Speaking Engagements

Report Back: Jesus Camp Nantucket Retreat 2024

In late October 2024, I once again had the privilege of teaching another great group of ladies at the Jesus Camp, Nantucket Women’s Retreat on Nantucket Island, Massachusetts. Conferences are super for reaching out to women in your community and surrounding areas, but retreats provide an intimate atmosphere that’s conducive to both formal instruction and informal, one on one discipleship. And we had plenty of time and space for both! Many thanks to Darcy Creech Marelli for opening up her lovely homes and hosting this biannual time of refreshing for women from all over the country.

In 2022, when I spoke at JCNWR, it was just a couple of months prior to my 30th wedding anniversary, so my husband, Scott, and I decided to drive to the retreat and treat ourselves to a “working second honeymoon,” visiting some fun “touristy” places on the way back home. We had such a great time, we decided to do it again last year and this year, too.

It’s two full days of driving from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, to Hyannis, Massachusetts, and, praise God, we had a fairly uneventful trip. We stopped at the visitors’ center in Trenton, Georgia, which we thought was going to be one of those big, fancy rest stops that you find near the state line on the interstate, but the Dade County Visitors’ Center was more like a small tourist information center in a charming storefront in the middle of town. Shoutout to Ms. Patricia who practically adopted us and saved us a bundle of time with an alternate route around Chattanooga traffic.

It is my personal belief that every visitors’ center should have adorable stickers like these to give out. :0)

The next day we stopped for gas at a way-off-the-beaten-path town in New York, in a somewhat sketchy looking neighborhood, and a gentleman saw the military stickers on our van, thanked my husband for his service, and let us go ahead of him in line at the gas pump.

Nothing extraordinary, but meeting nice people like these around the country is such a blessing and makes the trip more fun.

The following day, Wednesday, we caught up on some much needed rest, and after a leisurely lunch together, I boarded the ferry for Nantucket Island.

The ladies began to arrive that evening. We shared a delicious dinner, and then had the opportunity to hear everyone’s “two minute testimony”. Our backgrounds varied from those of us who were born and raised in church and came to know Christ at an early age to those who had survived abuse, or walked on the wild side, or were involved in heretical church backgrounds before coming to Christ later in life. There is no such thing as a “boring” testimony. Every new birth in Jesus is a miracle of His mercy and grace.

This year, I taught a four lesson series on the topic of biblical womanhood. The sessions were not recorded, but I’ve taught the same sessions before at other conferences:

Godโ€™s Design for Biblical Womanhood

Godโ€™s Design for Biblical Manhood

Walking in Biblical Womanhood

Holy Mothers (and others) of Godโ€™s Word (There are substantial differences, but Session 4 was about 60-70% drawn from this teaching session on holiness)

Thursday’s teaching started with God’s Design for Biblical Womanhood. We explored the value God places on womanhood and the unique place women hold in God’s plan for Creation, the home, and the church.

We finished things off for the day with God’s Design for Biblical Manhood. Manhood isn’t toxic. It’s a captivating part of God’s good design in Creation for men to lead their families, their churches, and to lead the way in exercising dominion over the earth. Each session was followed by a time of Q&A and discussion groups.

Friday, we kicked things off with Walking in Biblical Womanhood. The Fall led us to crave reversing roles with men and with God. But when we stand firm against the schemes of the devil, our homes and churches can truly flourish.

Our last session was Biblical Womanhood: Our Sisters in Scripture. God has given us excellent examples of pursuing holiness as godly women in the stories of many of our sisters in Scripture.

Both teaching sessions were again followed by Q&A and discussion groups. All of the ladies were very gracious and receptive, and we had many edifying moments of discipleship.

Of course, there’s always time for food, fellowship, and fun!

Friday afternoon, Darcy’s apiarist (beekeeper), Anton, came out, showed us High Point’s hives, and gave a fascinating talk about the lives of bees. I love to listen to people who are both passionate and knowledgeable about their field and I think you would be hard put to find anyone more passionate or knowledgeable about bees than Anton was.

Sunset made for some gorgeous pictures!

