The Navigators https://www.navigators.org To Know Christ, Make Him Known, and Help Others Do the Same® Tue, 16 Dec 2025 16:33:08 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://www.navigators.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/cropped-Navigators-Favicon-150x150.png The Navigators https://www.navigators.org 32 32 Standing in the Gap: Bringing Hope to Oklahoma City https://www.navigators.org/blog/standing-in-the-gap-bringing-hope-to-oklahoma-city/ https://www.navigators.org/blog/standing-in-the-gap-bringing-hope-to-oklahoma-city/#comments Mon, 19 Jan 2026 19:00:00 +0000 https://www.navigators.org/?p=268419 “The Word became flesh and blood, and moved into the neighborhood” John 1:14 (MSG).

In 2010, when Jared Stevenson was a young basketball player at McPherson College, he found himself asking deep questions: Who am I? What am I doing with my life? What’s it all for?

A family of five sits together on an outdoor bench, smiling and laughing in the sunlight.
Jared and his family.

One day, he reached out to the only guy he knew who might have answers about God — his friend Zach, a pastor’s kid who was living in the same party scene he was.

Unbeknownst to Jared, the Lord was sovereignly working in both of their lives. The night before, Zach had been challenged by a TV evangelist’s call for viewers to “get right with God.” At the time, Jared didn’t know what that meant, and the two friends started reading the Bible together. Jared remembers being blown away by Matthew 6:33 — that the God of the universe was inviting him to seek His Kingdom and be in relationship with Him.

After noticing Jared reading the Bible, one of Jared’s coaches started a campus Bible study. In a town where most churches were either preaching universalism or a prosperity gospel, this study became a lifeline for students.

Eventually, Jared and Zach found their way to a gospel-preaching church. The very first Sunday they attended a service, the pastor, Jim, invited them to Pizza Hut for lunch and then continued to meet regularly with them. This was Jared’s first experience with Life-to-Life® discipleship.

Fourteen years later, Jared now serves with Navigators I:58 and as a pastor at a church in Oklahoma City (OKC) leading the neighborhood ministry team.

Moving into the Neighborhood

If you look at a map of OKC, you’ll notice that four intersecting highways create a perfect square. Of the people currently incarcerated in OKC prisons, a disproportionate amount — nearly two-thirds — come from within that square. It’s an area riddled with gang violence and economic depletion, side effects of the gentrification that followed busing integration efforts of the 1970s.

Jared and many of those he ministers alongside intentionally moved into this area — and they’re planning to stay.

“If you want to see generational impact, you have to decide for yourself that you’re going to live here 15 to 20 years,” Jared says. “This is year 15 for me.”

For Jared, when you stick with people in this way, they become your family: it’s no longer us vs. them, but we as family.

“Your needs become my needs; your things become my things,” Jared explains. “That changes the way you do ministry.” 

With dispensaries standing where food markets once thrived, streets overrun by substance use, and youth desperate for community, Jared has faced challenges as a pastor and disciplemaker.

For example, this past year Jared unexpectedly encountered a young woman who was a victim of gun violence. After being shot, she lost control of the car and ran right through the wall of the church office. She passed in Jared’s arms as he prayed over her. The individuals involved in the violence were 15 and 17 years old.

That day, Jared revisited questions he has asked himself many times: How was Jesus a man of sorrows and yet full of joy? How can I personally press on in ministry with joy and hope while witnessing so much sorrow?

The Lord continues to meet Jared in these difficult moments by encouraging him through Scripture. He has committed to praying Zechariah 13:2 and Matthew 9:38 over his city — for all false teaching to stop and more laborers to arise as the body of Christ works together to advance the gospel in their neighborhood, maintain a free health clinic, sustain a startup community school, host after-school programs, and build up the local church.

“Stepping into areas where there has been systematic oppression for decades … any kind of real church work is going to be ‘prophetic’ in its nature, meaning it’s going to speak to those things and address some of those issues,” Jared says. “It’s going to preach the gospel and do the work.”

Creatively Reaching Youth in OKC

A few years ago, Jared was reading Proverbs 29 and recognized similar themes in the youth surrounding him: they didn’t know God, they were “casting off restraint” (see v. 18), and they were discouraged.

Jared recalls one kid who would wander the streets, often showing up at Jared’s house to ask for work, trying to earn money. Eventually, the boy got in some serious trouble. “It broke me,” Jared remembers.

With this heavy on his heart, Jared started asking students what they needed. The answer was both simple and complicated: they needed a place to go — a place to belong, to have fun with other youth, to eat and play games.

At the time, Jared’s church didn’t have a permanent gathering space, but he started praying. As he researched after-school programs, he learned that most youth get in trouble between the hours of 3 and 6 p.m. — right after school, before their parents get home.

What if someone stepped in the gap? “That’s what we did,” Jared says. Even before his church had a building of its own, God provided a space for the after-school program through another Kingdom-minded church in the community that graciously offered use of their building!

At the same time, Jared’s family and other ministry families were wrestling with the tensions of raising their own children in this neighborhood. While they were committed to raising up young disciplemakers — followers of Jesus who love like He did, and who understand that everyone is equally in need of the gospel — they didn’t have peace about entrusting their kids to the local school.

One day an older woman pulled one of the other church pastors aside during a neighborhood Bible study, grieved that her grandson couldn’t read. She asked, “What are you going to do about it?” The Holy Spirit brought Isaiah 58 to mind, and this is how St. Paul’s Community School was born.

Grace at Work

Jared carries the young guys from his neighborhood and after-school program on his heart — some of whom he’s known since they were 7 or 8 years old. He watches many of them struggle after they graduate, and that has taught him to be persistent in prayer  and confidently hope in the grace of God. “God’s grace is more merciful than I can even imagine, and He’s sovereignly working in their lives to draw them,” Jared shares.

That grace saved him when he was a junior at McPherson. It sustains him when he’s praying over the victim of a drive-by shooting or presiding over a family funeral. And grace is what he’s pointing his kids, his family, neighbors, congregants, and students toward — because we all need Jesus to be our Savior.

Grateful for God’s provision of the resources and relationships that are helping fuel so many different ministries in his neighborhood, Jared has seen firsthand the gift of seeing disciplemaking thrive in a local church context.

“What’s really great about our church is that there doesn’t seem to be any contentiousness with it,” Jared says. “And so, when we’re talking about Life-to-Life discipleship and training relationships, we’re talking about it in a way that helps us to see where that fits in with the larger map of discipleship.”

When disciplemakers press on in knowing Christ and all that His heart is for — making Him known, tangibly, in word and in deed, and helping others do the same — that’s when we see generations impacted by His grace.

Join us in praying over Jared’s ministry, that they continue to raise laborers to serve in local ministries, represent the heart of Jesus to those they serve, and see their city transformed.

Discipleship Tip:

Long-term presence can be one of the most powerful tools in disciplemaking. When you choose to stay, to show up consistently, and to carry people on your heart over years — not just moments — discipleship becomes family, not a project. Ask God where He’s inviting you to be faithfully present so others can experience His love through your steady, everyday life.


31 Days Toward Trusting God

Are you hesitant to trust God? Do you wonder where He is when hard things happen? You’re invited to go on a journey with God, explore His promises and find out more about His character. Find hope in how His Spirit reveals to you about trusting God more through this resource, 31 Days Toward Trusting God.


Note: As the Redemption Community Development Corporation (RCDC) started by Jared’s church responds to increasing needs in the community, they are expanding their after-school program from one day a week to four days a week. If you’re interested in giving, please reach out to Jared or give to this project here. If you’re interested in partnering with Jared in ministry in Oklahoma City, you can make a gift here.

]]>
“The Word became flesh and blood, and moved into the neighborhood” John 1:14 (MSG).

In 2010, when Jared Stevenson was a young basketball player at McPherson College, he found himself asking deep questions: Who am I? What am I doing with my life? What’s it all for?

A family of five sits together on an outdoor bench, smiling and laughing in the sunlight.
Jared and his family.

One day, he reached out to the only guy he knew who might have answers about God — his friend Zach, a pastor’s kid who was living in the same party scene he was.

Unbeknownst to Jared, the Lord was sovereignly working in both of their lives. The night before, Zach had been challenged by a TV evangelist’s call for viewers to “get right with God.” At the time, Jared didn’t know what that meant, and the two friends started reading the Bible together. Jared remembers being blown away by Matthew 6:33 — that the God of the universe was inviting him to seek His Kingdom and be in relationship with Him.

After noticing Jared reading the Bible, one of Jared’s coaches started a campus Bible study. In a town where most churches were either preaching universalism or a prosperity gospel, this study became a lifeline for students.

Eventually, Jared and Zach found their way to a gospel-preaching church. The very first Sunday they attended a service, the pastor, Jim, invited them to Pizza Hut for lunch and then continued to meet regularly with them. This was Jared’s first experience with Life-to-Life® discipleship.

Fourteen years later, Jared now serves with Navigators I:58 and as a pastor at a church in Oklahoma City (OKC) leading the neighborhood ministry team.

Moving into the Neighborhood

If you look at a map of OKC, you’ll notice that four intersecting highways create a perfect square. Of the people currently incarcerated in OKC prisons, a disproportionate amount — nearly two-thirds — come from within that square. It’s an area riddled with gang violence and economic depletion, side effects of the gentrification that followed busing integration efforts of the 1970s.

Jared and many of those he ministers alongside intentionally moved into this area — and they’re planning to stay.

“If you want to see generational impact, you have to decide for yourself that you’re going to live here 15 to 20 years,” Jared says. “This is year 15 for me.”

For Jared, when you stick with people in this way, they become your family: it’s no longer us vs. them, but we as family.

“Your needs become my needs; your things become my things,” Jared explains. “That changes the way you do ministry.” 

With dispensaries standing where food markets once thrived, streets overrun by substance use, and youth desperate for community, Jared has faced challenges as a pastor and disciplemaker.

For example, this past year Jared unexpectedly encountered a young woman who was a victim of gun violence. After being shot, she lost control of the car and ran right through the wall of the church office. She passed in Jared’s arms as he prayed over her. The individuals involved in the violence were 15 and 17 years old.

That day, Jared revisited questions he has asked himself many times: How was Jesus a man of sorrows and yet full of joy? How can I personally press on in ministry with joy and hope while witnessing so much sorrow?

The Lord continues to meet Jared in these difficult moments by encouraging him through Scripture. He has committed to praying Zechariah 13:2 and Matthew 9:38 over his city — for all false teaching to stop and more laborers to arise as the body of Christ works together to advance the gospel in their neighborhood, maintain a free health clinic, sustain a startup community school, host after-school programs, and build up the local church.

“Stepping into areas where there has been systematic oppression for decades … any kind of real church work is going to be ‘prophetic’ in its nature, meaning it’s going to speak to those things and address some of those issues,” Jared says. “It’s going to preach the gospel and do the work.”

Creatively Reaching Youth in OKC

A few years ago, Jared was reading Proverbs 29 and recognized similar themes in the youth surrounding him: they didn’t know God, they were “casting off restraint” (see v. 18), and they were discouraged.

Jared recalls one kid who would wander the streets, often showing up at Jared’s house to ask for work, trying to earn money. Eventually, the boy got in some serious trouble. “It broke me,” Jared remembers.

With this heavy on his heart, Jared started asking students what they needed. The answer was both simple and complicated: they needed a place to go — a place to belong, to have fun with other youth, to eat and play games.

At the time, Jared’s church didn’t have a permanent gathering space, but he started praying. As he researched after-school programs, he learned that most youth get in trouble between the hours of 3 and 6 p.m. — right after school, before their parents get home.

What if someone stepped in the gap? “That’s what we did,” Jared says. Even before his church had a building of its own, God provided a space for the after-school program through another Kingdom-minded church in the community that graciously offered use of their building!

At the same time, Jared’s family and other ministry families were wrestling with the tensions of raising their own children in this neighborhood. While they were committed to raising up young disciplemakers — followers of Jesus who love like He did, and who understand that everyone is equally in need of the gospel — they didn’t have peace about entrusting their kids to the local school.

One day an older woman pulled one of the other church pastors aside during a neighborhood Bible study, grieved that her grandson couldn’t read. She asked, “What are you going to do about it?” The Holy Spirit brought Isaiah 58 to mind, and this is how St. Paul’s Community School was born.

