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WHOLE Women’s Conference Info Meeting for Church & Ministry Leaders

Attention all Church Leaders, Women’s Ministry Leaders, College Ministry Leaders, Student Ministry Leaders and any other ministry leader who works with teen girls and/or adult women … we want to invite you to attend a very brief informational meeting on Saturday, April 6 about our WHOLE Women’s Conference, featuring Dannah Gresh, Annie Lobert and Lisa Whittle.

What makes our conference unique this year is that WHOLE 2013 will be held entirely ONLINE via web streaming and presented for FREE (on Saturday, September 7).

We are all about community here. So while attending a conference in one’s pajamas sounds great, we would very much LOVE and PREFER for women to gather together to attend this conference. And that’s where you come in. What better place to have women gather together than at a church, college campus or other ministry location in their own backyard … where true community is already taking place?

This non-committal informational meeting on Saturday, April 6 at 10am CST will serve as your opportunity to learn more about WHOLE Women’s Conference (speakers, topics, purpose, etc.), what it would look like for you to host (technology, promotional needs, etc.) and a chance to answer any questions you might have (you ask it, we’ll answer it). Please use the link below to register!

REGISTER NOW

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This meeting is not intended for women who are just interested in attending and want more information. For information about the conference itself, including how to register, visit WHOLECONFERENCE.COM.

Speakers Announced for WHOLE Women’s Conference!


Mark your calendars! WHOLE Women’s Conference is coming Saturday, September 7. For our 2nd annual conference, we are doing something a little different that we hope you will find unique and creative.

Our ministry was originally founded and has thrived through the use of technology (support groups, community, webinars, etc.). So why not make use of technology and bring our conference to women around the world? No flights to book. No hotels. No outrageous registration fees.

How you say? Well, WHOLE 2013 will be held entirely ONLINE via web streaming and entirely FREE to attend.

So whether it’s just you in front of your computer in your pajamas, you and your friends deciding to get together to attend or perhaps your church signs up as a live watch site, we are coming to YOU through the power of the Internet.

And we are excited to officially announce our keynote speakers. That’s right. Speakers. Three dynamic women to be exact. And they are in no particular order:

Additional testimonial speakers (TBA) will also present on a variety of topics including Emotional Health, Substance Addiction, Porn/Sex Addiction, Divorce, Abortion, Spiritual Abuse, Adultery, Teen Relationships and more.

FOR YOU SUPER EARLY-BiRDS, REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN… CLICK HEREBy registering early, you will be first to know when new speakers are announced, will be privy to special giveaways and more!

PRICING: As stated above, WHOLE 2013 is entirely free to attend. However, for an optional and nominal fee of $25, you can receive WHOLE ALL ACCESS. This special registration option entitles you to unlimited access to ALL the video content following the conference. An excellent choice for anyone who can’t attend the live webcast or who wants to share the content with their team/friends/family. Pretty cool, huh?

CHURCHES: We are all about community. So while attending a conference in one’s pajamas sounds great, we would LOVE for women to gather together to attend this conference. And in what better place to gather than at a church in their own backyard? If your church is interested in being a watch site, we want to know about it! We will provide printable promo posters/flyers, list your church on our website so women know you’re there and will add your church location to our registration form so you can track potential attendance. Contact us to get started.

SPONSORS: Just because we can offer this conference free of charge, that certainly doesn’t mean it is free for us to put on :) We will be relying even more heavily on advertising partners and sponsors to pull off WHOLE 2013. We have an assortment of sponsor options to choose from. If you are interested in being a financial sponsor, please check out our sponsor page.

The Best of 2012

Take a moment to check out our most popular blog posts of 2012… and let us know what you would like to read here in 2013. As part of our newly launched WHOLE Women Ministries, we are redesigning this space to become a place for women writers to share on a variety of women’s issues. If you would like to contribute a piece, contact us!

