About Respero

Committed to making safe, life-giving conversations available and accessible to everyone.

We give priority to working with pastors/leaders and to those seeking to heal from spiritual abuse.

Respero is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization committed to making safe, life-giving conversations and peer counseling available and accessible to everyone at no cost.

We train people in our faith-based cognitive behavioral framework.

The name Respero is based on the Latin word “spero”, which means hope. We have been offering hope since 2010 through our counseling, training, and teaching.

Our services are available and accessible to everyone regardless of social, economic, or religious status.

ABOUT OUR FOUNDER

Joe and his wife Kathy have been married for over four decades, and enjoy their adult children and grandchildren. After 28 years in California they moved to Portland, Oregon in 2021. Joe received his academic training at Capital University, Grace Theological Seminary, Santa Clara University, and Trinity Theological Seminary.

He is an avid reader, hiker, and sports fan, who hopes his favorite team, the Chicago Cubs, don’t go another century before they win another World Series. It isn’t looking good, but hope lives on.

“I want to be brave with my life. And when we make the choice to dare greatly, we sign up to get our asses kicked. We can choose courage or we can choose comfort, but we can’t have both. Not at the same time.” - Brene Brown

“We must learn that the world is a place of abundance, not scarcity. The mantra of “not enough” becomes a kind of default setting for our thinking about everything, from the cash in our pocket to the people we love or the value of our own lives. It becomes the reason we can’t have what we want or be who we want to be. But it’s not true!” - Lynn Twist

“Redemption does not mean that God meets our needs and then our souls stop longing. No, redemption does not eradicate desperation. Instead, redemption allows us to surrender. And God doesn't want something from us. He wants us.” - Sharon Hersh

“We should not ask to do great things for God, but to do small things with great love.” - Mother Theresa
“Do you know what it’s like to be rested? Truly rested? This is what I’m finding, every day, every hour: there is a way of living that is so sweet, so full, so whole and beautiful you’ll never want to go back once you’ve tasted it.” - Shauna Niequist
“Want to be happy? Stop trying to be perfect.” - Brene Brown
“Connection is why we’re here; it is what gives purpose and meaning to our lives.” - Brene Brown
“We run from grief because loss scares us, yet our hearts reach toward grief because the broken parts want to mend.” - Brene Brown
"We cannot selectively numb emotions. When we numb the painful emotions, we also numb the positive emotions." - Brene Brown
“Our world desperately needs wise, skillful practitioners of the cure of souls.” - Dallas Willard
“A shepherd counselor is not a doctor whose primary task is to take away pain…the main task of the shepherd counselor is to prevent people from suffering for the wrong reasons.” - Henri Nouwen
“Be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a great battle.” - Philo
“The deepest convictions of our heart are formed by stories and reside there in the images and emotions of story…..Life is not a list of propositions, it is a series of dramatic scenes.” - Brent Curtis
“Here is something very simple about relationships….Nobody will listen to you unless they sense that you like them.” - Donald Miller
“Jesus came to announce to us that an identity based on success, popularity, and power is a false identity—an illusion! Loudly and clearly he says: ‘You are not what the world makes you; but you are children of God.’ “ - Henri Nouwen
“When we accept our complete belovedness, we stop judging ourselves and other people; as a result, other people begin to feel safe with us.” - Henri Nouwen
“Human beings who give themselves to relational greatness—who have friends they laugh with, cry with, learn with, fight with, dance with, live and love and grow old and die with—these are the human beings who lead magnificent lives.” - John Ortberg
“The litmus test of spirituality is not the absence of conflict; conflict will not disappear until we die. The litmus test is how we handle it. Conflict is inevitable; resentment is not.” - John Ortberg
“There are few joys in life like being wanted, chosen, embraced. There are few pains like being excluded, rejected, left out. At the core of of Christian community is the choice between exclusion and embrace.” - Miroslav Wolf

SITE MAP

CONTACT US

 

Respero Ministries
P.O. Box 11224
Portland, OR 97211-0224

1-831-334-8268

[email protected]

SOCIAL MEDIA LINKS

© 2024 Respero, All rights reserved. We are a 501(c)(3). All donations are tax deductible.

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