Sweet fellowship…

Fire pit and s’mores!

All too soon, it was time to say goodbye, and I boarded an early morning ferry back to the mainland.

It was a wonderful time of fellowship in the Lord, and I hope to return soon! Many thanks to Darcy and her assistant, Otilia, who worked so hard to host a great retreat, took care of all my needs, and made me feel so welcome.


I arrived on the mainland mid-morning, and we promptly hit the road for Maryland to spend a little time with some of my husband’s family, whom we hadn’t seen in quite a while. It was a nice visit.

Next on the itinerary was the Pigeon Forge / Gatlinburg / Sevierville area of Tennessee. To get there, we had to go through Virginia. All day. Diagonally, I think, from the northeastern tip to the southwestern tip. That’s a lot of Virginia.

(Actually, I love Virginia. My parents used to live there and I’ve done more conferences in Virginia than any other state, including my own. I don’t think there’s a part of that state that isn’t beautiful.)

We finally pulled into Sevierville that evening and stopped at the Sevierville Buc-ee’s, which, until recently, was the largest Buc-ee’s in the world.

It was close to election day, and we couldn’t resist! We don’t care how hick anybody thinks we are! :0)

Exhausted, we checked into our hotel in Pigeon Forge. While there, we met a celebrity. I thought you might like to see the star of the new reality TV show, “Real Pigeons of Pigeon Forge”.๐Ÿ˜‚

We spent our honeymoon in the Gatlinburg area have always wanted to go back. I figured it had probably changed a lot in 32 years, and we were only going to be there for a few days, so I asked my followers for all of the “must see” sights. They did not disappoint.

The overwhelming majority of respondents said we simply had to go to Cades Cove, and they were so right! Cades Cove is the remnant of a 19th century community in the Smoky Mountains with homes, a grist mill, and three preserved churches (you know I was all over that!). We would highly recommend you go, but that you go on a day when a mama bear is not blocking the road for three hours in order to protect her cub. For that same reason, we’d recommend you not go when it’s hot, cold, raining, or when you have to go to the bathroom. Late October was perfect and the fall foliage was gorgeous.

Our first stop along the trail was the Primitive Baptist Church. The ranger (who we suspected might have been a deacon at his own church!) gave a captivating talk on the building itself, as well as the practices of the church and the community.

The church was the center of life and the โ€œinvisible governmentโ€ of the community. The ranger talked about the practice of church discipline, using as an example, a lazy man who wouldnโ€™t work to provide for his family. The elders would confront him, then, if he didn’t repent, disinvite him from church, and if he still didn’t repent, they would excommunicate him, which included shunning and refusing to trade with him.

The ranger also talked about how the church would provide for widows, and for people experiencing catastrophic illness or events.

When someone died, the church bell would be rung the same number of times as the age of the deceased. Everyone would drop what he or she was doing and immediately come together at the church. The men would dig the grave in the church’s graveyard, and the women would tend to the bereaved.

When an issue or proposal arose in the community, the elders would consider what Scripture had to say and reject it if it didnโ€™t measure up to Scripture.

In other words, the church was being the church.

The Methodist church…

If you’re a musician and you’ve ever been in an old church like this, I don’t have to tell you, the acoustics are phenomenal. We had to give them a try.

Please extend me a little grace. We hadn’t sung this in a while and I was having trouble finding my note. :0)

Next up was the Missionary Baptist Church. They split off the Primitive Baptist Church because they wanted to send out missionaries and the Primitive Baptist Church didn’t.

Acoustics, I said.

After the aforementioned three hour delay, courtesy of Boo Boo and his mama, we moved on to “Aunt Becky” Cable’s home, mill, and outbuildings.

On our way back through the mountains to Pigeon Forge, we stopped at a few charming craft shops (Providentially, one of them donated part of their profits to Reformed missionaries!), and ended up at another reader recommended spot, The Old Mill Restaurant and shopping district, where we learned a lot about the history of Pigeon Forge, visited some quaint shops, and had a huge and fabulous supper (for a surprisingly low price!).