Grace at Work

Jared carries the young guys from his neighborhood and after-school program on his heart — some of whom he’s known since they were 7 or 8 years old. He watches many of them struggle after they graduate, and that has taught him to be persistent in prayer  and confidently hope in the grace of God. “God’s grace is more merciful than I can even imagine, and He’s sovereignly working in their lives to draw them,” Jared shares.

That grace saved him when he was a junior at McPherson. It sustains him when he’s praying over the victim of a drive-by shooting or presiding over a family funeral. And grace is what he’s pointing his kids, his family, neighbors, congregants, and students toward — because we all need Jesus to be our Savior.

Grateful for God’s provision of the resources and relationships that are helping fuel so many different ministries in his neighborhood, Jared has seen firsthand the gift of seeing disciplemaking thrive in a local church context.

“What’s really great about our church is that there doesn’t seem to be any contentiousness with it,” Jared says. “And so, when we’re talking about Life-to-Life discipleship and training relationships, we’re talking about it in a way that helps us to see where that fits in with the larger map of discipleship.”

When disciplemakers press on in knowing Christ and all that His heart is for — making Him known, tangibly, in word and in deed, and helping others do the same — that’s when we see generations impacted by His grace.

Join us in praying over Jared’s ministry, that they continue to raise laborers to serve in local ministries, represent the heart of Jesus to those they serve, and see their city transformed.

Discipleship Tip:

Long-term presence can be one of the most powerful tools in disciplemaking. When you choose to stay, to show up consistently, and to carry people on your heart over years — not just moments — discipleship becomes family, not a project. Ask God where He’s inviting you to be faithfully present so others can experience His love through your steady, everyday life.


31 Days Toward Trusting God

Are you hesitant to trust God? Do you wonder where He is when hard things happen? You’re invited to go on a journey with God, explore His promises and find out more about His character. Find hope in how His Spirit reveals to you about trusting God more through this resource, 31 Days Toward Trusting God.


Note: As the Redemption Community Development Corporation (RCDC) started by Jared’s church responds to increasing needs in the community, they are expanding their after-school program from one day a week to four days a week. If you’re interested in giving, please reach out to Jared or give to this project here. If you’re interested in partnering with Jared in ministry in Oklahoma City, you can make a gift here.

]]>
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Meeting the Nations in Michigan: Patrick’s Story https://www.navigators.org/blog/meeting-the-nations-in-michigan-patricks-story/ https://www.navigators.org/blog/meeting-the-nations-in-michigan-patricks-story/#comments Mon, 05 Jan 2026 19:00:00 +0000 https://www.navigators.org/?p=268390 Thirty years ago, the Lord led Navigator Henry Bouma into a new mission field: ministering to boys at an inner city school in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Over the years, he’s watched as the young students he discipled have grown up, some even serving alongside him on Navigator staff today. Through persistent discipleship, mentorship in crucial life skills, and walking with these boys after they’ve graduated, Henry has witnessed the gospel move from one generation to the next.

A man stands outdoors on a grassy field speaking to a seated group of children and teens. The group listens attentively as the sun sets behind them, casting warm light over the trees in the background.

However, in 2007, God placed Mathew 28:19 on Henry’s heart — a calling to make disciples of all nations. Having spent his whole life within the borders of Grand Rapids, Henry had a hard time picturing what that calling would look like.

But the Lord works in mysterious ways.

Since then, God has brought the nations to Michigan, and Henry has had the chance to minister to students from all over the world. Many of these students have later returned to their home countries with a vision for disciplemaking, while others have chosen to advance God’s Kingdom by making a home right where they are — in Grand Rapids.

Through this commission, Henry met and discipled Patrick Gakuru: a student turned avid disciplemaker who is now lighting a fire for Christ among the young Rwandan community in Michigan.

The “Yes” That Sparked a Movement

In 2016, Patrick moved with his family from Rwanda to West Michigan, a high schooler at the time. 

One day while he was eating lunch in his new school cafeteria, Patrick came across Jon Blahnik, who led a Youth for Christ ministry at Patrick’s high school. As Patrick got more involved with the ministry, Jon started bringing him to Sunday evening Navigator Bible studies led by Henry. Jon and Henry frequently partnered up like this — connecting students from Jon’s after school program to the Sunday night group so that they would continue to have an encouraging Christian community post graduation.

Through Jon, Patrick was also introduced to Henry’s RISE (Relational Influencers Spiritually Equipped) Urban Youth Leadership program where Henry’s team would meet weekly with high schoolers, share a meal with them, assign mentors, and model what a healthy community looks like.

Tagteaming ministry, Jon and Henry started discipling Patrick throughout his high school years, meeting with him one-on-one and showing him what it means to be rooted in Scripture and live out his faith as a man of God.

Jon (left) and Henry (right) discipled Patrick (middle) throughout his high school experience, challenging him to grow and live out his faith.

“They supported me and loved me, and in hard times, they always were there for me,” Patrick recalls. “In everything they do, they glorify God. So whenever I have a problem, I go to them. If I have a question or a doubt, they have created a space for me to be vulnerable and safe with them.”

As Patrick continued to grow in his faith and graduated high school, Jon and Henry encouraged him to pass along what he’d learned to others as a young leader in the ministry. Patrick, naturally shy and introverted, was hesitant at first.

“It was really hard to say yes — I didn’t want to do it,” Patrick recalls. “But something inside of me knew I should say yes. And I saw God’s goodness in how He used me to reach other people.”

Over the past few years since, the Lord has taken Patrick’s “yes” and faithfully used it to start a chain of generational disciplemaking, specifically among the next generation of youth arriving in Grand Rapids from Rwanda. Coming alongside these students as they adjust to life in the United States, Patrick invites them to read the Bible with him. Now, he leads a dynamic cohort of over 20 young people among various Bible studies.

“Even as an introverted person, I kept going out to share the gospel, and I focused on Romans 1:16, which says that we should not be ashamed of the gospel because the power of God is sufficient to everyone who believes,” Patrick explains. “So I would pray, and as I moved around, I felt Jesus using me. The fear was gone, and I felt more confident to share the gospel with others.”

From leading Bible studies and prayer groups to walking around downtown Grand Rapids and sharing the gospel with strangers, the Lord has worked through Patrick to create a community of believers centered around discipleship.

“Jon and I equipped and discipled Patrick, and now he has four key guys that he’s discipled,” Henry says. “Those guys are now leading others, and some of the guys they are leading are already catching that vision too. So we are talking four, maybe five, generations of disciplemakers. The Holy Spirit is working mightily through Patrick — and he’s only 23!”

Trusting God to guide him, Patrick has grown a community of young believers in Grand Rapids who are now becoming disciplemakers themselves.

A Mission for the Light of Christ

Patrick has now followed the Lord’s calling to join The Navigators I:58 ministry in Grand Rapids. He and many of the other students from Rwanda meet in groups every night of the week. Several of them gather for prayer on Fridays — and they pray all night. Through boldness in the midst of fear and submission to God’s calling, the Lord is using Patrick’s hunger for the gospel to advance His Kingdom into all nations.

Patrick and Jon baptizing another young believer.

“My mission statement is to listen to hurting people, build their faith, and bring healing to the hurting and the lost, helping them grow close to God,” Patrick says. “I want to bring the hope of Jesus to the hopeless. Our world isn’t perfect, but I want people to know the perfect man, Jesus, and experience His peace. There are people stuck in the darkness — I want them to experience the light of Jesus.”

Please join us in praying over Patrick and Henry’s ministry in Grand Rapids, as they reach and shepherd students and their multicultural community to know Christ, make Him known, and help others do the same®.


Discipleship Tip:

Do you ever feel scared to say “yes” to God? Patrick didn’t think he would be a good disciplemaker because he was shy — and yet, the Lord has used him to impact dozens of lives in his city. If you are feeling hesitant or fearful to go where God is leading you, pray for the Lord’s peace and wisdom so that you can proceed with confidence, knowing that He has the power to move through you, even when you don’t feel qualified.


7 Tips for Starting a Discipleship Relationship

Are you looking to begin a discipleship relationship, but aren’t sure how? Check out our resource, “7 Tips for Starting a Discipleship Relationship,” for pointers on establishing intentional relationships, including conversation starters to explain the whats and whys of a discipleship relationship.

]]>
Thirty years ago, the Lord led Navigator Henry Bouma into a new mission field: ministering to boys at an inner city school in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Over the years, he’s watched as the young students he discipled have grown up, some even serving alongside him on Navigator staff today. Through persistent discipleship, mentorship in crucial life skills, and walking with these boys after they’ve graduated, Henry has witnessed the gospel move from one generation to the next.

A man stands outdoors on a grassy field speaking to a seated group of children and teens. The group listens attentively as the sun sets behind them, casting warm light over the trees in the background.

However, in 2007, God placed Mathew 28:19 on Henry’s heart — a calling to make disciples of all nations. Having spent his whole life within the borders of Grand Rapids, Henry had a hard time picturing what that calling would look like.

But the Lord works in mysterious ways.

Since then, God has brought the nations to Michigan, and Henry has had the chance to minister to students from all over the world. Many of these students have later returned to their home countries with a vision for disciplemaking, while others have chosen to advance God’s Kingdom by making a home right where they are — in Grand Rapids.

Through this commission, Henry met and discipled Patrick Gakuru: a student turned avid disciplemaker who is now lighting a fire for Christ among the young Rwandan community in Michigan.

The “Yes” That Sparked a Movement

In 2016, Patrick moved with his family from Rwanda to West Michigan, a high schooler at the time. 

One day while he was eating lunch in his new school cafeteria, Patrick came across Jon Blahnik, who led a Youth for Christ ministry at Patrick’s high school. As Patrick got more involved with the ministry, Jon started bringing him to Sunday evening Navigator Bible studies led by Henry. Jon and Henry frequently partnered up like this — connecting students from Jon’s after school program to the Sunday night group so that they would continue to have an encouraging Christian community post graduation.

Through Jon, Patrick was also introduced to Henry’s RISE (Relational Influencers Spiritually Equipped) Urban Youth Leadership program where Henry’s team would meet weekly with high schoolers, share a meal with them, assign mentors, and model what a healthy community looks like.

Tagteaming ministry, Jon and Henry started discipling Patrick throughout his high school years, meeting with him one-on-one and showing him what it means to be rooted in Scripture and live out his faith as a man of God.

Jon (left) and Henry (right) discipled Patrick (middle) throughout his high school experience, challenging him to grow and live out his faith.

“They supported me and loved me, and in hard times, they always were there for me,” Patrick recalls. “In everything they do, they glorify God. So whenever I have a problem, I go to them. If I have a question or a doubt, they have created a space for me to be vulnerable and safe with them.”

As Patrick continued to grow in his faith and graduated high school, Jon and Henry encouraged him to pass along what he’d learned to others as a young leader in the ministry. Patrick, naturally shy and introverted, was hesitant at first.

“It was really hard to say yes — I didn’t want to do it,” Patrick recalls. “But something inside of me knew I should say yes. And I saw God’s goodness in how He used me to reach other people.”

Over the past few years since, the Lord has taken Patrick’s “yes” and faithfully used it to start a chain of generational disciplemaking, specifically among the next generation of youth arriving in Grand Rapids from Rwanda. Coming alongside these students as they adjust to life in the United States, Patrick invites them to read the Bible with him. Now, he leads a dynamic cohort of over 20 young people among various Bible studies.

“Even as an introverted person, I kept going out to share the gospel, and I focused on Romans 1:16, which says that we should not be ashamed of the gospel because the power of God is sufficient to everyone who believes,” Patrick explains. “So I would pray, and as I moved around, I felt Jesus using me. The fear was gone, and I felt more confident to share the gospel with others.”

From leading Bible studies and prayer groups to walking around downtown Grand Rapids and sharing the gospel with strangers, the Lord has worked through Patrick to create a community of believers centered around discipleship.

“Jon and I equipped and discipled Patrick, and now he has four key guys that he’s discipled,” Henry says. “Those guys are now leading others, and some of the guys they are leading are already catching that vision too. So we are talking four, maybe five, generations of disciplemakers. The Holy Spirit is working mightily through Patrick — and he’s only 23!”

Trusting God to guide him, Patrick has grown a community of young believers in Grand Rapids who are now becoming disciplemakers themselves.

