotional reactions that it gave me a bad reputation. It made me afraid of myself. Literally afraid of what I might do in a strong emotional moment. My emotions kept ruining my life because they were so big that they would burn bridges. Praise the Lord! He has transformed the heart beliefs that created those emotions, and now I have much better reactions SO much more of the time! Importantly, I don’t feel afraid of my emotions anymore. Because of Jesus’ redemption through TPM, I feel safe being me. I am now performing my dream roles. Praise the Lord! I know that if I have strong emotions, I can take them to the Lord, instead of them taking me over.

And on top of that, a lot of my heart beliefs have been shifted so I have better initial reactions and feel MUCH better in general. I trust myself a lot more because I trust the Lord in me. Most of the time I walk around filled with God’s peace and love. Not all the time, of course, but that’s when I get another TPM session! 


3. Another huge testimony is I have been estranged from my family for 17 years because of some hard things that happened between us. I have been receiving so much deep inner healing through TPM that I feel healed and whole enough to go visit my family! I prayed to God for reconciliation and God did a miracle because he knew I was ready. Through a series of miracles that he orchestrated, He opened the door of love and my family invited me to Thanksgiving for the first time in almost 2 decades!

I feel so much freedom, love and joy in my heart towards them because Jesus has shifted my heart’s perspective to HIS truth. I pray for them with free loving goodwill in my heart! Praise Jesus! I feel heavenly freedom inside my heart. I love them!!! I am excited to see the people I previously proclaimed I never wanted to see again. Look what Jesus did!!! Jesus has reunited me with my family.

THE MOST IMPORTANT ONE!

4. Now, now—4 is the most important one. I am tearing up as I write this. Here it is: I have gotten to know Jesus intimately through this process. I have seen His amazing perspectives over and over again and gotten so much closer to Him by understanding how He feels and thinks about things. I have gotten closer to the Father as well, and of course, to Holy Spirit. Having relationship with Him is the best 

thing in the universe because it’s literally what we were created for. Getting to actually spend regular time hearing him speaking and showing me his wise 

perspective is like honey and diamonds. It’s the best thing there is! 

So yes, TPM has been an answer to the deep heartfelt prayer I had for my emotions to be well so that my life could be well. I am so thankful to God for bringing me TPM and for the deep inner effect it has had.

Book your TPM session here or start your training journey here!

Happy Thanksgiving

The Book I Wish I’d Had: Why It Took Me Ten Years to Write Raising Truth Seekers 

by Barbara Rolen, Program Director, Serenity Retreat

Ten years ago, God gave me a dream. 

He wanted me to help parents weave Transformation Prayer Ministry, this beautiful process we use at Serenity Retreat, into their everyday parenting and family rhythms. To show them how running to Jesus with struggles could become as natural as breathing in their homes. 

But here’s the thing: I wasn’t ready yet. 

I was still holding onto way too many lies. 

The Lies I Didn’t Know I Believed 

For decades, anxiety and fear plagued me. They colored everything: my relationships, my parenting, my view of God Himself. What I didn’t realize was that I’d picked up lies as a child. Lies like “I’m worthless.” “I’m unlovable.” “I’m defective.” 

The really insidious part? I had no idea these lies were running my life. I didn’t even know I believed I couldn’t trust God. 

But when I finally got to the end of myself—when I cried out to Him that I was just done with this way of living—He met me there. And He brought Transformation Prayer Ministry (TPM) into my life. 

One by one, He’s been replacing those lies with His truth—His perspective. 

That’s what TPM is, really. It’s a process where we meet God in our pain, and He brings truth that sets us free as it says in John 8:32, “You will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.” TPM is simply a very effective way to cooperate with God and receive His truth—the kind that reaches down into the hidden places where we’ve been believing things that aren’t true, but we’ve been living life as if they were true.  

Imagine growing up believing you’re unlovable. You might spend your life jumping through hoops so others will love you and not reject you. Maybe you can see how it would be extremely hard to believe that God loves you, if in the core of your being, you believe the totally opposite?  

Even my husband’s death became part of this transformation journey. God used everything in my TPM sessions—the grief, the questions, the wrestling—to help me see things through His eyes instead of through the filter of my lies or limited perspective.  

All of that has led to the birth of Raising Truth Seekers

The Moments I Couldn’t Help My Kids 

You know what I remember most about parenting young children? The helplessness. 

When my kids were fighting or melting down, I didn’t know how to help them process what they were really feeling. I’d try to fix it, manage it, redirect it, but I couldn’t actually help them get to the root of what was happening inside. 

And the reason was painfully simple: I didn’t know how to do it myself. 

I didn’t know how to name my own emotions, trace them back to the beliefs driving them, or run to Jesus for His perspective in those moments. So how could I possibly teach my children to do it? 

This is the book I wish I’d had as a young mom. 

Not another book telling me what I should be doing, but one that showed me how transformation actually works—in me first, and then in my family. Because here’s what I’ve learned: we can’t give our children what we don’t have ourselves. 

What We’re Really After 

What we’re really after as parents is raising kids with deeply rooted faith—the kind that holds when life gets hard. The kind that doesn’t crumble when they face disappointment, rejection, or suffering. The kind of faith that is actually strengthened in the hard times each time the Lord persuades a family member’s heart of His truth.  

And that can happen when we create a family culture where running to Jesus with struggles is just part of how we do life. 