After a good night’s rest, the Titanic Museum was next on our agenda. The building is designed to resemble the ship itself, and is quite fantastical looking. When you “board,” you’re issued a โ€œboarding passโ€ with the name and information of a real passenger who was aboard the Titanic. Some of these passengers are mentioned in various exhibits. At the end of the tour, you find out whether or not your passenger survived. (Mine did, Scottโ€™s didnโ€™t.)

I found it interesting that several pastors and missionaries were aboard ship. All gave up their seats on the lifeboats to others, and I appreciated the little area that was a tribute especially to them.

In the iceberg room, which the bridge overlooked, it was very cold, and you could put your hand in 28 degree water to experience the cold of that night.

Genuine artifacts from recovery missions to the site of the sinking were plentiful. We found it fascinating.

Our next project was to attempt to locate the lovely chalet we stayed in for our honeymoon. I still had the directions in my scrapbook, and we gathered our courage and drove up the harrowingly narrow mountain road. But, alas, it was not to be. We could not locate the chalet or even the road it had been on. We suspect it burned down during the catastrophic Great Smoky Mountain wildfires of 2016.

Our last stop for the day was another reader recommendation, The Apple Barn, a charming little shopping and restaurant district centered around a cider mill. We had a wonderful time shopping at the general store and other shops, snacking on fried apple pies and apple doughnuts, and eating another fantastic supper at the Applewood Farmhouse Grill.

When we got to the bakery, I spied a loaf of blackberry bread that looked awfully familiar, and whipped out my phone to find it was the same bread I’d been given by a dear attendee at a conference in Tennessee over a year earlier.

L- 2023 Tennessee conference gift, R- 2024 trip to The Apple Barn. If you can’t read the caption, it says, “…Iโ€™m not exaggerating when I say this is the best fruit bread Iโ€™ve ever eaten in my life. Ever.”

It was an amazing find – one of the highlights of the trip, for me – I was giddy, and my husband got really tired of hearing about it.

The next day was spent shopping and walking around in downtown Gatlinburg like we did on our honeymoon.

And finally, happily, we headed back home, thanking God for another wonderful time together.


Photo Credits

Thank you to all the retreat attendees who generously shared many of the photos you see above in the retreat section.

All other photos by Michelle and Scott Lesley

Speaking Engagements

Report Back: Jesus Camp Nantucket Retreat 2023

It brought me such joy, recently, to share with another great group of ladies at the Jesus Camp, Nantucket Women’s Retreat on Nantucket Island, Massachusetts. Conferences are super for reaching out to women in your community and surrounding areas, but retreats provide an intimate atmosphere that’s conducive to both formal instruction and informal, one on one discipleship. And we had plenty of time and space for both! Many thanks to Darcy Creech Marelli for opening up her lovely homes and hosting this biannual time of refreshing for women from all over the country this past October.

Last year when I spoke at JCNWR, it was just a couple of months prior to my 30th wedding anniversary, so my husband and I decided to drive to the retreat and treat ourselves to a “working second honeymoon,” visiting some fun “touristy” places on the way back home. We had such a great time, we decided to do it again this year.

It’s two full days of driving from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, to Hyannis, Massachusetts, and things were off to a great start. Our hotel in Virginia the first night was free due to some rewards points I’d forgotten I had.

The second night, when we arrived at our inn in Hyannis, we checked in and discovered that, for whatever reason, they had upgraded us for free to a room with a bay view.

As we unloaded our luggage in the parking lot and prepared to head to our room, I heard a man’s voice calling out a greeting to me in French. (Brothers, can I just say, unless you want to completely terrify a woman you don’t know, never call out to her in a dark parking lot – in French or otherwise.) It turns out he was from Baton Rouge, too, had seen our Louisiana license plate, and was glad to see some home folks. (We ran into an oddly inordinate number of people from Louisiana, or with close ties to Louisiana, in Massachusetts this year.)

Wednesday night, the ladies began to arrive. We shared a delicious dinner, and then had the opportunity to hear everyone’s “two minute testimony”. Our backgrounds varied from those of us who were born and raised in church and came to know Christ at an early age to those who had survived abuse, or walked on the wild side, or were involved in heretical church backgrounds before coming to Christ later in life. There is no such thing as a “boring” testimony. Every new birth in Jesus is a miracle of His mercy and grace.