A Mission for the Light of Christ

Patrick has now followed the Lord’s calling to join The Navigators I:58 ministry in Grand Rapids. He and many of the other students from Rwanda meet in groups every night of the week. Several of them gather for prayer on Fridays — and they pray all night. Through boldness in the midst of fear and submission to God’s calling, the Lord is using Patrick’s hunger for the gospel to advance His Kingdom into all nations.

Patrick and Jon baptizing another young believer.

“My mission statement is to listen to hurting people, build their faith, and bring healing to the hurting and the lost, helping them grow close to God,” Patrick says. “I want to bring the hope of Jesus to the hopeless. Our world isn’t perfect, but I want people to know the perfect man, Jesus, and experience His peace. There are people stuck in the darkness — I want them to experience the light of Jesus.”

Please join us in praying over Patrick and Henry’s ministry in Grand Rapids, as they reach and shepherd students and their multicultural community to know Christ, make Him known, and help others do the same®.


Discipleship Tip:

Do you ever feel scared to say “yes” to God? Patrick didn’t think he would be a good disciplemaker because he was shy — and yet, the Lord has used him to impact dozens of lives in his city. If you are feeling hesitant or fearful to go where God is leading you, pray for the Lord’s peace and wisdom so that you can proceed with confidence, knowing that He has the power to move through you, even when you don’t feel qualified.


7 Tips for Starting a Discipleship Relationship

Are you looking to begin a discipleship relationship, but aren’t sure how? Check out our resource, “7 Tips for Starting a Discipleship Relationship,” for pointers on establishing intentional relationships, including conversation starters to explain the whats and whys of a discipleship relationship.

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What is the One Thing Necessary for Raising Disciples of Jesus? https://www.navigators.org/blog/what-is-the-one-thing-necessary-for-raising-disciples-of-jesus/ https://www.navigators.org/blog/what-is-the-one-thing-necessary-for-raising-disciples-of-jesus/#comments Mon, 15 Dec 2025 19:00:00 +0000 https://www.navigators.org/?p=268319 When I was a child, a couple of times a year, my family would journey from our home in central Illinois to visit my grandmother in southern Minnesota. Because we traveled that path so frequently, I knew the six-hour route very well. I knew when we would cross the Mississippi River and pass the Quaker Oats sign — which was important when you were searching for that illusive Q in the alphabet game. I knew how many hours in the car were left when we passed through certain towns or that our trip would be extended when we turned down a road that led to my aunt and uncle’s farm. Even today, I can point out the location where our family van exceeded the speed limit early one Thanksgiving morning, and my dad received his first traffic ticket.

A family walks through a forest trail together, with the father carrying a child on his shoulders and the mother and daughter walking beside them.

During those trips I learned how to read a state road map. I still carry an old-school atlas with me in the car, just in case. But today we can open an app on our phones or on the car dashboard to provide us with cues for our travels. The GPS tells us when to exit, merge with traffic, and change lanes. It can provide alternate routes based on traffic, suggest the closest coffee shop, or exclaim “Recalculating route!” when you miss your turn.

But what’s the one thing necessary for a GPS system to function as it has been designed?

A Destination.

When it comes to raising disciples, we should set our eyes on the destination.

I believe that one of the reasons parents and caregivers struggle to disciple children well is that we haven’t clearly identified the destination for their discipleship and the directions that guide them toward that goal.

How would you describe a child who is entering adolescence as an active disciple? Would you choose words that describe their character: loving, joyful, obedient, self-controlled? Or would you choose words that describe behaviors: reads the Bible daily, asks spiritual questions, worships God? Perhaps you would choose words that describe their depth of knowledge and understanding about God and His Word.

Public and private education systems have stated objectives when it comes to student expectations. Lists of student learning outcomes articulate the goals for students at the conclusion of each grade level. Each child is unique and develops at their own rate, so there are those who will exceed the expectations and others who will struggle. But teachers begin each year knowing the goals and guiding students along the path toward achievement. Like a GPS, they might have to find alternate paths for some or help others get turned back around, but with a clear goal and markers on the way, teachers are able to guide their young disciples.

This is what we’ve been missing in our homes and churches — a discipleship map that states the goal for raising disciples and provides directions toward that goal.

In some Christian traditions, the goal for children has been a public confession of Christ; in others, submission through the act of baptism. In yet other traditions, it has been the completion of confirmation classes. Regardless of our tradition, our goal for raising disciples should be the same as the goal for all disciples: to become more and more like Christ every day.

For three years, Jesus taught the crowds, His enemies, and political leaders, but most often, He was teaching twelve ordinary men from various backgrounds, vocations, and experiences. When He chose the Twelve, He had a goal in mind. Jesus knew that at the conclusion of His earthly ministry He would redeem the world through His death, return to God the Father, and equip His followers with the Holy Spirit to disciple others. He needed a core group of leaders who would follow Him daily (Luke 9:23), continuing His mission “to seek and to save the lost” (Luke 19:10) and to “make disciples of all nations” (Matthew 28:19).

As Jesus prepared to leave the Twelve to continue His mission, He met with them to give them some final encouragements and admonitions. Woven through Jesus’ conversation in the upper room (John 13–17), we find descriptions of what it means to become like Christ:

These descriptors provide some direction toward the goal for all disciples.

With the destination of becoming like Christ as our goal, we can utilize childhood development information from the fields of social science, learning theory, and psychology to create a map for discipleship from infancy to adolescence.* Beginning at birth, there are seven directional discipleship markers — approximately one for every two years of life — that parallel the biological, cognitive, social, and moral development of children. Just as Jesus discipled the Twelve from spiritual infancy to spiritual maturity, we can use this map to raise disciples who become increasingly more like Christ.

Did you like this article? Check out Teresa Roberts’ full book, Raising Disciples, as well as the accompanying free 8-week parenting curriculum today!

Discipleship Tip:

When discipling someone, consider verbally setting discipleship goals. With a destination in mind, you can orchestrate milestones and implement accountability, making sure that you both are progressing forward in their discipleship journey.


4 Truths for Becoming Like Jesus

According to Scripture, becoming like Jesus is not only possible, but is God’s intended purpose for His adopted children. This Bible study includes four truths to guide you toward becoming like Jesus in your day-to-day life. Reflect on these truths and discover what God reveals about His divine plan for your life by checking out The Navigators resource, “4 Truths for Becoming Like Jesus.”

*The faith research of James W. Fowler (Stages of Faith: The Psychology of Human Development and the Quest for Meaning, San Francisco: Harper and Row, 1981) and insights of spiritual development from John H. Westerhoff III (Will Our Children Have Faith?, 3rd. ed., Harrisburg, PA: Morehouse, 2012) has also informed this discipleship map.


Meet the Author

Teresa Roberts is Professor of Ministry and Christian Formation, Program Director of Children’s Ministry, and a vice president at Ozark Christian College. She is an expert in children’s spiritual formation training with more than 25 years of ministry experience.

Dr. Roberts holds a Master of Arts in Family and Youth Ministry, a Master of Divinity, and a Doctor of Ministry. She serves in children’s ministry at Carterville Christian Church where she attends with her husband and step-daughter. Learn more at discipleshipguides.com/.

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When I was a child, a couple of times a year, my family would journey from our home in central Illinois to visit my grandmother in southern Minnesota. Because we traveled that path so frequently, I knew the six-hour route very well. I knew when we would cross the Mississippi River and pass the Quaker Oats sign — which was important when you were searching for that illusive Q in the alphabet game. I knew how many hours in the car were left when we passed through certain towns or that our trip would be extended when we turned down a road that led to my aunt and uncle’s farm. Even today, I can point out the location where our family van exceeded the speed limit early one Thanksgiving morning, and my dad received his first traffic ticket.

A family walks through a forest trail together, with the father carrying a child on his shoulders and the mother and daughter walking beside them.

During those trips I learned how to read a state road map. I still carry an old-school atlas with me in the car, just in case. But today we can open an app on our phones or on the car dashboard to provide us with cues for our travels. The GPS tells us when to exit, merge with traffic, and change lanes. It can provide alternate routes based on traffic, suggest the closest coffee shop, or exclaim “Recalculating route!” when you miss your turn.

But what’s the one thing necessary for a GPS system to function as it has been designed?

A Destination.

When it comes to raising disciples, we should set our eyes on the destination.

I believe that one of the reasons parents and caregivers struggle to disciple children well is that we haven’t clearly identified the destination for their discipleship and the directions that guide them toward that goal.

How would you describe a child who is entering adolescence as an active disciple? Would you choose words that describe their character: loving, joyful, obedient, self-controlled? Or would you choose words that describe behaviors: reads the Bible daily, asks spiritual questions, worships God? Perhaps you would choose words that describe their depth of knowledge and understanding about God and His Word.

Public and private education systems have stated objectives when it comes to student expectations. Lists of student learning outcomes articulate the goals for students at the conclusion of each grade level. Each child is unique and develops at their own rate, so there are those who will exceed the expectations and others who will struggle. But teachers begin each year knowing the goals and guiding students along the path toward achievement. Like a GPS, they might have to find alternate paths for some or help others get turned back around, but with a clear goal and markers on the way, teachers are able to guide their young disciples.

This is what we’ve been missing in our homes and churches — a discipleship map that states the goal for raising disciples and provides directions toward that goal.

In some Christian traditions, the goal for children has been a public confession of Christ; in others, submission through the act of baptism. In yet other traditions, it has been the completion of confirmation classes. Regardless of our tradition, our goal for raising disciples should be the same as the goal for all disciples: to become more and more like Christ every day.

For three years, Jesus taught the crowds, His enemies, and political leaders, but most often, He was teaching twelve ordinary men from various backgrounds, vocations, and experiences. When He chose the Twelve, He had a goal in mind. Jesus knew that at the conclusion of His earthly ministry He would redeem the world through His death, return to God the Father, and equip His followers with the Holy Spirit to disciple others. He needed a core group of leaders who would follow Him daily (Luke 9:23), continuing His mission “to seek and to save the lost” (Luke 19:10) and to “make disciples of all nations” (Matthew 28:19).

As Jesus prepared to leave the Twelve to continue His mission, He met with them to give them some final encouragements and admonitions. Woven through Jesus’ conversation in the upper room (John 13–17), we find descriptions of what it means to become like Christ:

These descriptors provide some direction toward the goal for all disciples.

With the destination of becoming like Christ as our goal, we can utilize childhood development information from the fields of social science, learning theory, and psychology to create a map for discipleship from infancy to adolescence.* Beginning at birth, there are seven directional discipleship markers — approximately one for every two years of life — that parallel the biological, cognitive, social, and moral development of children. Just as Jesus discipled the Twelve from spiritual infancy to spiritual maturity, we can use this map to raise disciples who become increasingly more like Christ.

Did you like this article? Check out Teresa Roberts’ full book, Raising Disciples, as well as the accompanying free 8-week parenting curriculum today!

Discipleship Tip:

When discipling someone, consider verbally setting discipleship goals. With a destination in mind, you can orchestrate milestones and implement accountability, making sure that you both are progressing forward in their discipleship journey.


4 Truths for Becoming Like Jesus

According to Scripture, becoming like Jesus is not only possible, but is God’s intended purpose for His adopted children. This Bible study includes four truths to guide you toward becoming like Jesus in your day-to-day life. Reflect on these truths and discover what God reveals about His divine plan for your life by checking out The Navigators resource, “4 Truths for Becoming Like Jesus.”

*The faith research of James W. Fowler (Stages of Faith: The Psychology of Human Development and the Quest for Meaning, San Francisco: Harper and Row, 1981) and insights of spiritual development from John H. Westerhoff III (Will Our Children Have Faith?, 3rd. ed., Harrisburg, PA: Morehouse, 2012) has also informed this discipleship map.


Meet the Author

Teresa Roberts is Professor of Ministry and Christian Formation, Program Director of Children’s Ministry, and a vice president at Ozark Christian College. She is an expert in children’s spiritual formation training with more than 25 years of ministry experience.

Dr. Roberts holds a Master of Arts in Family and Youth Ministry, a Master of Divinity, and a Doctor of Ministry. She serves in children’s ministry at Carterville Christian Church where she attends with her husband and step-daughter. Learn more at discipleshipguides.com/.

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Divine Appointments: How One Knock Impacted Generations https://www.navigators.org/blog/divine-appointments-how-one-knock-impacted-generations/ https://www.navigators.org/blog/divine-appointments-how-one-knock-impacted-generations/#comments Mon, 08 Dec 2025 19:00:00 +0000 https://www.navigators.org/?p=268313 It was July 13, 1978 when Walt McCord sat on the bed in his freshman dorm room at Penn State and prayed for a sign from God.

