You carry the work.
We build the spine.
You run the program — addiction, foster care, IDD, mental health, prison, youth, single-mom support. You are passionate, undertrained for the load, and often the only person in your church who can name what you actually do all day. We build the framework, the tools, and the peer community that turns conviction into a practice that holds.
Built for the populations
the church has lost touch with.
Every one of these communities has stopped expecting much from the church. The fastest way to change that is to send a trained, supervised, supplied ministry director toward them — and to keep her there.
IDD & autism family support
Respite, family nights, sibling care, and pastoral care for caregivers of children and adults with intellectual or developmental disabilities. Often the most isolated families in your community — and the most loyal once seen.
Single-mother & family programs
Practical support, mentorship, childcare partnership, and a real spiritual community for moms parenting alone. Built on dignity, not deficit.
Prison & re-entry ministry
Inside-the-walls discipleship, family-of-the-incarcerated care, and re-entry mentorship for men and women coming home. The pathway that bridges Sunday and a halfway house.
Youth mentorship & at-risk youth
Mentorship matching, school-partnership models, and trauma-informed youth work for teens who don't have a present adult in their corner.
Recovery & mental health ministry
Peer-led recovery groups, clinical referral pathways, and supervised lay caregiving for neighbors carrying addiction or mental-health weight.
Foster, adoption & kinship care
Family-of-origin support, kinship-care wraparound, and a church-wide posture that makes vulnerable kids a community responsibility, not a household burden.
Three things your role is missing.
A framework, not a vibe.
You've been running on instinct and gospel conviction. We give you the model — trauma-informed, evidence-based, theologically literate — so your work is repeatable and trainable.
Tools that respect your time.
Forms, intake protocols, supervision templates, and outcome trackers that fit between home visits — not another database to feed.
Peers who get it.
A cohort of program leads doing the same kind of work in other contexts. The loneliness of this role is itself a barrier to good practice. We end it.