Not someday. Not when they’re older. Not when we finally get our act together. 

Right now, in the carpool line, in the meltdowns and the middle-of-the-night worries. 

TPM can happen anywhere: in traffic, before a hard conversation, in the moment your teenager slams the door. It’s like getting in the express lane with God. It takes you straight to the root of what’s really going on, instead of just managing the surface symptoms. 

When Kids See It Work 

I love what a dad in West Virginia shared with me. His teenage daughter was skeptical at first about this whole TPM thing. (Teenagers, right?) But after receiving truth from God in a TPM session with her dad, she yelled through the house: “Hey sis, Dad’s not crazy! This thing really works!” 

That’s the dream, isn’t it? Raising kids who actually want to bring their struggles to God; who know how to meet Him in their pain instead of numbing it, fixing it, or running from it. 

Esa and Conor George are a young Canadian couple I interviewed for my book. I recall Esa as a student in our training course asking questions about how to use TPM with children. I was delighted to discover that they are figuring it out in real time. Esa told me that they don’t typically sit down for a formal prayer session in their home. It happens right in the middle of the kitchen with the family all around. What a way to model running to Jesus when your emotions reveal you are not seeing things the way God sees them.  

Conor said that TPM has made him more curious in the moment. Now he asks himself, “Why am I so upset right now? What’s really behind this feeling?” He’s even learned to name what’s happening inside, saying to his family, “I’m feeling this right now. It’s not anyone’s fault—I just want to be honest.” That awareness helps him pause before reacting. He recognizes that his emotions might not reflect the full truth. Instead of rushing to fix things, he makes space for God to bring His perspective. What a beautiful way Conor is learning to shepherd his family so that his children grow up knowing there is only one thing to do when life gets hard: run to Jesus. 

This is generational transformation. 

It Starts With Us 

Here’s what I know after years of doing this work: the fruit of TPM is real, lasting transformation. 

As prayer ministers at Serenity, we get a front-row seat to these stories. We watch someone walk into a prayer session carrying years of anxiety or depression—and then watch them leave with a different countenance. One hour with the Lord brings more breakthrough than years of trying to fix themselves. 

But it starts with us experiencing it first. 

Our kids won’t learn to run to God with their struggles if they never see us do it. They won’t know how to receive truth from Him if we’re not modeling what that looks like. They won’t develop the habit of bringing their emotions to Jesus if home isn’t a safe place to name what they’re really feeling. 

Raising Truth Seekers is not a how-to book of Transformation Prayer Ministry but rather my invitation for you to prayerfully consider creating a family culture where meeting Jesus in the hard moments, for the purpose of gaining His perspective, becomes just part of how you do life together. You’ll read testimonies of parents and grandparents who have learned to incorporate TPM as a lifestyle in their families.  

Your Turn 

What lies might you be believing right now—about yourself, about God? What would it look like to run to Him with those struggles instead of trying to manage them on your own? 

At Serenity Retreat we’d love to walk with you on that journey. Because the truth really does set us free and that freedom is the greatest inheritance we can pass on to our children. 

Want to be the first to hear when Barbara’s new book Raising Truth Seekers releases? Grab your free Family Faith Talk at PursueAbundantLife.com, you’ll be added to her list for early updates, sneak peeks, and more!

At SerenityRetreat.com you can schedule a prayer session, request information about a retreat in Bellville, TX, or register for TPM 101, the first step in our TPM training.  

Raising Truth Seekers will be released this fall in its entirety. For anyone who commits to a monthly pledge in October 2025, you can request a copy of the 25th Anniversary Special Release (limited quantity).  

Experience the Unthinkable

By Eric Miller

My health had declined in ways that doctors couldn’t explain, then I lost my job, and most painfully, God felt silent.

I was still praying and living for Him, but my daily struggle had somehow drowned out His voice. I was worn out physically and spiritually, and sadly, I had started to believe that maybe God would no longer speak to me.

Then we discovered Transformational Prayer Ministry (TPM) through a Google search. After an orientation, I thought it would be just like any other prayer method I’d tried in the past, but boy, was I wrong. During my very first session, I experienced the unthinkable.

God spoke to me again… for the first time in several years.

Not through someone else and not in vague impressions, but in a crystal clear way that addressed the exact lie I’d been believing: that I was all alone. It was intensely personal, and extremely transforming. It gave me hope. Hearing God speak made my heart feel soft again (It’s amazing how hard my heart had become).

Amazingly, albeit slowly, my circumstances began to shift. Over time, my health began to improve, and eventually, new doors opened for me professionally. One day, I realized that I felt completely stable and perfectly normal. And shortly after that, I realized that the trials I had walked through had served the purpose of teaching me to always trust my Savior in the midst of suffering and pain.

TPM didn’t fix everything, but it definitely made my heart soften enough to hear God speak again, and as a result (it’s been several years since that first session), I am still able to hear my Savior speaking to me daily, and I am walking in continued health, freedom, and hope. All glory to God!

If you find yourself disconnected from God, or in a season of overwhelming trials, I want to encourage you that God is always speaking to you, and that you can always hear Him speaking if your heart is soft enough to listen. And I bet that He’ll use your pain and suffering to break through to you. And TPM.

…cause that’s what He did for me.

To book a TPM Session virtually, in-person, or at our retreat center in Bellville, TX go to: https://serenityretreat.com/book/