Walt’s father had passed away when he was 13 years old, and since then, his life had spiraled out of control. Frequently getting into trouble, he left for college without a home to come back to. “I was just a mess,” Walt remembers. “I went off to college to party my life away. The day I left for college, my mom told me, ‘I don’t ever want you coming back here.’”

An old picture of two Navigator students
Walt McCord (right) and his wife when they were in college.

On July 12th, Walt got drunk with a friend and cried for the first time since his dad died. When his friend asked him why, Walt replied, “Mark, I have absolutely nothing to live for. But I’m scared to die.”

The next day, Walt got into a fight with another student playing basketball. As he sat in his dorm room after — still covered in the other students’ blood from breaking his nose — he hit a breaking point. Sending a desperate plea to God, he asked for a sign.

“Whoever You are, show me how I can be right with You,” Walt prayed. “Show me how I can deal with this anger, and I’ll give You my life.”

Several minutes later, Walt heard a knock on his door. On the other side stood Keith Hughes, a recent graduate who was involved with The Navigators on campus.

Earlier in the evening, Keith had planned to go to a baseball game on campus. When the game was canceled due to weather, he sat at a park nearby Walt’s dorm to spend some time with the Lord. During that time, he felt a calling from God — there was someone in the dorm he needed to talk to. He walked into the hall, got in the elevator, closed his eyes, and chose a random floor to visit. Two doors over, in room 402, Walt was ready for him.

That night, Keith shared the gospel with Walt, and it was a moment that forever changed the trajectory of Walt’s life.

“When God sent Keith to my door, I knew, it’s time,” Walt remembers. “God’s done his part. Now it’s time for me to bend my knee and come to the Lord. So that’s what I did.”

A Lasting Impact

Today, over four decades later, Walt still vividly remembers that night: the exact date, along with Keith’s name, are forever inscribed inside the front cover of Walt’s Bible — despite the fact that Walt and Keith lost touch a couple weeks later that summer.

In the years since, Walt has grown in his faith and passionately pursued the Lord, serving overseas and teaching the next generation of Christian leaders how to live out their faith around the world. Thousands of lives have been touched by the gospel through Walt’s faith — including his mom, whom he later led to Christ, and his three sons, who are now serving in ministry themselves. For Walt’s family, Keith Hughes is a household name — the man who led their father to Christ all those years ago and impacted their family for generations.

The funny part of the story, though? If you asked him today, Keith doesn’t remember that moment in the dorm room at all.

When Keith thinks back on that summer, he mostly recalls it as the months that he began to date his wife. At the time, he would go onto campus to practice evangelism as The Navigators had trained him to do in college, sharing the gospel with the students he met. He doesn’t remember Walt specifically, or that fateful night — just that he was trying to plant seeds for Christ.

“For me, it was all about obedience — God allowed me to plant a seed, and the ground was fertilized,” Keith says. “God had worked in Walt’s heart long before we crossed paths, and God had an impact through his life since. But for me, this was probably something I wouldn’t have found out about until glory.”

This past year, Walt and Keith were reconnected through Navigator Greg Bryan, who coincidentally met Walt, heard his story, and helped him track down Keith. When Walt shared with Keith the impact that he had on his life back in 1978 and that he had been wanting to meet him again ever since, Keith could barely believe it.

“It was a surreal conversation because this was the most important day of my life,” Walt says. “It changed the trajectory of my life forever. And Keith doesn’t even remember.”

Seeds Planted For Christ

“For when one says, ‘I follow Paul,’ and another, ‘I follow Apollos,’ are you not mere human beings? What, after all, is Apollos? And what is Paul? Only servants, through whom you came to believe — as the Lord has assigned to each his task. I planted the seed, Apollos watered it, but God has been making it grow. So neither the one who plants nor the one who waters is anything, but only God, who makes things grow” 1 Corinthians 3:4-7 (NIV)

For Keith, 1 Corinthians 3:4-7 sums up his story with Walt: though he planted a seed, God watered it and transformed Walt into the faithful man he is today.

Like many believers, Keith may never have known the impact of the seed he planted that day. But through God’s grace of reconnecting with Walt years later, he has now been able to catch a glimpse of heaven, seeing how the Lord used his obedience that one night when he was a young man.

“To me, this is a story about divine appointments and a glimpse of heaven,” Greg says. “Keith had no idea what happened to that broken, angry young man he led to faith that night … they might not have even met until they stepped into eternity. But now Walt can say, ‘You touched my life, you changed my life. And because of that, I was able to go on and touch others’ lives with the gospel. The seed you’ve sown in my life produced fruit.’”

You can hear more of Walt and Keith’s story of divine appointments on Greg’s podcast Gospel Addict.

Discipleship Tip:

As disciplemakers, sometimes we don’t know how God will water the seeds we plant. Like Keith, we may never know how one conversation can lead to a chain reaction of impact years later. This week, invite God into your relationships and ask Him to water the seeds that you plant.


One-Verse Evangelism

Are you wanting to grow in your ability to strike up gospel conversations? One-Verse Evangelism® is a simple, interactive way to share Christ’s love conversationally and visually. Using just one verse, it’s easy to learn, and you can write it anywhere. Check out the resource today!

]]>
It was July 13, 1978 when Walt McCord sat on the bed in his freshman dorm room at Penn State and prayed for a sign from God.

Walt’s father had passed away when he was 13 years old, and since then, his life had spiraled out of control. Frequently getting into trouble, he left for college without a home to come back to. “I was just a mess,” Walt remembers. “I went off to college to party my life away. The day I left for college, my mom told me, ‘I don’t ever want you coming back here.’”

An old picture of two Navigator students
Walt McCord (right) and his wife when they were in college.

On July 12th, Walt got drunk with a friend and cried for the first time since his dad died. When his friend asked him why, Walt replied, “Mark, I have absolutely nothing to live for. But I’m scared to die.”

The next day, Walt got into a fight with another student playing basketball. As he sat in his dorm room after — still covered in the other students’ blood from breaking his nose — he hit a breaking point. Sending a desperate plea to God, he asked for a sign.

“Whoever You are, show me how I can be right with You,” Walt prayed. “Show me how I can deal with this anger, and I’ll give You my life.”

Several minutes later, Walt heard a knock on his door. On the other side stood Keith Hughes, a recent graduate who was involved with The Navigators on campus.

Earlier in the evening, Keith had planned to go to a baseball game on campus. When the game was canceled due to weather, he sat at a park nearby Walt’s dorm to spend some time with the Lord. During that time, he felt a calling from God — there was someone in the dorm he needed to talk to. He walked into the hall, got in the elevator, closed his eyes, and chose a random floor to visit. Two doors over, in room 402, Walt was ready for him.

That night, Keith shared the gospel with Walt, and it was a moment that forever changed the trajectory of Walt’s life.

“When God sent Keith to my door, I knew, it’s time,” Walt remembers. “God’s done his part. Now it’s time for me to bend my knee and come to the Lord. So that’s what I did.”

A Lasting Impact

Today, over four decades later, Walt still vividly remembers that night: the exact date, along with Keith’s name, are forever inscribed inside the front cover of Walt’s Bible — despite the fact that Walt and Keith lost touch a couple weeks later that summer.

In the years since, Walt has grown in his faith and passionately pursued the Lord, serving overseas and teaching the next generation of Christian leaders how to live out their faith around the world. Thousands of lives have been touched by the gospel through Walt’s faith — including his mom, whom he later led to Christ, and his three sons, who are now serving in ministry themselves. For Walt’s family, Keith Hughes is a household name — the man who led their father to Christ all those years ago and impacted their family for generations.

The funny part of the story, though? If you asked him today, Keith doesn’t remember that moment in the dorm room at all.

When Keith thinks back on that summer, he mostly recalls it as the months that he began to date his wife. At the time, he would go onto campus to practice evangelism as The Navigators had trained him to do in college, sharing the gospel with the students he met. He doesn’t remember Walt specifically, or that fateful night — just that he was trying to plant seeds for Christ.

“For me, it was all about obedience — God allowed me to plant a seed, and the ground was fertilized,” Keith says. “God had worked in Walt’s heart long before we crossed paths, and God had an impact through his life since. But for me, this was probably something I wouldn’t have found out about until glory.”

This past year, Walt and Keith were reconnected through Navigator Greg Bryan, who coincidentally met Walt, heard his story, and helped him track down Keith. When Walt shared with Keith the impact that he had on his life back in 1978 and that he had been wanting to meet him again ever since, Keith could barely believe it.

“It was a surreal conversation because this was the most important day of my life,” Walt says. “It changed the trajectory of my life forever. And Keith doesn’t even remember.”

Seeds Planted For Christ

“For when one says, ‘I follow Paul,’ and another, ‘I follow Apollos,’ are you not mere human beings? What, after all, is Apollos? And what is Paul? Only servants, through whom you came to believe — as the Lord has assigned to each his task. I planted the seed, Apollos watered it, but God has been making it grow. So neither the one who plants nor the one who waters is anything, but only God, who makes things grow” 1 Corinthians 3:4-7 (NIV)

For Keith, 1 Corinthians 3:4-7 sums up his story with Walt: though he planted a seed, God watered it and transformed Walt into the faithful man he is today.

Like many believers, Keith may never have known the impact of the seed he planted that day. But through God’s grace of reconnecting with Walt years later, he has now been able to catch a glimpse of heaven, seeing how the Lord used his obedience that one night when he was a young man.

“To me, this is a story about divine appointments and a glimpse of heaven,” Greg says. “Keith had no idea what happened to that broken, angry young man he led to faith that night … they might not have even met until they stepped into eternity. But now Walt can say, ‘You touched my life, you changed my life. And because of that, I was able to go on and touch others’ lives with the gospel. The seed you’ve sown in my life produced fruit.’”

You can hear more of Walt and Keith’s story of divine appointments on Greg’s podcast Gospel Addict.

Discipleship Tip:

As disciplemakers, sometimes we don’t know how God will water the seeds we plant. Like Keith, we may never know how one conversation can lead to a chain reaction of impact years later. This week, invite God into your relationships and ask Him to water the seeds that you plant.


One-Verse Evangelism

Are you wanting to grow in your ability to strike up gospel conversations? One-Verse Evangelism® is a simple, interactive way to share Christ’s love conversationally and visually. Using just one verse, it’s easy to learn, and you can write it anywhere. Check out the resource today!

]]>
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NavPress Celebrates the Release of ‘The Message Women’s Devotional Bible,’ Five Years in the Making https://www.navigators.org/blog/navpress-celebrates-the-release-of-the-message-womens-devotional-bible-five-years-in-the-making/ https://www.navigators.org/blog/navpress-celebrates-the-release-of-the-message-womens-devotional-bible-five-years-in-the-making/#respond Mon, 17 Nov 2025 20:22:32 +0000 https://www.navigators.org/?p=268356 Released on August 5, 2025, the award-winning devotional Bible pairs The Message® translation with insightful content written by women for women.

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (November 17, 2025) — This fall, after a careful editorial and production process spanning nearly five years, NavPress (a business ministry of The Navigators) celebrated the release of The Message Women’s Devotional Bible

Featuring 320 topical devotions, 52 biblical character profiles, and other supplemental content written by women for women, this expansive project pairs Eugene H. Peterson’s award-winning translation of the Bible with insights from more than 80 contributors of diverse backgrounds, ethnicities, vocations, and Christian denominations. The devotional Bible has been recognized for outstanding design, as well: It received a Top Shelf Book Cover Award from the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association (ECPA) at this year’s Publishing University on October 31.

“The features in this Bible are what rose to the surface when our team asked, What do women really need in a devotional Bible?” shares Olivia Eldredge, editor of The Message® Bible. “Women need to hear from other women: diverse, trustworthy, thoughtful voices who can speak to how the Bible intersects with the lives of women. And they need to have space to bring their questions, their vulnerability, their honest wrestling — and be met by God.”

While Christian content marketed specifically to women can tend toward superficiality and stereotypes, The Message Women’s Devotional Bible pursues nuance, sensitivity, and authenticity while remaining faithful to the biblical texts. Throughout, it invites women to engage deeply with difficult or overlooked passages, offering candid reflections on the truth that women — though often unnamed in Scripture — are indeed active, vital participants in God’s story, both in the biblical narrative and today.