This year, I taught a four lesson series on the topic of suffering. (No audio or video available.) Suffering is something we will all eventually experience, and God’s Word has so much to teach us about how to endure and respond to it in a biblical way.

Thursday’s teaching started with Christ, the Suffering Servant, discussing Christ’s suffering as the lens through which we view our own suffering.

We rounded out our instructional time with The Theology of Suffering, examining some common “Christian” misconceptions about suffering, and what the Bible actually teaches. Each session was followed by a time of Q&A and discussion groups.

Friday, session 1 was Rejoicing in God’s Promises During Suffering. Though suffering can be difficult and painful, God has made so many good promises to us and given us ample reason to rejoice, even in the most challenging circumstances.

Our second session was The Christian’s Response to Suffering. We always want to be sure we’re responding to suffering in a godly way, whether it’s our own suffering or we’re ministering to someone else.

Both teaching sessions were again followed by Q&A and discussion groups. All of the ladies were very gracious and receptive, and we had many edifying moments of discipleship.

Of course, there’s always time for food, fellowship, and fun! The ladies enjoyed working out, chatting around the dinner table, relaxing in the pool and hot tub, and trips into town and to the beach.

Retreat swag! Darcy kindly provided these resources and gifts for retreat attendees, and gave me a special treat of honey from High Point’s hive!

All too soon, it was time to say goodbye. It was a wonderful time of fellowship in the Lord, and I’m looking forward to going back next year! Many thanks to Darcy and her assistant, Otilia, who worked so hard to host a great retreat, took care of all my needs, and made me feel so welcome.



I was starving when I got off the ferry and onto the mainland, so we stopped at a trendy local restaurant for a late lunch before hitting the road for a few fun stops on the way home.

Fish tacos, New England style. Every Louisiana woman who travels knows to
carry Tony’s in her purse. Sometimes, when you’re away from home,
ya just gotta kick it up a notch! :0)

First on our itinerary was Dayton, Ohio, so we headed west.

I keep hoping to visit New York City one of these days. Last year, this is as close as we got.

This year we got a little closer. We actually drove through the city on the interstate. Here are the sights we saw (pretty thrilling, huh?):

Finally, we arrived in Dayton, home to the National Museum of the United States Air Force. My husband served in the Air National Guard, so this was a special treat for him.

We got in early enough to spend a couple of hours at the museum before it closed. Next on the agenda was Skyline Chili for supper. I was first introduced to the idea of eating chili on top of spaghetti noodles a few years ago on Twitter. To which I promptly said, “Gross. How could anybody ruin chili that way?”. But my Ohio followers swear by it, and there was a Skyline Chili practically across the street from our hotel, so I thought, why not give it a try? Besides, I love sampling the local fare when I travel. I ordered it “4 Way” (noodles, chili, beans, and cheese).

The verdict? I love you, Ohio, but my initial reaction to chili spaghetti was spot on for me. It’s just not my cup of tea. Sorry.

We spent the next day seeing the rest of the NMUSAF. To me, a plane is a plane (Don’t tell my husband I said that! :0), and there must have been hundreds of them, but even for someone like me, there were plenty of things to hold my interest, and I highly recommend that you visit if you get the opportunity. I’ve been to a lot of great museums, including the Smithsonian, and the NMUSAF is definitely one of the best. And not only that, admission and parking are both free, it’s open 7 days a week, and the grounds are lovely as well. If you love planes, plan to spend a few days. It’s huge.

One of the planes I enjoyed seeing was the C-47. This is the plane my grandfather flew during WWII, back when the Air Force was still the Army Air Corps.

There was a very sad exhibit on the Holocaust.

Disney lent its art and artists to a number of planes and units.

Major General Claire Lee Chenault was a long time Louisiana resident and former LSU student who formed and led the very successful American Volunteer Group – the Flying Tigers – during WWII.

