How does Jesus meet us where we are and lead us to where we are meant to be? This question, among many others, was explored by 220 high school students in the Southeastern California Conference (SECC) during the 12th annual OneLife Retreat. Held August 15–17 at Camp Cedar Falls, the weekend combined worship, presentations, prayer, and the signature “Jesus Experience”—student-led group discussions guided by a curriculum. But who designs this curriculum? Who are the people shaping the atmosphere and curating the themes behind the event?
While the conference oversees the OneLife retreats, the event is truly a collaboration of youth pastors from more than 20 churches. Each year, the planning team chooses a theme, invites a speaker, and discusses their individual responsibilities. Because the theme sets the direction for everything else, it is chosen first. How is it selected? Lindsey Haffner, youth pastor at Redlands church, explained: “The biggest question is, what do the students need? That’s two-fold: what do they perceive as their need, and what do we as pastors—who spend significant time with them—recognize as their deeper needs?”


This year’s theme, “Here and Beyond,” invited students to reflect deeply. Haffner, who helped create the Jesus Experience curriculum, posed questions such as: “How does Jesus meet you here, and what does that look like? How does He move us and propel us beyond what we can comprehend?” The curriculum drew on the biblical stories of Cornelius, Moses and the burning bush, Nicodemus, and the woman at the well. The main speaker was Aren Rennacker, newly appointed Pacific Union Conference Director of Growing Young Leaders.
With one of their core members absent, the youth pastors stepped up to take on greater responsibilities. “This year, it was especially youth-pastor led,” Haffner noted. “We took on more responsibility than usual, delegating tasks among ourselves. Because of that, the retreat felt more autonomous—and we were more invested in its success. It clarified that OneLife truly began, and continues, as the result of churches coming together.”
That sense of ownership extended to the students as well, inspiring them to take responsibility for their own faith—asking big questions and seeking answers in partnership with their church and with God.
Photo Credit Mikayla Rodriguez