The Message is a contemporary translation of the Bible, created by Eugene H. Peterson and thoroughly reviewed by a team of Old and New Testament scholars to ensure accuracy and fidelity to the original biblical languages. A pastor, theologian, scholar, writer, and poet, Peterson worked directly from the Greek and Hebrew texts to craft a faithful rendering of Scripture in accessible, everyday language. It took him a full decade to complete his translation work.

Learn more about The Message Women’s Devotional Bible and other NavPress resources by visiting NavPress.com.

###

About The U.S. Navigators

The Navigators is a ministry that shares the gospel of Jesus and helps people grow in their relationship with Him through Life-to-Life® discipleship, creating spiritual generations of believers. Since its founding in 1933, The Navigators has upheld the mission “to know Christ, make Him known, and help others do the same®.” Our Worldwide Partnership includes around 6,000 staff of 85 nationalities, serving in 123 countries. Navigators encourage spiritual growth across life stages, serving wherever people work, live, worship, and play: on college campuses and military bases as well as in urban neighborhoods, workplaces, churches, local communities, and hard-to-reach places. To learn more, visit www.navigators.org.


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 5, 2025
Contact: Chris Muller, Senior Vice President, Ministry Engagement, (719) 594-2269, chris.muller@navigators.org

]]>
Released on August 5, 2025, the award-winning devotional Bible pairs The Message® translation with insightful content written by women for women.

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (November 17, 2025) — This fall, after a careful editorial and production process spanning nearly five years, NavPress (a business ministry of The Navigators) celebrated the release of The Message Women’s Devotional Bible

Featuring 320 topical devotions, 52 biblical character profiles, and other supplemental content written by women for women, this expansive project pairs Eugene H. Peterson’s award-winning translation of the Bible with insights from more than 80 contributors of diverse backgrounds, ethnicities, vocations, and Christian denominations. The devotional Bible has been recognized for outstanding design, as well: It received a Top Shelf Book Cover Award from the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association (ECPA) at this year’s Publishing University on October 31.

“The features in this Bible are what rose to the surface when our team asked, What do women really need in a devotional Bible?” shares Olivia Eldredge, editor of The Message® Bible. “Women need to hear from other women: diverse, trustworthy, thoughtful voices who can speak to how the Bible intersects with the lives of women. And they need to have space to bring their questions, their vulnerability, their honest wrestling — and be met by God.”

While Christian content marketed specifically to women can tend toward superficiality and stereotypes, The Message Women’s Devotional Bible pursues nuance, sensitivity, and authenticity while remaining faithful to the biblical texts. Throughout, it invites women to engage deeply with difficult or overlooked passages, offering candid reflections on the truth that women — though often unnamed in Scripture — are indeed active, vital participants in God’s story, both in the biblical narrative and today.

The Message is a contemporary translation of the Bible, created by Eugene H. Peterson and thoroughly reviewed by a team of Old and New Testament scholars to ensure accuracy and fidelity to the original biblical languages. A pastor, theologian, scholar, writer, and poet, Peterson worked directly from the Greek and Hebrew texts to craft a faithful rendering of Scripture in accessible, everyday language. It took him a full decade to complete his translation work.

Learn more about The Message Women’s Devotional Bible and other NavPress resources by visiting NavPress.com.

###

About The U.S. Navigators

The Navigators is a ministry that shares the gospel of Jesus and helps people grow in their relationship with Him through Life-to-Life® discipleship, creating spiritual generations of believers. Since its founding in 1933, The Navigators has upheld the mission “to know Christ, make Him known, and help others do the same®.” Our Worldwide Partnership includes around 6,000 staff of 85 nationalities, serving in 123 countries. Navigators encourage spiritual growth across life stages, serving wherever people work, live, worship, and play: on college campuses and military bases as well as in urban neighborhoods, workplaces, churches, local communities, and hard-to-reach places. To learn more, visit www.navigators.org.


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 5, 2025
Contact: Chris Muller, Senior Vice President, Ministry Engagement, (719) 594-2269, chris.muller@navigators.org

]]>
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Inspiration for Practicing Hospitality https://www.navigators.org/blog/inspiration-for-practicing-hospitality/ https://www.navigators.org/blog/inspiration-for-practicing-hospitality/#comments Mon, 17 Nov 2025 19:00:00 +0000 https://www.navigators.org/?p=268166 Hospitality is holiness lived out in practicality. It is the pillow, the food and drink, and the hot shower of our practical love. The spiritual is practical. The practical is spiritual.

Older couple joyfully greeting family at the door.

The Holy Trinity is a mystery to me, with its three in oneness and its oneness in three, and I can just barely grasp the deep relational nature of how the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit touch and spin and dance off each other and with each other. Hospitality — that generous making room for others and giving and receiving to and from each other from our plenty and sometimes from our scarcity but we do it anyway — seems to flow out of that communal and relational and so generous nature of God. Being holy as God is holy, if we can believe it, catapults us into relationship with others and the practice of hospitality. Holiness is relational, and that is why hospitality fits holiness like a soft leather glove.

Hospitality is holiness lived out in practicality.

Hospitality involves the holy practice of gratitude.

All of this is made easier alongside the holy practice of gratitude. I have this place, this food, this book; please take it and enjoy it as well. We try to believe that everything we have comes from God, and so it is ours not to own but to share. So hospitality is almost always best when it is gratitude adjacent. However, the discipline of hospitality can happen also while you are still a grouchy, miserly mess. Disciplines take discipline. Not everything is easy or feels good right away, but that might mean it’s even more worth doing, and not less.

Hospitality invites humility.

In Luke 14:12-14, Jesus tells us how to throw a dinner party. Dinner parties are, after all, what most of us think of first when we think about hospitality: “‘When you put on a luncheon or a banquet,’ he said, ‘don’t invite your friends, brothers, relatives, and rich neighbors. For they will invite you back, and that will be your only reward. Instead, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, and the blind. Then at the resurrection of the righteous, God will reward you for inviting those who could not repay you’” (NLT). In Luke 14:8-10, He even discusses seating plans: “When you are invited to a wedding feast, don’t sit in the seat of honor … Instead, take the lowest place at the foot of the table” (NLT).

Holiness is relational, and that is why hospitality fits holiness like a soft leather glove.

Jesus knows me so well. He predicts my thirst for status. When we practice hospitality as part of our holiness, we will come face-to-face with our desire to invite first our friends, the people we especially like or those whom we want to especially like us, along with the relatives we are most comfortable with, and, of course, our rich neighbors. We might strut around like a peacock in our own dining room and not even realize we are doing it. Again, our intentional moves toward holiness will show us how far we have yet to travel. Our efforts to do good on the outside will show us how far we are from good on the inside, and in that gap, we learn again of our need for the forgiving, restoring love of God in our own lives and hearts, and how much we need him, even when we are serving macaroni to friends.

We learn something about ourselves — and therefore move deeper into our holiness journeys — when we pay attention to whom we want to welcome in and how we want to welcome them to our homes, our tables, and our lives.

Hospitality helps us to examine our hidden motivations.

As we consider ourselves, we can confess ourselves to God and ask for help. Why am I making this so fancy? we can ask our inner hostess, in an examination of motivation that is a daily part of pushing into our holiness. What is my motivation? Also, Why am I talking about myself so much? And why can’t I stop?

Our honest answers do not bring the dinner party, the coffee date, or the open house to a screeching halt, but instead provide us another opportunity to be honest with ourselves and with God — who is the ultimate and gracious host of heaven and earth now and the new earth that is to come. Make me holy in my hospitality, we might pray. Kill off my show-off-ness, we might ask. Help me listen more than I speak, as my blunt spouse has said I need to work on.

Help me not to be so needy, I can pray as I juice blood oranges for udon noodles with fried tofu and orange nam jim from my expensive hardcover Ottolenghi Flavour cookbook propped open on the counter. Perhaps for a little while, as part of our own healing, we will make a simple spaghetti Bolognese, accept the offer of our guest to bring store-bought garlic bread and let Maureen help with the cleanup, like she always wants to do. We will resist the temptation to offer our guests a tour of our new barbeque and satisfy our thirst for thanks by turning it outward to gratitude to God. What if whenever we yearn for someone to say, “Thank you, you are marvelous for all you have done,” we accept that as a prompt to whisper, “Thank You. You are marvelous for all You have done.”

Hospitality exercises a variety of spiritual disciplines.

Food is just one expression of hospitality. Conversation is another. When we practice holiness through hospitality, we create a space in which other pursuits of holiness can be practiced, such as listening well and not interrupting, putting others first, and offering encouragement and companionship to the person God has placed and we have invited in front of us. From the way Jesus tells us to invite, and the humility presumed in His recommended seating plan, we can assume that we don’t invite people to our table so we can imprison them to hear all and only about us. We don’t tie them to their chairs with our story and our glory.

We can stretch our ability to put others first, and to forgive.

We can practice patience, a fruit of the Spirit we get to work with, toward friends who arrive late (or even worse, early) and those who stay too long. We practice not biting off the heads of those with whom we disagree. If we do bite their heads off at dinner, we can practice the art of unequivocal apology. Apologizing is a holy act. I’m sorry are holy, healing words. Through hospitality’s gift of space opened up and time slowed down, we can “be happy with those who are happy, and weep with those who weep,” which Paul told us to do only two verses after he reminded us to “always be eager to practice hospitality” in Romans 12:13-15.


Discipleship Tip:

Hospitality isn’t about impressing others — it’s about making space for them. This week, invite someone into your home or life with gratitude and humility, focusing on listening and encouraging rather than showcasing. Ask the Lord for opportunities to be hospitable in your community in order to point others to Jesus.


Opening Doors to the Gospel Through Generosity

By showing the love of God to meet people’s practical needs, the Holy Spirit can open new and unexpected opportunities to share the gospel. Through this free resource, discover how living a life of generosity could lead to meeting someone’s practical need and their deep spiritual need as well.



About the Author

Karen Stiller is a senior editor of Faith Today magazine and writes frequently for magazines like Reader’s Digest, Ekstasis, In Trust, and other publications across North America. Stiller is a three-time winner of the prestigious A.C. Forrest Memorial Award from the Canadian Church Press for excellence in socially conscious religious journalism. She is author of The Minister’s Wife (2020, Tyndale Momentum); co-author of Craft, Cost & Call (2019), Shifting Stats Shaking the Church (2015) and Going Missional (2010); editor of The Lord’s Prayer (2015) and coeditor of Evangelicals Around the World (2015). She lives in Ottawa and has a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Non-Fiction from University of King’s College, Dalhousie.

This article was originally published on the DiscipleMaker Blog by NavPress. You can also hear more from Karen Stiller through her book Holiness Here and NavPress’ new podcast, “Good Books, Big Questions,” where Karen hosts bold, loving, and sensible conversations about faith.

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Hospitality is holiness lived out in practicality. It is the pillow, the food and drink, and the hot shower of our practical love. The spiritual is practical. The practical is spiritual.

Older couple joyfully greeting family at the door.

The Holy Trinity is a mystery to me, with its three in oneness and its oneness in three, and I can just barely grasp the deep relational nature of how the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit touch and spin and dance off each other and with each other. Hospitality — that generous making room for others and giving and receiving to and from each other from our plenty and sometimes from our scarcity but we do it anyway — seems to flow out of that communal and relational and so generous nature of God. Being holy as God is holy, if we can believe it, catapults us into relationship with others and the practice of hospitality. Holiness is relational, and that is why hospitality fits holiness like a soft leather glove.

Hospitality is holiness lived out in practicality.

Hospitality involves the holy practice of gratitude.

All of this is made easier alongside the holy practice of gratitude. I have this place, this food, this book; please take it and enjoy it as well. We try to believe that everything we have comes from God, and so it is ours not to own but to share. So hospitality is almost always best when it is gratitude adjacent. However, the discipline of hospitality can happen also while you are still a grouchy, miserly mess. Disciplines take discipline. Not everything is easy or feels good right away, but that might mean it’s even more worth doing, and not less.

Hospitality invites humility.

In Luke 14:12-14, Jesus tells us how to throw a dinner party. Dinner parties are, after all, what most of us think of first when we think about hospitality: “‘When you put on a luncheon or a banquet,’ he said, ‘don’t invite your friends, brothers, relatives, and rich neighbors. For they will invite you back, and that will be your only reward. Instead, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, and the blind. Then at the resurrection of the righteous, God will reward you for inviting those who could not repay you’” (NLT). In Luke 14:8-10, He even discusses seating plans: “When you are invited to a wedding feast, don’t sit in the seat of honor … Instead, take the lowest place at the foot of the table” (NLT).

