Workshops

Non Profit Trainings:

Why Book A Made To Walk Workshop?

When crisis strikes—whether in the workplace, community, or home—your team’s response can shape recovery, trust, and long-term well-being. The Made to Walk Crisis Response & Compassion Care Training equips your staff to respond with both skill and heart, grounded in biblical wisdom.

Through this workshop, your team will learn to:
  • Recognize and respond appropriately to colleagues, clients, or community members experiencing emotional, physical, or situational crisis.
  • Communicate with empathy under stress, using active listening, de-escalation techniques, and trauma-informed language.
  • Set healthy boundaries to avoid burnout while still offering Christlike compassion.
  • Engage in self-care and resilience practices, enabling sustained service without losing joy or peace.

Our training blends practical tools with a biblical foundation, drawing from principles like “Bear one another’s burdens” (Galatians 6:2) while also honoring Jesus’ example of rest and withdrawal for renewal (Mark 6:31).

Key Focus Areas Include:
  • Trauma-Informed Care in the Workplace – Understanding how trauma shapes behavior and responding with grace and wisdom.
  • Compassion Fatigue & Resilience Training – Balancing empathy with self-care to prevent emotional and spiritual exhaustion.
  • Crisis Communication & Support Skills – Helping others navigate emergencies while keeping calm and centered.
  • Psychological First Aid – Offering immediate, Christ-centered support that points people toward long-term healing.

In a world where crises are inevitable, your team can be prepared—not just to manage emergencies, but to be a steady, hope-filled presence.
Book a Made to Walk Workshop and equip your people to serve with courage, compassion, and the confidence that comes from walking in God’s truth.

What benefits come from a MTW Workshop

Let's take a look.

See each workshop below for its targeted benefits and select what's right for your season of ministry needs:

Check out all the great New Biblical Workshops.

Book a workshop for your staff or congregants.
Enbolden them for these critical times:

The Proverbs 31 Advocate

The Proverbs 31 woman is often remembered for her diligence, wisdom, and care for her household—but Scripture also describes her as a voice and hand for those in need. “She opens her arms to the poor and extends her hands to the needy” (Proverbs 31:20).
This workshop equips participants to follow her example by:
  • Recognizing the biblical call to advocacy and compassion.
  • Learning practical ways to stand with the vulnerable in everyday life and in times of crisis.
  • Balancing care for others with stewardship of personal energy, time, and resources.
  • Using influence—whether in the workplace, church, or community—to create safe spaces and tangible support.
Through Scripture, discussion, and real-world application, we’ll explore how godly wisdom and action can meet real needs and reflect Christ’s love in a hurting world.

You Can’t Wait for Others to Do the Right Thing — Courageous Crisis Intervention from Abigail

In 1 Samuel 25, Abigail finds herself in a dangerous crisis: her husband Nabal’s arrogance has provoked David to bring armed retaliation against their household. While others freeze, excuse, or ignore the threat, Abigail acts swiftly and wisely—intervening with humility, generosity, and discernment to prevent bloodshed.
This workshop draws leadership and crisis management lessons from Abigail’s decisive response, showing that in moments of moral urgency, waiting for someone else to act can cost lives, relationships, and reputations.
Key Takeaways:
  • Reading the Moment – Recognizing when inaction will make matters worse.
  • Acting with Discernment – Balancing boldness with respect and wisdom.
  • Bridging Divides – Becoming a peacemaker when tensions are high.
  • God’s Favor on Courage – How faithful action, even in the face of risk, can change the outcome of a crisis.
  • Personal Responsibility in Leadership – Why doing nothing is never neutral.
Participants will leave equipped to step into difficult situations with confidence, grounded in biblical wisdom, and prepared to act when silence or hesitation would only deepen the harm.

The Cost of Doing Nothing —Crisis Management Lessons from David & Absalom

 In 2 Samuel, King David faces a growing crisis with his son Absalom—one that begins with injustice, festers through silence, and escalates into betrayal, rebellion, and national upheaval. David’s choice to remain passive in the face of wrongdoing and relational breakdown offers a sobering leadership lesson: in times of crisis, inaction is itself a decision—with consequences.
This workshop uses the biblical account of David and Absalom to help leaders, parents, and influencers recognize the warning signs of unresolved conflict, understand the dangers of avoidance, and develop a plan for timely, godly intervention.
Key Takeaways:
  • Recognizing Early Warning Signs – Identifying relational and organizational fractures before they widen.
  • The Dangers of Avoidance – How delay and silence can amplify harm.
  • Balancing Grace with Confrontation – Learning to act with both compassion and courage.
  • Restoring Trust After Crisis – Steps to rebuild relationships when conflict has been left too long.
  • Biblical Leadership Principles – Applying Scripture to navigate difficult decisions with integrity.
By walking through David’s leadership failure in this moment of history, participants will gain practical tools for engaging conflict before it spirals—and the spiritual grounding to lead with wisdom, courage, and compassion.

When “What’s Right for Me” Isn’t Right for Us — Confronting Subjective Ethics in the Church

In Paul’s first letter to the Corinthians, we see a church rich in spiritual gifts but fractured by divisions, pride, and moral compromise. One of the underlying issues was subjective ethics—each person deciding right and wrong by personal preference or cultural convenience rather than by God’s truth.
This workshop explores how “everyone doing what is right in their own eyes” (Judges 21:25) erodes unity, distorts the gospel, and weakens the witness of Christ’s body. Using 1 Corinthians as our guide, we’ll uncover how the early church’s moral confusion mirrors challenges in today’s congregations—and how to address them with grace and truth.
Key Takeaways:
  • Understanding Subjective Ethics – Why personal moral standards are unstable without God’s Word as the foundation.
  • The Corinthian Case Study – How divisions over teaching, morality, and personal freedoms weakened the church.
  • Guarding Against Relativism – Practical tools for discerning God’s will amid competing opinions.
  • Restoring Biblical Unity – Applying 1 Corinthians’ call for humility, accountability, and love in conflict.
  • Living as a Witness – How aligning ethics with Scripture strengthens the church’s mission and credibility.
Participants will leave with a renewed commitment to stand on God’s truth together, resisting the pull of “my truth” in favor of the Truth that unites.

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