An Invitation for Couples: Walking the Camino Together
A mid-year invitation for couples to slow down, walk together, and create space for discernment, renewal, and next steps on the Camino de Santiago.
Have you been longing for space to slow down, step back, and reconnect — not only with God, but with each other?
This coming May, in partnership with our friends at The Way Between, my wife and I are facilitating a couples pilgrimage on the Camino de Santiago in northern Spain, and we’d love to invite you to consider joining us.
The Way Between is a fitting name for this pilgrimage — a sacred space between where you are now and what may be emerging next.
Why the Camino — and why as a couple?
For centuries, pilgrims have walked the Camino seeking renewal, clarity, and direction. There’s something about the simple rhythm of walking — step after step — that opens space for listening and discernment.
Walking this path together as a couple creates a unique opportunity to:
Slow your pace and step out of the noise of daily life
Have deeper conversations that don’t fit into busy routines
Discern next steps during a season of transition or change
Reconnect spiritually and relationally through shared experience
Many couples describe the Camino as a reset — not because it fixes everything, but because it creates space to notice what matters most.
A Mid-Year Pause with Intention
Walking the Camino together offers a meaningful way to pause mid-year and ask:
What is God inviting us into in this next season?
What do we need to release?
What do we want to carry forward — together?
You don’t need to have clear answers before you come. The Camino has a way of meeting you right where you are.
The Way Between | Couples Camino Pilgrimage
🗓 May 24–29, 2026
📍 El Camino de Santiago, Spain
This is a guided, intimate pilgrimage for couples, designed with spacious rhythms, shared reflection, and supportive facilitation.
👉 Learn more and register here:
https://thewaybetween.churchcenter.com/registrations/events/2909088
Whether you’re discerning next steps, navigating transition, or simply longing for intentional time together, we’d be honored to walk this Way Between with you.
Walking with you,
-Tim
P.S. You don’t need to be “figured out” to come on this pilgrimage. Many couples arrive with questions, not answers — and find that the Camino gently makes space for both.
Walking in the Way
I’ve been reflecting on my relationship with uncertainty, especially in seasons when there has been little to no sense of direction. Have you ever been in one of those slumps? Are you in the middle of one currently? How are you framing your view of the unknown? Through the lens of curiosity or resistance?
And let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us… -Hebrews 12:1b
In life I’m a walker, not a runner. Regardless, the thought I want to convey is the same. I’ve learned that walking takes perseverance too. I’ve been reflecting on my relationship with uncertainty, especially in seasons when there has been little to no sense of direction. Have you ever been in one of those slumps? Are you in the middle of one currently? How are you framing your view of the unknown? Through the lens of curiosity or resistance?
The scripture is clear. The race (road, path, journey, calling, assignment) is marked out for us by God. We sometimes think we’ve missed the signpost. Could it be that the signs are just more spaced out than we originally thought? Or hidden from plain sight in order to entice the seeker in us? And could all of this be His “way” of nurturing our faith and growing us into people of character who know how to endure?
This idea is not unlike my experience of walking the way of the pilgrim, the El Camino de Santiago. My wife and I completed a 100 mile stretch of the trail in 2022. In just over a month from now, we return for more, albeit a different section of the trail…this time leading a group of like-minded couples.
The scallop shell symbol, famous along the Camino, appears once in a while along the way to ease the mind of the questioning pilgrim. This appeals to the planner in me. There is something that comes alive in me upon the sight of it. Yes, I say to myself, you are heading in the right direction. Who doesn’t like a bit of confirmation?
Walking the Camino somewhere in Northern Spain, 2022
However, there are long stretches of the trail void of markers. One does not always get to see the sign in front of them shouting “this is the way” (Mandalorian creed anyone?). But just often enough the pilgrim will spot the scallop shell etched into wood, dirt or stone, a welcome assurance that they are heading in the right direction.
In our faith journeys, God gives us markers along the way, signposts to encourage us and give us a sense of confidence that he is leading and directing. Not all of the time, remind you. The signs can be few and far between. Nothing predictable or formulaic. A God Who inspires wonder and mystery will have none of that. Nonetheless, He’s good at what he does in forming the human soul. He knows what we need and when.
Personally, I’ve navigated large gaps and spaces of uncertainty, and plenty confusion to go with it. I’ve longed for clarity in those seasons. Can you relate? I’ve missed a few signs along the way, having to retrace my steps. I’ve cried out for clarity. Maybe I should have been praying for trust instead?
This is why I love doing what I do as a coach, walking with others through transition seasons. So much of the process is about becoming OK with uncertainty, learning to trust. It’s the questions which drive curiosity. 100% confidence all the time loses its luster and produces stagnation.
We walk in life with the expectancy that the next mile-marker will confirm what we hope for. Not full clarity. Not total confidence. Certainly not completion (Is the real race ever really completed?). But a firm conviction that we haven’t just stumbled into this place; we are here with a purpose. We are in the Way.