Holiness is relational, and that is why hospitality fits holiness like a soft leather glove.

Jesus knows me so well. He predicts my thirst for status. When we practice hospitality as part of our holiness, we will come face-to-face with our desire to invite first our friends, the people we especially like or those whom we want to especially like us, along with the relatives we are most comfortable with, and, of course, our rich neighbors. We might strut around like a peacock in our own dining room and not even realize we are doing it. Again, our intentional moves toward holiness will show us how far we have yet to travel. Our efforts to do good on the outside will show us how far we are from good on the inside, and in that gap, we learn again of our need for the forgiving, restoring love of God in our own lives and hearts, and how much we need him, even when we are serving macaroni to friends.

We learn something about ourselves — and therefore move deeper into our holiness journeys — when we pay attention to whom we want to welcome in and how we want to welcome them to our homes, our tables, and our lives.

Hospitality helps us to examine our hidden motivations.

As we consider ourselves, we can confess ourselves to God and ask for help. Why am I making this so fancy? we can ask our inner hostess, in an examination of motivation that is a daily part of pushing into our holiness. What is my motivation? Also, Why am I talking about myself so much? And why can’t I stop?

Our honest answers do not bring the dinner party, the coffee date, or the open house to a screeching halt, but instead provide us another opportunity to be honest with ourselves and with God — who is the ultimate and gracious host of heaven and earth now and the new earth that is to come. Make me holy in my hospitality, we might pray. Kill off my show-off-ness, we might ask. Help me listen more than I speak, as my blunt spouse has said I need to work on.

Help me not to be so needy, I can pray as I juice blood oranges for udon noodles with fried tofu and orange nam jim from my expensive hardcover Ottolenghi Flavour cookbook propped open on the counter. Perhaps for a little while, as part of our own healing, we will make a simple spaghetti Bolognese, accept the offer of our guest to bring store-bought garlic bread and let Maureen help with the cleanup, like she always wants to do. We will resist the temptation to offer our guests a tour of our new barbeque and satisfy our thirst for thanks by turning it outward to gratitude to God. What if whenever we yearn for someone to say, “Thank you, you are marvelous for all you have done,” we accept that as a prompt to whisper, “Thank You. You are marvelous for all You have done.”

Hospitality exercises a variety of spiritual disciplines.

Food is just one expression of hospitality. Conversation is another. When we practice holiness through hospitality, we create a space in which other pursuits of holiness can be practiced, such as listening well and not interrupting, putting others first, and offering encouragement and companionship to the person God has placed and we have invited in front of us. From the way Jesus tells us to invite, and the humility presumed in His recommended seating plan, we can assume that we don’t invite people to our table so we can imprison them to hear all and only about us. We don’t tie them to their chairs with our story and our glory.

We can stretch our ability to put others first, and to forgive.

We can practice patience, a fruit of the Spirit we get to work with, toward friends who arrive late (or even worse, early) and those who stay too long. We practice not biting off the heads of those with whom we disagree. If we do bite their heads off at dinner, we can practice the art of unequivocal apology. Apologizing is a holy act. I’m sorry are holy, healing words. Through hospitality’s gift of space opened up and time slowed down, we can “be happy with those who are happy, and weep with those who weep,” which Paul told us to do only two verses after he reminded us to “always be eager to practice hospitality” in Romans 12:13-15.


Discipleship Tip:

Hospitality isn’t about impressing others — it’s about making space for them. This week, invite someone into your home or life with gratitude and humility, focusing on listening and encouraging rather than showcasing. Ask the Lord for opportunities to be hospitable in your community in order to point others to Jesus.


Opening Doors to the Gospel Through Generosity

By showing the love of God to meet people’s practical needs, the Holy Spirit can open new and unexpected opportunities to share the gospel. Through this free resource, discover how living a life of generosity could lead to meeting someone’s practical need and their deep spiritual need as well.



About the Author

Karen Stiller is a senior editor of Faith Today magazine and writes frequently for magazines like Reader’s Digest, Ekstasis, In Trust, and other publications across North America. Stiller is a three-time winner of the prestigious A.C. Forrest Memorial Award from the Canadian Church Press for excellence in socially conscious religious journalism. She is author of The Minister’s Wife (2020, Tyndale Momentum); co-author of Craft, Cost & Call (2019), Shifting Stats Shaking the Church (2015) and Going Missional (2010); editor of The Lord’s Prayer (2015) and coeditor of Evangelicals Around the World (2015). She lives in Ottawa and has a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Non-Fiction from University of King’s College, Dalhousie.

This article was originally published on the DiscipleMaker Blog by NavPress. You can also hear more from Karen Stiller through her book Holiness Here and NavPress’ new podcast, “Good Books, Big Questions,” where Karen hosts bold, loving, and sensible conversations about faith.

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The Navigators Collegiate Mission Establishes 26 New Campus Ministries https://www.navigators.org/blog/the-navigators-collegiate-mission-establishes-26-new-campus-ministries/ https://www.navigators.org/blog/the-navigators-collegiate-mission-establishes-26-new-campus-ministries/#respond Wed, 05 Nov 2025 17:38:34 +0000 https://www.navigators.org/?p=268274 With ministries on nearly 200 college campuses around the United States, The Navigators Collegiate Mission is reaching students with the gospel during one of the most formative seasons of their lives.

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (November 5, 2025)The Navigators Collegiate Mission is experiencing a season of growth with the launch of 26 new campus ministries in the past year alone. A ministry of The Navigators, Navigators Collegiate has now established Christian disciplemaking communities on nearly 200 college campuses around the United States, reaching approximately 25,000 college students each year. This momentum reflects a notable trend: As recent Barna Group research confirms, today’s young people are demonstrating an increased openness and commitment to Christian faith compared to previous generations.

Among the many organizations reaching college students with the Good News of Jesus, The Navigators is known for its distinct focus on fostering Life-to-Life® discipleship relationships: intentional, one-to-one connections that offer students a model for how to follow Jesus in daily life, and how to help others –– roommates, classmates, teammates, friends, and family members –– do the same.

Accordingly, The Navigators Collegiate aims to equip students to be lifelong disciplemakers who will make Christ known not only on campus, but wherever they go after graduation.

“The campus environment is one of the most strategic places to reach people because nobody stays a student forever,” Navigators Collegiate Mission Director Ben Nugent explains. “So, Lord willing, our Collegiate work is sending out ‘workers for the Kingdom,’ ‘next door to everywhere.’”

Along with Life-to-Life® discipleship, Navigators Collegiate ministries offer students a variety of on-campus events, community groups, retreats, and Bible studies, as well as service opportunities like U.S.-based Summer Training Programs and international short-term mission trips.

The Navigators campus-based ministries differ in form depending on what resources best suit the unique location, size, and demographic makeup of a given student body. In many cases, a Navigator staff couple will move to an area and become established in the local community before launching a campus ministry. Other ministries operate with less formal organizational frameworks: For instance, a team of EDGE Corps staff (Navigator interns) may visit the campus twice weekly, or a Bible study group may develop organically within other established groups, such as sororities and fraternities. Additionally, students who are passionate about their faith and friendships may volunteer to launch new ministry initiatives; many of these individuals benefit from resources provided by the Navigators Discipleship™ app.

To learn more about The Navigators Collegiate Mission, visit https://www.navigators.org/ministry/navigators-collegiate/.

###

About The U.S. Navigators

The Navigators is a ministry that shares the gospel of Jesus and helps people grow in their relationship with Him through Life-to-Life® discipleship, creating spiritual generations of believers. Since its founding in 1933, The Navigators has upheld the mission “to know Christ, make Him known, and help others do the same®.” Our Worldwide Partnership includes around 6,000 staff of 85 nationalities, serving in 123 countries. Navigators encourage spiritual growth across life stages, serving wherever people work, live, worship, and play: on college campuses and military bases as well as in urban neighborhoods, workplaces, churches, local communities, and hard-to-reach places. To learn more, visit www.navigators.org.


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 5, 2025
Contact: Chris Muller, Senior Vice President, Ministry Engagement, (719) 594-2269, chris.muller@navigators.org

]]>
With ministries on nearly 200 college campuses around the United States, The Navigators Collegiate Mission is reaching students with the gospel during one of the most formative seasons of their lives.

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (November 5, 2025)The Navigators Collegiate Mission is experiencing a season of growth with the launch of 26 new campus ministries in the past year alone. A ministry of The Navigators, Navigators Collegiate has now established Christian disciplemaking communities on nearly 200 college campuses around the United States, reaching approximately 25,000 college students each year. This momentum reflects a notable trend: As recent Barna Group research confirms, today’s young people are demonstrating an increased openness and commitment to Christian faith compared to previous generations.

Among the many organizations reaching college students with the Good News of Jesus, The Navigators is known for its distinct focus on fostering Life-to-Life® discipleship relationships: intentional, one-to-one connections that offer students a model for how to follow Jesus in daily life, and how to help others –– roommates, classmates, teammates, friends, and family members –– do the same.

Accordingly, The Navigators Collegiate aims to equip students to be lifelong disciplemakers who will make Christ known not only on campus, but wherever they go after graduation.

“The campus environment is one of the most strategic places to reach people because nobody stays a student forever,” Navigators Collegiate Mission Director Ben Nugent explains. “So, Lord willing, our Collegiate work is sending out ‘workers for the Kingdom,’ ‘next door to everywhere.’”

Along with Life-to-Life® discipleship, Navigators Collegiate ministries offer students a variety of on-campus events, community groups, retreats, and Bible studies, as well as service opportunities like U.S.-based Summer Training Programs and international short-term mission trips.

The Navigators campus-based ministries differ in form depending on what resources best suit the unique location, size, and demographic makeup of a given student body. In many cases, a Navigator staff couple will move to an area and become established in the local community before launching a campus ministry. Other ministries operate with less formal organizational frameworks: For instance, a team of EDGE Corps staff (Navigator interns) may visit the campus twice weekly, or a Bible study group may develop organically within other established groups, such as sororities and fraternities. Additionally, students who are passionate about their faith and friendships may volunteer to launch new ministry initiatives; many of these individuals benefit from resources provided by the Navigators Discipleship™ app.

To learn more about The Navigators Collegiate Mission, visit https://www.navigators.org/ministry/navigators-collegiate/.

###

About The U.S. Navigators

The Navigators is a ministry that shares the gospel of Jesus and helps people grow in their relationship with Him through Life-to-Life® discipleship, creating spiritual generations of believers. Since its founding in 1933, The Navigators has upheld the mission “to know Christ, make Him known, and help others do the same®.” Our Worldwide Partnership includes around 6,000 staff of 85 nationalities, serving in 123 countries. Navigators encourage spiritual growth across life stages, serving wherever people work, live, worship, and play: on college campuses and military bases as well as in urban neighborhoods, workplaces, churches, local communities, and hard-to-reach places. To learn more, visit www.navigators.org.


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 5, 2025
Contact: Chris Muller, Senior Vice President, Ministry Engagement, (719) 594-2269, chris.muller@navigators.org

]]>
https://www.navigators.org/blog/the-navigators-collegiate-mission-establishes-26-new-campus-ministries/feed/ 0
A Ride on the Gospel Train: Everyday Disciplemakers from Boston to D.C. https://www.navigators.org/blog/a-ride-on-the-gospel-train-everyday-disciplemakers-from-boston-to-d-c/ https://www.navigators.org/blog/a-ride-on-the-gospel-train-everyday-disciplemakers-from-boston-to-d-c/#comments Mon, 03 Nov 2025 19:00:00 +0000 https://www.navigators.org/?p=268160 The Apostle Paul’s ministry consisted of lots of traveling – spanning roughly 10,000 miles across various lands. During these travels, Paul spent time intentionally checking in to see the ways in which God had been working and moving through various churches.

Two men smiling while sitting in a restaurant booth.
Frank Tully (right) and Joe Violi (left), who leads Nav20s ministry in Philadelphia.

Navigator Frank Tully decided to go on a journey of his own in the beginning of 2025 through the Northeast Corridor — what is known as a “megalopolis” of overlapping cities and suburbs, stretching from northern Virginia into southern Maine and home to over 50 million people — to get a front row seat in the ministry of everyday disciplemakers in the Navigators Workplace ministry along the way. Frank, who currently serves as the associate city director of The Navigators in Boston, jumped on an Amtrak on a Monday for a week-long “Gospel Train Trip” to see — and share — the work God has been doing.