And HAPPY NEW YEAR…

  • Fifty Shades: Not Your Mother’s Romance Novel
    • “It’s not a shirtless man with a big busted woman on the cover anymore. And it’s not a woman being seduced by the stable boy in the barn. From what I’ve researched about this series of books, the main sexual themes throughout are BDSM (bondage/discipline/sadism/masochism), control, violence, damage from childhood abuse, etc.” —read more
  • What if We’re Single on Purpose?
    • So we almost develop this kind of complex that we’re just not complete until we’re married. That life really doesn’t begin until after marriage. That we don’t really count until we’re married. That we just don’t… measure… up. —read more
  • WHOLE: from Same-Sex Attraction
    • For years, my conscience was tormented and torn between disapproving God and embracing my homosexual identity. I felt I had only two choices. I could live a double life and repress my true feelings for same sex attractions and pretend to be a heterosexual, or live openly, honestly as a lesbian and take the chance of condemnation. —read more
  • When Porn Gets Personal
    • It all seemed so sudden. So hasty. Many replied to her announcement. Encouraging her to make a better choice. Some even offering to come get her. But as the week progressed, much of her story wasn’t quite lining up and our team began to do some research. —read more
  • Breaking Free: Sundi Jo’s Story
    • I picked up the church laptop and within seconds my eyes were fixated on the familiar images that had comforted me thousands of times before. God quickly snapped me back into reality. I picked up the laptop and threw it across the room. I had reached a new low in my depression. —read more

WHOLE Women Ministries — NEW WEBSITE!

It’s Official! WHOLE Women Ministries…

“Daughter, your faith has made you WHOLE…” Mark 5:34

Healing. Restoring. Equipping.

God is in the business of healing & restoring women and equipping them for their kingdom purpose. And that, through Him, is what WHOLE Women Ministries exists to do as well. Our projects so far include Dirty Girls Ministries and WHOLE Women’s Conference.

Check out the official WHOLE Women Ministries website, HERE.

* Limited Edition WHOLE T-Shirts, specially made for WHOLE Women’s Conference 2012, are on sale now. Available in sizes S, M, L and XL while supplies last. Get yoursHERE.

What if We’re Single on Purpose?

The following post is adapted from some notes of a message I gave last year on singleness. And shocker… I am actually single and not a married woman sharing about how hard it is to be single and how sorry I am that you’re still single. Yeah, I’ve read those posts and heard those messages too. Lately, you, the single woman like me, have been on my heart. Perhaps it’s the holidays. Perhaps it’s because I am inching closer to 30. I don’t know. I just thought it was time to share this post. I am not saying this will make you feel better about your current Facebook marital status. But I hope it does give you some encouragement on the journey…

Crystal Renaud
Founder & Executive Director
WHOLE Women Ministries
Dirty Girls Ministries

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I think of any people group in the world, the single adult population is the most diverse. I say that because we have women who have always been single, like myself, women who have been married but who are single again (whether through divorce or loss of spouse). We also have women who are single moms, and they too could have never been married, or they are single again for whatever reason, or have always been single.

That’s a lot of different kinds of people. And each one is uniquely created to fulfill a God-given purpose.

But for some reason, single women, particularly and if not exclusively Christian single women, live their lives like this is the staging area for the big production … or like they are just sitting in the waiting room outside the rest of their real life that’s to come.

There are misconceptions (maybe) that as single women, we can’t know or live out our God-given purpose in life until we’re a wife and a mother. I believe this misconception might come about as a result of what we see and hear at church or in our culture and from our well-meaning, but idiotic-sounding married friends.

We hear a lot of sermons on parenting, on being a good spouse, etc. and very little or nothing at all on what it means to live out our purpose as single adults. And we hear from our friends that if we would just put ourselves out there more, we’d find a husband or that we’re just too picky.

(What’s wrong with being picky by the way? What happened to “don’t settle cause God’s got the perfect man for you”? Is that just advice for high school girls?)

So we almost develop this kind of complex that we’re just not complete until we’re married. That life really doesn’t begin until after marriage. That we don’t really count until we’re married. That we just don’t… measure… up.

But that couldn’t be further from the truth.

In this post, we’re going to look at some rather large chunks of scripture. These verses can be freeing to you as a single woman, but also a bit convicting. But as we know, conviction is God’s way of correcting our thoughts and behaviors. So we should never shy away from the scriptures that speak hard, honest truth to us.

The first book of Corinthians is one of two letters that Paul sent to the church of Corinth in Greece about Christian living and conduct due to concerns that had been brought to him from those in the area.

A little bit about Paul, if you don’t know, is that Paul was formerly known as Saul, a Pharisee and just an all around bad guy. He had been a murderer of Christians. In today’s standards, some might think of him as a terrorist. But he had a mighty encounter with the Lord on the Road of Damascus that changed his life.

You see, Paul was set apart to do great things for the Lord.

He accepted Jesus as his Messiah and became one of the most influential missionaries to ever walk this earth. Planting many churches, discipling many young men and women, and even authoring as many as 13 books of the New Testament including 1 and 2 Corinthians, 1 and 2 Timothy, Romans, Ephesians, Galatians, etc.

