Learn two beginner-friendly strategies, follow weekly alerts, and join a community that helps you see $100–$300/month potential without overwhelm.
You’re not lazy. You’re not irresponsible.
You’ve just been so focused on helping others that your own financial future got pushed to the side. Maybe…
You’ve contributed to a retirement account here and there, but it’s nowhere near enough.
You’ve looked at the stock market before and thought, “I don’t have time to figure this out.”
You’ve wondered if you’ll have to keep working long after you want to stop, just to make ends meet.
You’ve even considered a second job or side hustle... but the thought of it wears you out.
You're not alone.
Thousands of pastors are in the same boat and they're quietly anxious about what the future holds.
You don’t need a finance degree. You don’t need thousands of dollars.
All you need is a desire to take control of your future, and a guide who understands your world.
Clarity on exactly when to enter and exit trades
Two proven strategies that fit into your schedule
Monthly watchlist of high-probability stock setups
Weekly trade alerts so you can follow along with confidence
Supportive community to keep you motivated and learning
Direct answers when you have questions
Built by a pastor who understands the financial challenges ministry leaders face
Strategies tested and refined with years of real-world results
A step-by-step learning path that meets you where you are
A community that values wisdom, stewardship, and intentional growth
While nothing is guaranteed in trading and there is always a risk of losing, many members report seeing $100–$300/month potential within their first few months of joining. The real win is gaining the skills and confidence to make disciplined, repeatable trades.
$97/mo
Beginner-friendly video course that walks you through every step
Monthly seasonal watchlist of high-probability stocks
Real-time trade alerts for SLM and MIS strategies
Access to member community
Downloadable checklists, templates, and guides
Up to 3 questions per month, responses within 48 hours
Seasonal Leverage Method course
Monthly Income Strategy course
Cash Flow Collective Course
Double Canopy Strategy Course
Monthly live group coaching calls
2 free months
1:1 onboarding video chat and initial coaching session
No contracts - cancel anytime
$197/mo
Beginner-friendly video course that walks you through every step
Monthly seasonal watchlist of high-probability stocks
Real-time trade alerts for all four strategies
Access to member community
Downloadable checklists, templates, and guides
Unlimited questions, priority same-day response
Seasonal Leverage Method course
Monthly Income Strategy course
Cash Flow Collective course
Double Canopy Strategy course
Monthly live group coaching calls
2 free months
1:1 onboarding video chat and initial coaching session
No contracts - cancel anytime
$1,970/yr
Beginner-friendly video course that walks you through every step
Monthly seasonal watchlist of high-probability stocks
Real-time trade alerts for all four strategies
Access to member community
Downloadable checklists, templates, and guides
Unlimited questions, priority same-day response
Seasonal Leverage Method course
Monthly Income Strategy course
Cash Flow Collective course
Double Canopy Strategy course
Monthly live group coaching calls
2 free months
1:1 onboarding video chat and initial coaching session
No contracts - cancel anytime
Learn two simple strategies, follow weekly trade alerts, and join a supportive community that helps you grow with confidence.
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Living Water and the Dry Places Pastors’ Wives Know All Too Well
“You, God, are my God, earnestly I seek you; I thirst for you, my whole being longs for you, in a dry and parched land where there is no water.”
— Psalm 63:1
Spiritual dryness is not a new phenomenon. It’s threaded throughout scripture, most vividly in the Psalms. David didn’t just mention dryness in passing; he lived it. He wrote about it with raw honesty, crying out in spiritual thirst again and again.
Then we read the New Testament, where Jesus talks about living water. We are introduced to a beautiful image of an endless, internal wellspring of refreshment. Somewhere along the way, we quietly adopt a belief: if I’m a believer, I shouldn’t feel dry anymore.
That sounds lovely. But it falls apart the moment you find yourself in a wilderness, bone-dry, wondering why your prayers hit the ceiling and your Bible reads like a textbook. Suddenly you feel alone, broken, and maybe even ashamed. You begin to wonder what’s wrong with you.
As someone who walks closely with pastors’ wives around the country, I can tell you: this isn’t just your story. It’s ours. And more importantly, it still belongs to God.