Although Frank had visited and talked with each of these disciplemakers before, it wasn’t until earlier this year when he began to ask himself, “Why don’t I try to organize one trip where I can spend some time and get alongside each of them for a little bit and get to feel for their world?”

Each of these disciplemakers — men and women who regularly interact with colleagues, clients, customers, and even competitors — have incredible opportunities to live and speak the gospel of Jesus and His kingdom in the workplace.

Young Professionals Owning Their Callings at Work in Boston

On Monday of this “Gospel Train Trip” journey, Frank stopped at the Gospel@Work Gathering in Boston, where a group of young professionals was concluding their final session of “The Work Exchange.” Beginning with six lies the enemy wants us to believe about our work, they looked at how we can exchange these for six truths from God’s Word about our identity and purpose as followers of Jesus at work. The gathering is a part of a broader work the Boston City Team has been championing to help the next generation of young professionals to own The Navigator calling as disciplemakers in their environment.

“It’s probably the biggest movement I’ve seen over the last several years. We’re trying to help people in their 20s to really embrace this going forward,” Frank remarked.

When the Gospel Gains a Foothold in Unexpected Places

Frank got to hear about the diversity of ministry in The Navigators as he made a stop on Tuesday in Harlem to visit Navigator Kenny Cox near the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA). Kenny shared about how the gospel had gained a foothold in the NYCHA — the largest housing agency in the world with over 13,000 workers that houses over a million people — through employee Bible studies that have been going on for the past several decades with the blessing of NYCHA leadership. In recent years, this has expanded to Bible reading groups for residents in two locations, demonstrating the extent to which Kenny has gained the trust of the NYCHA leadership.

Kenny, a former employee of NYCHA, had been organizing lunch hour Bible studies since 2009 that had grown exponentially and had felt a need to get some other resources for these studies. That’s when he came across Navigator materials like the Design for Discipleship studies from NavPress and got connected to Navigator staff in New York City.

“This was not initially a Navigator ministry,” Frank said, “as much as it’s a work in the kingdom of God that marries up with what the Navigators are trying to accomplish in New York City.”

The Fruit of Gospel Labor Among “New York’s Finest”

On Wednesday, Frank took the NYC subway to Queens, where he had an opportunity to sit alongside the New York City Police Department (NYPD) for a “Communicating with God” NYPD Training Day put on by the New York City Navigators and First Responder ministry.

“I was blown away by the stories these police and correctional officers — men and women of diverse backgrounds — shared as they discussed The Wheel, The Word Hand, prayer, and Scripture memory,” Frank shared.

Frank got to see the fruit of years of labor of the gospel making an impact in NYPD and the families of officers and first responders.

Pioneering a Navigator City of Brotherly Love

On Thursday, Frank took the train to Philadelphia to meet with Navigator Joe Violi, who was in his second year launching a Navigators 20s team with college graduates he has known from his time serving at Penn State University. At the same time, Joe has been hard at work trying to make Philadelphia into a recognized Navigator city, which up to this point has been a loose connection of a few staff and retired staff in the area. Frank joined Joe as he met with a couple for lunch, a man doing medical residency, and others that Joe has been connecting with — everyday disciplemakers who are foundational for growing a future Navigator city of Brotherly Love.

The Kingdom Making Headway on Capitol Hill

On Friday, Frank made his final stop on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. He met with Navigator Doug Weber and connected with followers of Jesus who serve on staff in the Senate, the House, and the Justice Department. Even amid the escalating stress and tension for federal workers, they reported seeing an openness to authentic spiritual conversations among other staffers.

“We learned of an investigative Bible study starting at the Justice Department and had the opportunity to pray for several who have been invited to participate,” Frank recalls.

Gospel Train Ride Reflections

Finally, on the ride home of this “Gospel Train Ride,” Frank had a chance to reflect on each of these brothers and sisters — both staff and everyday disciplemakers — and the work God was doing through them to reach the over 50 million people in the Northeast Corridor. From Boston’s biotech labs, the streets of New York City, inside a Philadelphia hospital, to inside the hallways of Congress, God is doing an amazing and often outside-of-the box work.

Pray for Navigator staff and everyday disciplemakers in the Northeast Corridor as they seek to work together for the expansion of the kingdom, and opportunities to be able to connect with one another for mutual encouragement, learning, and support.

Discipleship Tip:

Like the Apostle Paul, Frank has made an effort to check in and encourage ministries in the work they are already doing, bolstering them on to further good works. Where can you encourage believers around you in the work God has already called them to? Think about how you can uplift those around you and spur them on to new horizons.


Come Fish With Me: A Discipleship Bible Study

Jesus had a way of meeting each person right where they were — including His disciples. In the “Come Fish with Me” Discipleship Bible study resource, you will explore Jesus’ invitation to these fishermen and how this applies to your life today. Invite a friend to follow Jesus with you as you complete this study together.

]]>
The Apostle Paul’s ministry consisted of lots of traveling – spanning roughly 10,000 miles across various lands. During these travels, Paul spent time intentionally checking in to see the ways in which God had been working and moving through various churches.

Two men smiling while sitting in a restaurant booth.
Frank Tully (right) and Joe Violi (left), who leads Nav20s ministry in Philadelphia.

Navigator Frank Tully decided to go on a journey of his own in the beginning of 2025 through the Northeast Corridor — what is known as a “megalopolis” of overlapping cities and suburbs, stretching from northern Virginia into southern Maine and home to over 50 million people — to get a front row seat in the ministry of everyday disciplemakers in the Navigators Workplace ministry along the way. Frank, who currently serves as the associate city director of The Navigators in Boston, jumped on an Amtrak on a Monday for a week-long “Gospel Train Trip” to see — and share — the work God has been doing.

Although Frank had visited and talked with each of these disciplemakers before, it wasn’t until earlier this year when he began to ask himself, “Why don’t I try to organize one trip where I can spend some time and get alongside each of them for a little bit and get to feel for their world?”

Each of these disciplemakers — men and women who regularly interact with colleagues, clients, customers, and even competitors — have incredible opportunities to live and speak the gospel of Jesus and His kingdom in the workplace.

Young Professionals Owning Their Callings at Work in Boston

On Monday of this “Gospel Train Trip” journey, Frank stopped at the Gospel@Work Gathering in Boston, where a group of young professionals was concluding their final session of “The Work Exchange.” Beginning with six lies the enemy wants us to believe about our work, they looked at how we can exchange these for six truths from God’s Word about our identity and purpose as followers of Jesus at work. The gathering is a part of a broader work the Boston City Team has been championing to help the next generation of young professionals to own The Navigator calling as disciplemakers in their environment.

“It’s probably the biggest movement I’ve seen over the last several years. We’re trying to help people in their 20s to really embrace this going forward,” Frank remarked.

When the Gospel Gains a Foothold in Unexpected Places

Frank got to hear about the diversity of ministry in The Navigators as he made a stop on Tuesday in Harlem to visit Navigator Kenny Cox near the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA). Kenny shared about how the gospel had gained a foothold in the NYCHA — the largest housing agency in the world with over 13,000 workers that houses over a million people — through employee Bible studies that have been going on for the past several decades with the blessing of NYCHA leadership. In recent years, this has expanded to Bible reading groups for residents in two locations, demonstrating the extent to which Kenny has gained the trust of the NYCHA leadership.

Kenny, a former employee of NYCHA, had been organizing lunch hour Bible studies since 2009 that had grown exponentially and had felt a need to get some other resources for these studies. That’s when he came across Navigator materials like the Design for Discipleship studies from NavPress and got connected to Navigator staff in New York City.

“This was not initially a Navigator ministry,” Frank said, “as much as it’s a work in the kingdom of God that marries up with what the Navigators are trying to accomplish in New York City.”

The Fruit of Gospel Labor Among “New York’s Finest”

On Wednesday, Frank took the NYC subway to Queens, where he had an opportunity to sit alongside the New York City Police Department (NYPD) for a “Communicating with God” NYPD Training Day put on by the New York City Navigators and First Responder ministry.

“I was blown away by the stories these police and correctional officers — men and women of diverse backgrounds — shared as they discussed The Wheel, The Word Hand, prayer, and Scripture memory,” Frank shared.

Frank got to see the fruit of years of labor of the gospel making an impact in NYPD and the families of officers and first responders.

Pioneering a Navigator City of Brotherly Love

On Thursday, Frank took the train to Philadelphia to meet with Navigator Joe Violi, who was in his second year launching a Navigators 20s team with college graduates he has known from his time serving at Penn State University. At the same time, Joe has been hard at work trying to make Philadelphia into a recognized Navigator city, which up to this point has been a loose connection of a few staff and retired staff in the area. Frank joined Joe as he met with a couple for lunch, a man doing medical residency, and others that Joe has been connecting with — everyday disciplemakers who are foundational for growing a future Navigator city of Brotherly Love.

The Kingdom Making Headway on Capitol Hill

On Friday, Frank made his final stop on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. He met with Navigator Doug Weber and connected with followers of Jesus who serve on staff in the Senate, the House, and the Justice Department. Even amid the escalating stress and tension for federal workers, they reported seeing an openness to authentic spiritual conversations among other staffers.

“We learned of an investigative Bible study starting at the Justice Department and had the opportunity to pray for several who have been invited to participate,” Frank recalls.

Gospel Train Ride Reflections

Finally, on the ride home of this “Gospel Train Ride,” Frank had a chance to reflect on each of these brothers and sisters — both staff and everyday disciplemakers — and the work God was doing through them to reach the over 50 million people in the Northeast Corridor. From Boston’s biotech labs, the streets of New York City, inside a Philadelphia hospital, to inside the hallways of Congress, God is doing an amazing and often outside-of-the box work.

Pray for Navigator staff and everyday disciplemakers in the Northeast Corridor as they seek to work together for the expansion of the kingdom, and opportunities to be able to connect with one another for mutual encouragement, learning, and support.

Discipleship Tip:

Like the Apostle Paul, Frank has made an effort to check in and encourage ministries in the work they are already doing, bolstering them on to further good works. Where can you encourage believers around you in the work God has already called them to? Think about how you can uplift those around you and spur them on to new horizons.


Come Fish With Me: A Discipleship Bible Study

Jesus had a way of meeting each person right where they were — including His disciples. In the “Come Fish with Me” Discipleship Bible study resource, you will explore Jesus’ invitation to these fishermen and how this applies to your life today. Invite a friend to follow Jesus with you as you complete this study together.

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NavPress Title ‘The Discipleship Opportunity’ Receives Writer of Colour Award at the 2025 Word Awards https://www.navigators.org/blog/navpress-title-the-discipleship-opportunity-receives-writer-of-colour-award-at-the-2025-word-awards/ https://www.navigators.org/blog/navpress-title-the-discipleship-opportunity-receives-writer-of-colour-award-at-the-2025-word-awards/#respond Mon, 03 Nov 2025 19:00:00 +0000 https://www.navigators.org/?p=268242 Recent books by authors Daniel Im, Karen Stiller, and Christie Thomas were recognized as part of the guild’s annual awards program, which honors the best of Canadian Christian writing from the previous year.

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., (November 3, 2025) — A recent release from NavPress author Daniel Im was recognized at The Word Awards, an annual awards program hosted by The Word Guild to honor the best of Canadian Christian writing from the previous year. Im received the Writer of Colour Award for his 2024 book, The Discipleship Opportunity: Leading a Great-Commission Church in a Post-Everything World. Two other NavPress titles—Karen Stiller’s Holiness Here and Christie Thomas’ Little Habits, Big Faith—were finalists in the Christian Living – Personal Growth category.

“I’m delighted to see these gifted authors recognized for their writing,” says Deborah Sáenz, acquisition editor for NavPress, which is a business ministry of The Navigators. “All three books offer deep insight and wisdom, enriching individual readers and strengthening the Church as a whole. The recognition is well deserved.”

Daniel Im (Edmonton, Alberta) is a pastor, Bible teacher, and podcast host with a passion for the local church. In The Discipleship Opportunity, Im offers a powerful, practical resource for church leaders seeking to navigate the challenges of today’s rapidly evolving, post-pandemic, post-Christian world.


