
I was recently sharing my testimony and realized that the most significant and transformative events in my life took place between ages 14-24. When I tell my story, I talk about the key people and events that shaped me during those years; my dads death, changing churches and experiencing God in a new way, a season in college wrestling with the Bible and experiencing depression, finding stability at seminary, and of course the individuals who played a huge role in my spiritual growth along the way. Those are the significant events that I share because they shaped and marked my life, but that was a long time ago.
I’m not sure how to summarize the 12 years that followed those significant markers. God was working on me, but there wasn’t a year that etched a new mark on my testimony timeline.

However, in 2019, I added a new transformative “event” to my story –
36 YEARS OLD, EMMAUS MINISTRIES.
When I came to work at Emmaus, I didn’t have a first hand experience of the ministry. I am only the second staff member to have not gone through the school first. I had been supporting my dear friend and now current director, Caleb Ives for six years so I was familiar with the ministry. I was passionate about the mission, and I felt like God was leading me here but I had never experienced Emmaus myself.
I heard testimonies of how life-changing it was and I was excited to be a part of helping others experience that life change. However, I wasn’t expecting how life changing it would be for me.
I’ve always valued giving my time to things that make a tangible impact and the reason I’m so passionate about Emmaus is because it does just that. These are just a few of the ways it has changed and impacted me this year.
1 – MISSIONARY LIFE – Being a missionary changed my prayer life and my relationships with friends and family.
During this year I’ve prayed and trusted God more than any other season of my life. Living dependently on God and others has allowed me to see God’s active presence in my life and to experience very specific answered prayers. It has also allowed me to need the Body of Christ and experience people in a new way. In America people love independence and don’t want to need people. It can be hard and vulnerable to depend on people, but the reality is that we do need each other and when we experience others meeting our needs something happens inside of us. It stirs up thankfulness, humility, and a desire to reciprocate. I now pray for a whole list of people instead of just my immediate circle and I get to stay connected to people even when we don’t live in the same city. Trusting God to provide for me through His people and inviting them to join in my work is a process that continues to shape and stretch me. We are the body of Christ, and we need each other but now I’ve experienced that more intimately.

2 – AUTHENTIC SPIRITUAL COMMUNITY – Having a “community” of people to hangout with is one thing, but having genuine spiritual community to deepen my relationship with God is something I desired for over a decade. I have always had individuals who helped me grow spiritually but having a whole community of them is different. I dare say there is nothing more powerful than being surrounded by people who live their daily lives actively seeking God and teaching others to do the same.
We laugh together, we eat together, we Uber each other to the airport, we play games and go to events but more than that, we get real with each other. We admit our struggles, we ask each other how our relationship with God is going, we pray together, we cry together, we wrestle with questions together, we speak truth to each other. Our relationship with God and with those around us are better because we live in intentional Christian community.
As if this weren’t enough, I have also been refined in the everyday moments simply by watching how they live like Jesus in the details and the small moments. Their lives have been a daily sermon to me. They don’t have to call out my weaknesses for me to be convicted. It only takes me a few minutes to notice when they are living like Christ and I’m living out of my flesh. I am encouraged and challenged by the way they walk through life and their desire to honor Christ and others in every interaction.
Getting to do life with such a genuine intentional group of Christ followers is truly one of the greatest gifts, and something I want everyone to have access to. I’m so thankful to be a part of this kind of community and to get to welcome others into it. My prayer is that when they leave Emmaus they will create the same kind of community wherever they are.
3 – STUDYING THE BIBLE – Outside of my time in Seminary, Emmaus has taught me more about the Bible than anything else. There is something unique and powerful about dedicating a year of your life and time to study the whole Bible in-depth.
I studied the OT and NT in college but it was spread out over 4 years and in the middle of Math, English, and Science classes so there was a lot I missed. I’ve also been reading the Bible daily for the last 15 years but since I rarely used a specific reading plan I often neglected books like Haggai, Zephaniah, Malachi or Revelation. I have read some books 50x but not reading the whole Bible annually means I can actually go years without reading some books. Some people only read devotionals, some read a few verses a day, some only read from the NT, and a sermon rarely covers more than a few verses each week so these realities have left the church biblically anemic.
Emmaus has helped me recognize some of my own deficiencies. It is humbling to admit that since I’ve been studying and teaching the Bible for the last 15 years, but our program has filled in some important missing holes in my big picture foundation. I have a greater grasp on the the overall story of God’s plan for His people, then and now, than I did before working at Emmaus.
It does make me wonder if anything can compare to intentionally studying the entire Bible in a condensed time frame. The longer it takes us to read through the Bible the more we forget and the more disconnected everything becomes. If you were to read the whole Bible in a week, you would connect things and grasp things you never noticed before. Seeing and understanding the big picture lays a critical foundation for interpreting the details. Studying the Bible for a year at Emmaus is like getting a helicopter view of Central Park instead of strolling the grounds for 5-10 minutes a few times a week. The helicopter experience keeps you from missing the forest because of the trees. Our program doesn’t allow you to only study books you are used to or get too caught up in details. All of the books are important and intimately connected to the bigger story of God’s work in the world. I think we miss something significant when we never take the helicopter ride.
I truly wish everyone could spend one year of their life at Emmaus. I think the experience of dedicating a season of your life to study God’s Word in the context of genuine Christian community and intentional discipleship is well worth the unconventional decision. Helicopter rides cost more than a daily stroll but you get a completely different experience. It’s one of my greatest joys to walk with people who choose to do this with us every year.
I am so thankful for a ministry like Emmaus. I will be forever grateful for how God used 2019 at Emmaus to change me, how the Holy Spirit enabled me to effect change, and that I got to watch transformation happen in the lives of those who have joined us. It has been a redemptive, exciting, and hopeful season.
2020 HERE WE COME!