And he did all of this while living as a single man who from what we know of scripture, never married.

And like I was saying before about playing the waiting room game or believing that our life’s purpose can’t really begin until after marriage, the scripture says,

… don’t be wishing you were someplace else or with someone else. Where you are right now is God’s place for you. Live and obey and love and believe right there. God, not your marital status, defines your life. (1 Corinthians 7:17 MSG)

To decide to pursue your own passions and purpose as a single woman is not equivalent to you throwing in the towel on the possibility of marriage and family. It is does not make you an old maid. It does not make you a lost cause. It does not mean you have to symbolically marry Jesus. You are not destined for the convent life as a nun.

You have a life to live now and it can be a pretty great one.

Sometimes I wish everyone were single like me-a simpler life in many ways! But celibacy is not for everyone any more than marriage is. God gives the gift of the single life to some, the gift of the married life to others. (1 Corinthians 7:7 MSG)

Nothing is accidental. If God wanted you to be married right now, guess what? You would be married.

There’s actually nothing in the Bible that requires marriage. In fact, Paul talks of singleness as the better choice when compared to marriage. Basically saying, “only get married if you must.”

Why did Paul say it’s better? Let’s look at the scripture together and find out.

I do want to point out, friends, that time is of the essence. There is no time to waste, so don’t complicate your lives unnecessarily. Keep it simple —in marriage, grief, joy, whatever. Even in ordinary things—your daily routines of shopping, and so on. Deal as sparingly as possible with the things the world thrusts on you. This world as you see it is on its way out.

I want you to live as free of complications as possible. When you’re unmarried, you’re free to concentrate on simply pleasing the Master. Marriage involves you in all the nuts and bolts of domestic life and in wanting to please your spouse, leading to so many more demands on your attention. The time and energy that married people spend on caring for and nurturing each other, the unmarried can spend in becoming whole and holy instruments of God. I’m trying to be helpful and make it as easy as possible for you, not make things harder. All I want is for you to be able to develop a way of life in which you can spend plenty of time together with the Master without a lot of distractions. (1 Corinthians 7:29-35 MSG)

I have lived 28 years of single life and without any prospects. I know it is hard to be the third wheel, or feel singled out for being single, or be literally one of the last of your girlfriends to walk down the aisle.

But if we begin to look at our singleness as an honor or as a gift, that we’ve been set apart to do the Lord’s work without distraction, would we be as upset about our martial status? How much more could God do with our time?

There’s nothing wrong with desiring marriage and family. I believe both are from the Lord and He will give you the desires of your heart in due time. But these years of singlehood can be a time for you to be totally about the Lord’s work both in your own life and in the lives of others.

So live your single life as if it were on purpose. Because it is.

I want to leave you with a perspective shift and a challenge, if you’ll allow me that.

Last March, I was on a mission trip to Thailand. Not only does Thailand battle a huge human trafficking epidemic, but there is a huge cultural pressure for young and arranged marriage in this culture.

It is not uncommon for a Thai girl to be married by the age of 14 or 15. In fact, for a girl to remain unmarried at the age of 20 years old, it is considered shameful by her family and by society. As a result, teenage girls are getting married, becoming young mothers soon after and not pursuing their education or their dreams.

Eight years ago, Mai, was taken in by a safe home in Pua called Grace House. She was very bright and even had dreams of becoming a doctor. Last March, Mai returned home after school released for summer break like so many girls do.

While she was away, Mai succumbed to cultural pressure and was married over the summer. She now has a young baby and will not return to her education. She’s was only 17 at the time and would have graduated high school last March.

Stories like these are becoming far too common over there.

One evening while at New Hope Home, which is a home for girls with HIV or who have been displaced because of HIV, one of the pastors on the trip asked the girls to make him and God a promise.

To stand against the pressure that is placed on them. To pursue God. To pursue their passions. To pursue their God-given purposes.

And as you see in that picture, these girls have their hands all in and they are repeating back to him their promise, their commitment to never settle and to live out the purpose God has set them apart to do long ago (Ephesians 2:10).

I challenge you today to make the same commitment.

So please don’t, out of old habit, slip back into being or doing what everyone else tells you. Friends, stay where you were called to be. God is there. Hold the high ground with him at your side. (1 Corinthians 7:23-24 MSG)

What are misconceptions you’ve encountered as a single woman in the Church?
How have you allowed cultural pressure to determine your steps?
If you’re married, how can you help create a culture where it’s safe to be single?

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Do you want to see more posts like this? Let us know.

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