About the House
A Sanctuary of Covenant, Community, and Restoration
Beit Mivtah Banecha — A House of Refuge for His Children
Beit Mivtah Banecha means House of Refuge for His Children.
This place is not ours—it is His.
Born from loss, refined through fire, and built on lived experience, Beit Mivtah Banecha was never meant to follow the world’s mold of healing. It was created to restore what religion and systems broke.
This is a House of Covenant. A refuge. A return.
A living, breathing ecosystem where healing is not rushed, earned, or performed—but invited, witnessed, and walked out in full.
We are not a clinic. We are not a shelter.
We are a sanctuary where people live, work, and worship in community—where creation, not control, sets the rhythm.
The Journey That Shaped the House
This House is not the beginning of our story—it is the culmination of years of work, loss, and hard lessons.
Our first program began in Georgia under a 501(c)(3) with 508(c)(1)(a) status. But we witnessed how board governance, democratic structures, and government oversight could shift missions, expose survivors to vulnerability, and restrict spiritual freedom. That work continues today, doing what it is now called to do—but its structure could not hold the fullness of this calling.
Our second program in Tennessee closed before it even began during development and research. Legislation and cost of living prevented us from offering the whole-person healing we knew was necessary. The model was right; the environment was not.
We learned:
- Survivors need protection from bureaucracy, not exposure to it.
- Real healing isn’t clinical or time-limited.
- Government-approved care models often retraumatize those they claim to help.
- A House must have structural integrity—physically, spiritually, and relationally—to hold wounded people safely.
- Above all: survivors heal best in community, not in isolation.
These convictions led us to Arkansas—a place the Father highlighted repeatedly, even when we resisted. When we walked the land, we felt His presence. We felt rest. We felt “home.”
And when we explored the state laws, we realized:
Here, we could finally build what He showed us—with no compromise.
A faith-based nonprofit ministry trust.
A refuge governed by Scripture, not systems.
A place where survivors can heal at the pace their body, mind, and spirit require.
Why Arkansas
Arkansas was not chosen—it was revealed.
We came here after everything else broke. After programs closed. After systems failed. After watching survivors suffer under models that were never designed for their healing.
On this land, something different happened.
We felt stillness.
We felt permission.
We felt the presence of Yah.
Arkansas allows what other states prevent:
- Faith-based governance
- Covenant structures
- Non-institutional healing
- Land-based therapeutic rhythms
- Freedom from medical and government control
- Space to build a refuge without compromise
This is where the House belongs.
THE NAME THAT BREATHED LIFE
Beit Mivtah Banecha—BMB—is named in honor of Kendall’s close friend, Bryan Michael Bane, whose life deeply shaped this work. Bryan long dreamed of a healing place in nature where people could recover without pressure, medication dependency, or institutional control—a place where creation and the Creator partnered in restoring the broken.
He lost his battle with trauma in 2024.
His initials now live in this House. His dream is being built into the land itself. A legacy lives on because of the many times Bryan made sure Kendall survived the night.
This House is not only a refuge—it is a promise, a remembrance, and a continuation of a life that mattered.
What Makes Us Different
Land-Based Rhythms
To restore the nervous system. Daily work in nature rewires stress patterns, stabilizes the body, and rebuilds internal peace.
Whole-House Community Life
We live, work, worship, and heal together—not isolated, medicated, or observed.
Real Food Self-Sufficiency
We reduce dependency and eliminate exploitation by growing, raising, and preparing our food.
Spiritual Authority with Gentleness
No manipulation, no forced belief—just safety, truth, and covenant leadership.
True Trauma-Informed Care
No labels, no diagnoses, no pathologizing—just embodied restoration.
Long-Term Structure (1–3 years)
Healing unfolds over seasons, not sessions. Time is a gift, not a limit. Each choosing their own pace.
Creation-Based Healing
Gardening, animal care, harvest, and seasonality become the rhythm of the soul’s restoration. Living in harmony with Creator and creation.
Identity Restoration
Through scripture and encounter survivors learn who they are by meeting Yah in safety, truth, and belonging.
Freedom From Government Oversight
We are a private ministry trust—able to offer real spiritual safety without compromise.
The Covenant Path
Year 1: Stabilization & Awakening
In the first year, survivors settle into safety, rhythm, and rest. Their nervous system begins to unclench. Their body learns it no longer has to brace. This is the season of decompression, receiving care without fear, and awakening to the goodness of Yah.
Year 2: Deep Healing & Identity Work
Year two is a season of truth-telling and unlearning survival patterns. Clients rebuild thought structures, confront lies that shaped their identity, and encounter steady spiritual grounding. What was fragmented begins to come into alignment.
Year 3: Belonging, Purpose & Readiness
In the third year, survivors walk in restored identity, relational stability, and rooted joy. They begin preparing for life beyond the House—equipped, confident, and no longer defined by what they escaped. This is the season of becoming.
The Land Heals Too
Spring – New Life:
They witness lambs, chicks, bees, and blooming trees. They begin to believe they, too, can start again.
Summer – Endurance:
They garden, fence, carry weight, sweat under sun—and discover strength they didn’t know they had.
Fall – Harvest:
They gather what has grown. They learn gratitude, letting go, and blessing what no longer serves them.
Winter – Rest:
They slow down. They breathe. They make soup, tan hides, mend clothes—and wait for the mercy of spring.



The Spiritual Culture of the House
We honor Yahweh as Creator, Yeshua as Redeemer, and covenant as the structure of belonging. Our rhythms, decisions, and daily life are rooted in Scripture, in embodied truth, and in the quiet consistency of walking with Him. We do not demand performance or force belief. We simply create a safe place for the soul to encounter rest, alignment, and Him.
- We honor Yahweh as Creator and Yeshua as Redeemer.
- We guard covenant, belonging, and sacred structure.
- We follow Scripture as our anchor and guide.
- We walk in rhythms of rest, work, worship, and community.
- We welcome all who seek truth with a willing heart.
Real faith does not control—it sets free.

Building the House
We are actively preparing the land and building systems that will support a full residential restoration community. Every structure, pathway, field, and rhythm is being built with intention—so that those who come can heal without instability, scarcity, or chaos. We are laying the foundation for a self-sustaining House of refuge, built to last for generations.
- Clearing land
- Planting orchards and large-scale gardens
- Building tiny homes and earth structures
- Creating rotational grazing systems
- Setting up fencing and water infrastructure
- Constructing a 450 sq ft commercial kitchen and outdoor kitchens
- Establishing worship and gathering spaces
2026: A Residency for the Called
Before this House becomes a refuge for survivors, it must first become a refuge for those who are called to build it.
In 2026, we will open our land to a small group of men and women who feel drawn to this work—not as a job, but as a life. These residents will walk the same healing rhythms as future clients while helping establish the foundation of the House.
This is not a polished environment. It is raw, early, and unfinished—and intentionally so.
It is for those who need healing, who long for structure, who crave purpose, and who carry a quiet sense that they were made for this.
They will work the land, build the systems, learn the rhythms, and walk the program from the ground up. Those who endure and grow will have the option to step into long-term positions as pillars of this House.
People We Are Looking For:
- Those discerning whether this work is their lifelong calling
- Those who need healing while helping build a sanctuary that heals others
- Those who thrive in structure, rhythm, and shared daily work
- Those willing to live simply during the building phase
- Those with grit, teachability, and covenant loyalty
- Those who want to work the same program future clients will walk
- Those ready to help build a generational refuge from the ground up
This residency is not easy. It is not glamorous.
But it is holy.
If you feel the pull, the ache, or the quiet yes in your spirit— you might be one of the ones He is sending. Email us to connect.