This week, a dear friend of mine who is a faithful pastor’s wife reached out in tears. She’s not new to ministry, and she’s not weak in her faith. But she’s in a dry season, and it hurts. She told me she feels like she’s been poured out completely, with no one to pour back into her. Every time she tries to pray, her words feel stuck. Every time she reads scripture, it feels heavy and hard to absorb.
What makes it worse is that the expectations around her haven’t slowed down. She’s still parenting. Still leading. Still holding space for others. But inside, she feels like a cracked well.
She asked me, “If I have living water inside me, why do I feel this thirsty?”
I understood exactly what she meant. I’ve lived that question.
Jesus talks about “living water” twice—once in John 4, and again in John 7. We often assume he’s referring to himself. But he was actually pointing to the Holy Spirit, the promised gift of God’s presence, power, and peace within us.
“Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty again, but whoever drinks the water I give them will never thirst. Indeed, the water I give them will become in them a spring of water welling up to eternal life.”
— John 4:13–14
“If anyone is thirsty, let him come to me and drink. Whoever believes in me, as the Scripture has said, streams of living water will flow from within him.”
— John 7:37–39
In both passages, Jesus is not promising that we will never experience dryness again. He is promising that we will have life. He is pointing to the Holy Spirit as a seal, a living internal source that sustains our spiritual life even when our surroundings are harsh.
This water is real. It is eternal. But it does not mean we will not walk through spiritual drought.
Just like our physical bodies respond to harsh environments, our souls respond to difficult spiritual terrain. You wouldn’t walk into a desert without water, sunscreen, and a plan. Yet many of us enter spiritual deserts without preparing for what we will face.
David knew what it meant to thirst. His words in Psalm 63 don’t come from a place of sin or rebellion. They come from a place of being surrounded by dryness—exiled, hunted, grieving, misunderstood. He was faithful. And he was spiritually dehydrated.
That is why it is not a contradiction to be sealed with the Spirit and still feel dry. The presence of living water does not eliminate the experience of thirst. It means we are not abandoned in it.
So what do we do in seasons where ministry feels dry, our prayers feel hollow, and our hearts feel disconnected?
When climbing unfamiliar terrain, wise travelers seek someone who has been there before. Find a trusted voice who can walk with you. You don’t need someone who will try to fix your dryness. You need someone who will help you walk through it with honesty and grace.
Not everything that feels good is hydrating. Avoid the quick fixes that offer comfort but leave you more empty later. Spiritually, that means slowing down. Return to scripture, but take it in small, nourishing portions. Don’t pressure yourself to cover large chunks. Start with one verse. Let it speak. Let it sit.
“The Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do not know what we ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us through wordless groans.”
— Romans 8:26
Even when your heart feels flat and your mind feels blank, the Spirit is still working. Your silence is not a barrier to God. It is an invitation.
Sometimes the most spiritual thing you can do is rest. Sleep. Step back. Breathe. Dryness is not failure. It is part of being human. Let your body and soul find healing in stillness.
Dryness does not mean you are disqualified. It does not mean your salvation is in question. You are sealed by the Holy Spirit. The well has not run dry. You are still deeply loved and fully secure.
Dry seasons are a good time to take inventory. What burdens are you carrying that were never yours to begin with? What expectations have you internalized that are slowly draining you?
Maybe it’s the pressure to show up at every church event.
Maybe it’s the belief that you have to hold it all together.
Maybe it’s the fear that honesty will disappoint people.
Whatever it is, let it go. God doesn’t need your performance. He wants your presence. He isn’t looking for polished perfection. He’s asking for your trust.
You are not required to be the strong one all the time. You don’t have to hold the church together. You don’t need to be everyone’s emotional safety net.
God never asked you to be the one who keeps smiling while your soul crumbles. He didn’t call you to be a role model of perfection. He called you to follow him. That’s all.
Sometimes following means fighting for joy.
Sometimes it means lying down in green pastures and letting him restore your soul.
Sometimes it means stumbling through the valley, one tired step at a time.
But no matter where you are, you are never alone.
So if you’re dry today, hold on. The living water is still within you. You may not feel it now. You may not see it. But it is there. You are sealed. You are seen. You are loved. And your Shepherd is walking with you, every step of the way.