Other exhibits I enjoyed included: walking through the “Air Force Ones” of Presidents Roosevelt, Truman, Eisenhower, and Kennedy (the one that flew his body back to Washington after the assassination), a giant, floor to ceiling quilt commemorating Air Force bases that have closed, the evolution of the Air Force song, and Ham’s – the first chimp in space – uniform and simulator. Ham was trained at Holloman AFB, not far from where I grew up in Las Cruces, New Mexico.

We finished up the Air Force museum early enough to drive on to our next destination, just an hour away – northern Kentucky.

After a good night’s sleep, we headed for the Creation Museum! What a joy to be in a museum having anything to do with science and hear a biblical perspective on it instead of having to consciously ignore all the evolution stuff (or correct it to your children). And all of the exhibits were so gospel-centered! We watched two brief 3D movies- one on the six days of Creation, the other, a Genesis through Revelation presentation of the gospel. There was also a small exhibit from the Museum of the Bible, which we hope to visit next year. It was too cold to spend much time outside, and the animals in the zoo seemed to agree, so we didn’t see many of them. When we got done with the museum, we took a quick look-see at downtown Cincinnati (it reminded us a lot of downtown New Orleans) and saw Paycor Stadium, where the Cincinnati Bengals play.

The final stop on our trip was the Ark Encounter, which we thoroughly enjoyed and highly recommend, along with the Creation Museum. My favorite part was the exhibit with all the Noah storybooks that explained how harmful the โ€œkiddieficationโ€ of the Noahic narrative is. We also got to meet Ronda, a follower who has been such a faithful supporter of my ministry and A Word Fitly Spoken. Ronda works at the Ark, and was so kind and gracious to meet us and give us a behind the scenes tour of the hydroponic gardens and greenhouses in her department, where decorative plants as well as plants that feed the animals in the petting zoo are grown and maintained. Thank you, Ronda!

This trip was such a blessing. We are most grateful to God for providing it for us!


Photo Credits

Thank you to all the retreat attendees who generously shared many of the photos you see above in the retreat section.

All other photos by Michelle Lesley

Speaking Engagements

Report Back: Jesus Camp Nantucket Retreat 2022 (and 30th Anniversary Jaunt!)

It brought me such joy, recently, to share with a great group of ladies at the Jesus Camp, Nantucket Women’s Retreat on Nantucket Island, Massachusetts. Conferences are super for reaching out to women in your community and surrounding areas, but retreats provide an intimate atmosphere that’s conducive to both formal instruction and informal, one on one discipleship. And we had plenty of time and space for both! Many thanks to Darcy Creech Marelli for opening up her lovely homes and hosting this biannual time of refreshing for women from all over the country.

I love the way Darcy decorates her homes with these varied and striking maps of Nantucket!

My husband doesn’t often get to come with me to speaking engagements, but since we’ll be celebrating our 30th anniversary in December, we decided to make this a “working second honeymoon,” driving up to the retreat together, exploring Nantucket, and visiting any sites that caught our fancy on the drive home. (In case you’re wondering, it’s about a 24 hour drive from our home in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, to Hyannis, Massachusetts, where we caught the ferry to Nantucket Island.)

Our view from the ferry as we docked in Nantucket.

Darcy and her friend Sheree graciously picked us up at the ferry and whisked us out to the High Point, the Jesus Camp property, a lovely home and guest house perfect for hosting retreats and other getaways. (Ladies if you enjoy admiring beautifully appointed homes, be sure to check out the slideshow and video of High Point here. You’ll love the nautical and local island themes!)

Things got off to a cozy start Wednesday night with the arrival of all the retreat attendees. We shared a delicious dinner, then had the opportunity to hear everyone’s testimonies. Our backgrounds varied from those of us who were born and raised in church and came to know Christ at an early age to those who had survived abuse, or walked on the wild side, or were involved in heretical church backgrounds before coming to Christ later in life. There is no such thing as a “boring” testimony. Every new birth in Jesus is a miracle of His mercy and grace.

Thursday’s teaching started with God’s Word, Our Foundation, discussing the necessity, authority and sufficiency of God’s Word. We rounded out our instructional time with Teach What Is Good: Discipling Women in the 21st Century, examining biblical and practical discipleship and women’s ministry. Each session was followed by a time of Q&A and discussion groups.

