Solitude can be deeply refreshing, but just as often, it can feel like painful emotional surgery. In this third part Stephanie Wilson teaches that if we notice and name the pain we’ve been avoiding through distraction we allow God to forms us into the people he’s always desired us to become.
In the second teaching John Herron looks at the goal of being alone with God in the silence: ultimately to hear God’s voice over all the other voices in our head.
In this first teaching David Armstrong looks at how Solitude is not a place but a practice, one that follows Jesus’ pattern of retreating from distractions to be fully present with the Father and returning to serve in community.