“As I was writing this book, the question that was burning in my heart, my soul, and my mind was how we could be more faithful to Jesus’ Great Commission in this ‘post-everything’ world that we’re living in,” Im shared upon receiving the Writer of Colour Award. “I’m so grateful to hear all of the stories from the pastors and the church leaders who have […] told me the ways that they have changed the way that they disciple and preach and evangelize — because the ways that we used to do it don’t work anymore.”

Holiness Here by Karen Stiller (Ottawa, Ontario) and Little Habits, Big Faith by Christie Thomas (Sherwood Park, Alberta) were included on the 2025 Word Awards Short List as finalists in the Christian Living – Personal Growth category. Holiness Here invites readers to explore how holiness pervades the Christian life, even in its seeming mundanity. Little Habits, Big Faith offers simple daily practices to support children in their spiritual growth.

Founded in 2001, The Word Guild is a diverse and growing community of Canadian writers, publishing professionals, librarians, and others who share a passion for the written word and affirm a common statement of faith. The guild’s mission is “to organize and serve Canadians who communicate through the written word from a Judeo-Christian worldview, so that they can increase in faith and excellence and inspire all readers.” The guild’s annual Word Awards program “exists to encourage writers and recognize their accomplishments over the past year,” offering awards in three primary categories: Unpublished Works or Writers, Published Works or Writers, and Specialty Awards.

To learn more about The Discipleship Opportunity and other NavPress titles, visit NavPress.com.

###

About NavPress

NavPress is a business ministry of The Navigators. With a rich catalog of bestselling books, discipleship resources, and The Message® Bible, NavPress equips readers “to know Christ, make Him known, and help others do the same®.” Since 2014, NavPress has been in a publishing alliance with Tyndale House Publishers, one of the largest independently-owned Christian publishers in the world. NavPress resources are sold, distributed, and marketed worldwide through Tyndale House Publishers. NavPress, the NavPress logo, and The Message® are registered trademarks of NavPress, The Navigators, Colorado Springs, CO.

About The U.S. Navigators

The Navigators is a ministry that shares the gospel of Jesus and helps people grow in their relationship with Him through Life-to-Life® discipleship, creating spiritual generations of believers. Since its founding in 1933, The Navigators has upheld the mission “to know Christ, make Him known, and help others do the same®.” Our Worldwide Partnership includes around 6,000 staff of 85 nationalities, serving in 123 countries. Navigators encourage spiritual growth across life stages, serving wherever people work, live, worship, and play: on college campuses and military bases as well as in urban neighborhoods, workplaces, churches, local communities, and hard-to-reach places. To learn more, visit www.navigators.org.


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 3, 2025
Mariah Franklin, Marketing and PR Content Editor
(719) 594-2563
mariah.franklin@navigators.org

]]>
Recent books by authors Daniel Im, Karen Stiller, and Christie Thomas were recognized as part of the guild’s annual awards program, which honors the best of Canadian Christian writing from the previous year.

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., (November 3, 2025) — A recent release from NavPress author Daniel Im was recognized at The Word Awards, an annual awards program hosted by The Word Guild to honor the best of Canadian Christian writing from the previous year. Im received the Writer of Colour Award for his 2024 book, The Discipleship Opportunity: Leading a Great-Commission Church in a Post-Everything World. Two other NavPress titles—Karen Stiller’s Holiness Here and Christie Thomas’ Little Habits, Big Faith—were finalists in the Christian Living – Personal Growth category.

“I’m delighted to see these gifted authors recognized for their writing,” says Deborah Sáenz, acquisition editor for NavPress, which is a business ministry of The Navigators. “All three books offer deep insight and wisdom, enriching individual readers and strengthening the Church as a whole. The recognition is well deserved.”

Daniel Im (Edmonton, Alberta) is a pastor, Bible teacher, and podcast host with a passion for the local church. In The Discipleship Opportunity, Im offers a powerful, practical resource for church leaders seeking to navigate the challenges of today’s rapidly evolving, post-pandemic, post-Christian world.


“As I was writing this book, the question that was burning in my heart, my soul, and my mind was how we could be more faithful to Jesus’ Great Commission in this ‘post-everything’ world that we’re living in,” Im shared upon receiving the Writer of Colour Award. “I’m so grateful to hear all of the stories from the pastors and the church leaders who have […] told me the ways that they have changed the way that they disciple and preach and evangelize — because the ways that we used to do it don’t work anymore.”

Holiness Here by Karen Stiller (Ottawa, Ontario) and Little Habits, Big Faith by Christie Thomas (Sherwood Park, Alberta) were included on the 2025 Word Awards Short List as finalists in the Christian Living – Personal Growth category. Holiness Here invites readers to explore how holiness pervades the Christian life, even in its seeming mundanity. Little Habits, Big Faith offers simple daily practices to support children in their spiritual growth.

Founded in 2001, The Word Guild is a diverse and growing community of Canadian writers, publishing professionals, librarians, and others who share a passion for the written word and affirm a common statement of faith. The guild’s mission is “to organize and serve Canadians who communicate through the written word from a Judeo-Christian worldview, so that they can increase in faith and excellence and inspire all readers.” The guild’s annual Word Awards program “exists to encourage writers and recognize their accomplishments over the past year,” offering awards in three primary categories: Unpublished Works or Writers, Published Works or Writers, and Specialty Awards.

To learn more about The Discipleship Opportunity and other NavPress titles, visit NavPress.com.

###

About NavPress

NavPress is a business ministry of The Navigators. With a rich catalog of bestselling books, discipleship resources, and The Message® Bible, NavPress equips readers “to know Christ, make Him known, and help others do the same®.” Since 2014, NavPress has been in a publishing alliance with Tyndale House Publishers, one of the largest independently-owned Christian publishers in the world. NavPress resources are sold, distributed, and marketed worldwide through Tyndale House Publishers. NavPress, the NavPress logo, and The Message® are registered trademarks of NavPress, The Navigators, Colorado Springs, CO.

About The U.S. Navigators

The Navigators is a ministry that shares the gospel of Jesus and helps people grow in their relationship with Him through Life-to-Life® discipleship, creating spiritual generations of believers. Since its founding in 1933, The Navigators has upheld the mission “to know Christ, make Him known, and help others do the same®.” Our Worldwide Partnership includes around 6,000 staff of 85 nationalities, serving in 123 countries. Navigators encourage spiritual growth across life stages, serving wherever people work, live, worship, and play: on college campuses and military bases as well as in urban neighborhoods, workplaces, churches, local communities, and hard-to-reach places. To learn more, visit www.navigators.org.


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 3, 2025
Mariah Franklin, Marketing and PR Content Editor
(719) 594-2563
mariah.franklin@navigators.org

]]>
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The Navigators Launches New Disciplemaking Resource: The Navigators Discipleship App https://www.navigators.org/blog/the-navigators-launches-new-disciplemaking-resource-the-navigators-discipleship-app/ https://www.navigators.org/blog/the-navigators-launches-new-disciplemaking-resource-the-navigators-discipleship-app/#respond Tue, 28 Oct 2025 06:00:00 +0000 https://www.navigators.org/?p=268196 The research-based app is designed to inspire and equip believers to grow in Christ and help others do the same.

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., (October 28, 2025): The Navigators, a 92-year-old worldwide disciplemaking ministry, has recently released the Navigators Discipleship App: a free, research-based resource providing timely content curated to equip individuals seeking “to know Christ, make Him known, and help others do the same.” The app’s intuitive design allows people to leverage this tool at their own pace and by their preferred topic, using a successful Navigator discipleship framework, The Five Traits of a Disciplemaker, as a roadmap for spiritual growth .

“For nearly a century, The Navigators has been committed to a shared mission of relational, Life-to-Life® disciplemaking—both as practitioners and as those who equip others in the Great Commission,” said Marvin Campbell, president of The U.S. Navigators. “Our Navigators Discipleship app helps Christians live out that mission in a society hungry for authenticity, community, and practical models of discipleship.”

After guiding users through a self-assessment of current strength and growth areas, the app provides a personalized plan to help them grow in their walk with God. Throughout the plan, users are encouraged to apply and share what they’ve learned, so that their relationship with Jesus develops in community with others. With this new digital tool, The Navigators aims to address a felt need expressed by everyday Christians who want to share the gospel with people in their network, but feel intimidated by the idea of “disciplemaking.”

The app was informed by research conducted by The Navigators in partnership with the Barna Group, which is detailed in two companion publications: Growing Together and How to Save the World: Disciplemaking Made Simple. According to this research, the top five obstacles keeping believers from offering discipleship to friends or family relate to a lack of confidence they will do it well. “One of the primary ways an app can earn its way onto our phones is by simplifying something important to us that usually feels difficult,” said The Navigators Vice President of Marketing, Amanda Trautmann. “We’re thrilled that early users have confirmed our app is making it much easier to grow in Christ themselves and bring friends they care about on the journey with them, wherever they’re starting from.”

Learn more about the Navigators Discipleship App by visiting https://www.navigators.org/discipleship-app/.

 ###

About The U.S. Navigators

The Navigators is a ministry that shares the gospel of Jesus and helps people grow in their relationship with Him through Life-to-Life® discipleship, creating spiritual generations of believers. Since its founding in 1933, The Navigators has upheld the mission “to know Christ, make Him known, and help others do the same®.” Our Worldwide Partnership includes around 6,000 staff of 85 nationalities, serving in 123 countries. Navigators encourage spiritual growth across life stages, serving wherever people work, live, worship, and play: on college campuses and military bases as well as in urban neighborhoods, workplaces, churches, local communities, and hard-to-reach places. To learn more, visit www.navigators.org.


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 28, 2025
Contact: Chris Muller, Senior Vice President, Ministry Engagement, (719) 594-2269, chris.muller@navigators.org

]]>
The research-based app is designed to inspire and equip believers to grow in Christ and help others do the same.

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., (October 28, 2025): The Navigators, a 92-year-old worldwide disciplemaking ministry, has recently released the Navigators Discipleship App: a free, research-based resource providing timely content curated to equip individuals seeking “to know Christ, make Him known, and help others do the same.” The app’s intuitive design allows people to leverage this tool at their own pace and by their preferred topic, using a successful Navigator discipleship framework, The Five Traits of a Disciplemaker, as a roadmap for spiritual growth .

“For nearly a century, The Navigators has been committed to a shared mission of relational, Life-to-Life® disciplemaking—both as practitioners and as those who equip others in the Great Commission,” said Marvin Campbell, president of The U.S. Navigators. “Our Navigators Discipleship app helps Christians live out that mission in a society hungry for authenticity, community, and practical models of discipleship.”

After guiding users through a self-assessment of current strength and growth areas, the app provides a personalized plan to help them grow in their walk with God. Throughout the plan, users are encouraged to apply and share what they’ve learned, so that their relationship with Jesus develops in community with others. With this new digital tool, The Navigators aims to address a felt need expressed by everyday Christians who want to share the gospel with people in their network, but feel intimidated by the idea of “disciplemaking.”

The app was informed by research conducted by The Navigators in partnership with the Barna Group, which is detailed in two companion publications: Growing Together and How to Save the World: Disciplemaking Made Simple. According to this research, the top five obstacles keeping believers from offering discipleship to friends or family relate to a lack of confidence they will do it well. “One of the primary ways an app can earn its way onto our phones is by simplifying something important to us that usually feels difficult,” said The Navigators Vice President of Marketing, Amanda Trautmann. “We’re thrilled that early users have confirmed our app is making it much easier to grow in Christ themselves and bring friends they care about on the journey with them, wherever they’re starting from.”

Learn more about the Navigators Discipleship App by visiting https://www.navigators.org/discipleship-app/.

 ###

About The U.S. Navigators

The Navigators is a ministry that shares the gospel of Jesus and helps people grow in their relationship with Him through Life-to-Life® discipleship, creating spiritual generations of believers. Since its founding in 1933, The Navigators has upheld the mission “to know Christ, make Him known, and help others do the same®.” Our Worldwide Partnership includes around 6,000 staff of 85 nationalities, serving in 123 countries. Navigators encourage spiritual growth across life stages, serving wherever people work, live, worship, and play: on college campuses and military bases as well as in urban neighborhoods, workplaces, churches, local communities, and hard-to-reach places. To learn more, visit www.navigators.org.


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 28, 2025
Contact: Chris Muller, Senior Vice President, Ministry Engagement, (719) 594-2269, chris.muller@navigators.org

]]>
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