I want to tell you something I don't share in every email.
Years ago, Ann and I watched someone we loved face a serious health crisis. The conventional path had been walked. The options felt exhausted. And this person — someone full of faith, full of fight — was sitting in that in-between place that so many of you know: not giving up, but not sure where to turn.
What they needed wasn't more information. They had plenty of that. What they needed was an environment. A place where the body could finally receive what it had been designed to live on. A place where someone would sit with them, look at their whole picture, and help them understand what might be driving what they were experiencing. A place where the food was clean and the air was peaceful and the pace was slow enough for something to actually shift.
That experience never fully left me.
It's part of why the Hallelujah Diet Health Retreat exists — not as a program, not as a product, but as a place. A sanctuary where guests come carrying real burdens and leave — not always with everything resolved, but with clarity, with a plan, with renewed hope, and with the felt sense that their body is responding again.
We built it around the principles we've taught for decades: that God designed the body with extraordinary capacity to respond when given what it needs. That food is the foundation. That environment matters as much as information. That healing involves the whole person — body, mind, and spirit — and cannot be reduced to a checklist.
Guests eat meals that surprise them — beautifully prepared, plant-based, the kind of food that genuinely changes what they believe is possible at home. They go through therapies that support the body at a cellular level. They sit with us one-on-one. They rest by the river. They leave with a plan they can actually live.
Some come with cancer. Some with heart disease, diabetes, autoimmune conditions, or crushing fatigue. Some come simply because they know something has to change and they finally want to give their body a real chance. All of them are welcome. None of them are rushed.
If you've been wondering whether this is something you should do — whether July could be the week that changes the trajectory — I want you to know: that wondering is worth honoring.