Encounters on the Way

Wildflowers in front of a building

This work brings such a tapestry of humanity into my life.

Every week, I encounter people navigating grief, survival, transition, joy, and a deep yearning for meaning. Their stories are sacred. The need for spiritual care stretches far beyond the walls of our churches—and thanks to your support, we are there to meet it.

What follows is a composite of real lives I’ve encountered over the years. These stories are shared with care, shaped to protect confidentiality while illuminating the truth of what spiritual presence can mean in moments of vulnerability, beauty, and transformation.

  • A retired man shares about being blown away by the unpredictable wind of the Spirit and how he found hope in a 12-step recovery room.
  • A queer young adult wrestles with the faith of their upbringing and the fullness of their identity—living fully into themselves, even as their family back home remains unaware of the journey.
  • A mid-career adult begins to ask if their work still reflects their values—or if something deeper is calling.
  • A faith leader, after an arrest that upended their life, grapples with the loss of employment, community, housing, family, and certainty. They cling to a spiritual thread that now feels both fragile and vital.
  • A trans person living with mental health challenges moves through each day with courage, knowing this world was not built for them to thrive—and facing the constant fear of what that means for their safety.
  • Shelter staff, weary and radiant, show up every day for guests experiencing homelessness. They offer joy, dignity, and warmth in the face of narratives from the media and politicians that criminalize poverty and erase the humanity of those they serve.
  • A widow, caught in the suddenness of loss, asks simply: “what do I do now?” She seeks a service not from a stranger, but from someone who is willing to enter into her life.

Each of these people reminds me that spiritual care, a listening ear, empathy, and compassion are not luxuries. They are presence, they are witness, they are love—offered without condition. Your generosity makes this possible. You are helping create a world where more Missoulians navigate life with caring companionship. Thank you for standing with me in this work, and in this vision.

Gratitude

Mountains near Missoula, Montana

Thank you for your patience as I’ve navigated the recent transition to a new fiscal sponsor. I’m especially grateful to those of you who reached out when you encountered issues with the former online giving platform, asked how the transition was going, or simply checked in with continued curiosity and care. Your generosity and encouragement have meant so much to me.

There were certainly frustrations along the way—especially the hiccups that made it harder for some of you to continue your support. Thankfully, those issues seem to be resolved. The updated giving information above is now working beautifully and will remain the best way to support this work moving forward. Thank you, thank you, thank you.

The transition took longer than I anticipated, but I now feel well-supported by my new fiscal sponsor—and deeply appreciated by my former sponsor, the Montana Interfaith Collaborative (MIC). The stories of Two Pines and MIC intersect at several pivotal moments in my journey, and I’m grateful for the ways they’ve championed and supported this work over the years.  

I’m also profoundly thankful for the communities of faith across Montana that sustain this work. Recently, Sunrise Presbyterian in Great Falls and Hamilton Presbyterian Church generously supported our efforts to expand spiritual care. Thank you for viewing Two Pines as a meaningful expression of your mission and outreach.  

And to the congregations here in Missoula—Atonement Lutheran, UCC Missoula, and First Presbyterian Church—thank you for the invitations to worship together over the past several months. It is always a joy to be among you.

If you would like to join this amazing group of supporters, click below:

A New Chapter: Welcome to Two Pines

Courtney Arntzen talking to client with text New chapter, same mission

To better serve MIC and the broader Missoula community, I’m excited to announce the launch of my new project: Two Pines, now operating under the fiscal sponsorship of Social and Environmental Entrepreneurs (SEE)—a registered public charity.

This partnership ensures that all donations to Two Pines remain fully tax-deductible while supporting SEE’s mission to empower, encourage, and catalyze change-making projects like mine.

Two Pines remains a one-person endeavor (at this time), and all contributions go directly to supporting me and this work, just as they did as “Missoula Community Chaplain.”

If you’d like to contribute to my work at Two Pines, donations can be made in the following ways:

📩 By Check:
Make checks payable to SEE with “Two Pines” in the memo.
Mail to: Social and Environmental Entrepreneurs (SEE)
 23564 Calabasas Road Suite 201
 Calabasas, CA 91302

✅ Online (one-time or recurring):