Friday, session 1 was Hooked on a Feeling: Living By God’s Word Instead of Our Emotions. As Christians, our feelings don’t get to lead us around by the nose, we submit to the authority of Scripture instead. Our second session was Discernment 101. Both teaching sessions were again followed by Q&A and discussion groups. Many of the ladies were new to discernment and were disappointed to learn that some of their favorite ministries, authors, and teachers are false teachers. But they were all very gracious and receptive, and I had several fruitful conversations with women who were eager to learn.

During free time, the ladies enjoyed chatting around the dinner table, relaxing in the pool and hot tub, and trips into town and to the beach.

Retreat swag! Darcy kindly provided these resources and gifts for retreat attendees, and gave me a special treat of honey from High Point’s hive!

Ana, a retreat attendee who is originally from Guatemala but now resides in Ohio, brought me these lovely gifts. Homemade buckeyes and Guatemalan gifts and coffee. The sale of this coffee supports the orphanage and foster care home Ana and her husband still operate in Guatemala.

All too soon, it was time to say goodbye. It was a wonderful time of fellowship in the Lord, and I’m looking forward to going back next year! Many thanks to Darcy and her assistant, Otilia, who worked so hard to host a great retreat, took care of all my needs, and made my husband and me feel so welcome.


If your church or organization is ever in need of a speaker for a womenโ€™s event, Iโ€™d love to come share with your ladies as well. Click here for more information.


When the retreat was over, my husband, Scott, and I had the opportunity to explore the island a bit. We went out to Great Point, the farthest point on the island, and had a wonderful time seeing the seals and the Great Point lighthouse. The shops downtown were charming, and we enjoyed an authentic Nantucket dinner at The SeaGrille.

The next day, we boarded the ferry and headed back to the mainland. Since Plymouth, Massachusetts, was only 30 minutes away, we decided to make that our first sightseeing stop.

At Plimoth Patuxet we saw recreations of a Patuxet home site and 17th century English village. We enjoyed seeing Wampanoag (Indian) boats, dwellings, and a cooking demonstration. The Wampanoag word for the succotash stew (turkey, beans, corn, celery, onions, etc.) our guide was making means โ€œthrow it inโ€. (There’s a running joke in Louisiana that that’s pretty much what โ€œgumboโ€ means, too.) They would just throw in whatever they had and keep adding to it. We sampled some at the visitorsโ€™ center, and it was pretty good – basically a turkey and vegetable soup. We also saw the English village, made up of several Pilgrim homes and a fort.

We loved the beautiful fall foliage and scenery in the Plymouth area.

Our next stop in Plymouth was Jenney family grist mill. It was situated in a lovely little area, on, of course, a running stream. It still operates several times a week.

From the mill, we walked over to Plymouth Rock. It sits ensconced in a little pavilion on the side of the road. No velvet ropes or admission fees, no big hoopla. It’s just there. Along the way we saw some other Pilgrim points of interest including the Scrooby Leyden Church / Mayflower Meetinghouse and the Church of the Pilgrimage, along with monuments to Governor William Bradford and Elder William Brewster.

Our final stop in Plymouth was the Mayflower II, a replica of the original Mayflower. It was much smaller than I expected, and very spare in its appointments.

My husband is a JFK buff, so the next day we drove the half hour to Boston and visited the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum on the campus of the University of Massachusetts. (If you’d like to hear the “My Daddy Is President” song, click here.)

I had wanted to visit New York City on our way home, but, unfortunately, we didn’t have time. This is as close as we got.

After Boston, we headed for Hershey, Pennsylvania, and spent most of the day at Chocolate World. We went on a ride that explained how chocolate is made, designed our own candy bars, went to a chocolate tasting, and took a trolley tour of the town.

And one last stop on our way home from Alabama. I finally got a chance to go to Buc-ee’s!


Photo Credits

All photos marked with a white star were taken by Ana Morales.

Photo of The SeaGrille courtesy of The SeaGrille.

All other photos by Michelle Lesley