Hope for the
Searching, Suffering,
and Spiritually Restless.
Trent and Emily Chambers
A NOTE FROM TRENT
Even Still was birthed out of seasons of suffering and doubt in our own lives and along the way in our own faith journey. We are 20 years into marriage, 14 years into parenting and more than 2 decades into vocational ministry. We have borne the brokenness of countless stories, including our own. After a season of intense questioning and suffering, we have found that our limits and powerlessness have been met with deep peace and expectant hope in the One who is faithfully close and powerfully present.
Christ knows what it is to suffer. He knows rejection, isolation, and what it means to be completely abandoned. He is the ‘suffering servant,’ who seeks to be present with and to bring peace to those who suffer.
Emily and I know what it means to find ourselves lost, lonely, and disillusioned.
Even in the Darkness,
Even in the Doubting,
Even in the Silence,
the Suffering, and the Searching,
Even Still,
There is Hope.
About Even Still
Even Still exists for those who feel the tension between what they’ve known and what they’re now experiencing. Those who feel stuck, discouraged or just restless.
Even Still didn’t begin as an idea. It began in disruption.
After more than two decades in full-time ministry, preaching, counseling, and walking closely with people, life took an unexpected turn. What once felt stable became uncertain. What once felt clear became complicated.
The last couple of years have been marked by loss and long stretches of not knowing what God was doing. Not a crisis of faith, but a deep unraveling of certainty.
And in that space, something quieter began to take shape.
Even Still was born there, not as a solution, but as a place to be honest about the questions, the tension, and the quiet work of God that often goes unnoticed.
What We Do
Even Still helps people navigate seasons where life feels uncertain, complicated, or hard to name.
Through coaching, teaching, and honest conversation, we walk with those who are:
Reconsidering what they believe and what still feels true
Navigating disappointment, disorientation, or quiet forms of loss
Longing for a deeper, more grounded way of living
Trying to move forward without pretending everything makes sense
This isn’t about fixing people or forcing answers.
It’s about creating space to slow down, pay attention, and begin to notice what’s happening beneath the surface—trusting that something steady can still be found, even in unfamiliar places.
About Trent
Trent Chambers has spent over 25 years in full-time vocational ministry. His work has centered on preaching, counseling, and walking alongside people in the complexities of faith and real life.
In recent years, his own journey has been shaped by seasons of uncertainty, loss, and long-suffering. In that space, he entered into his own process of counseling and story work—being guided through his story with a trusted counselor and coach. What began as a response to disruption became a place of deep healing, reshaping the way he understands both his own life and the lives of others.
These experiences now quietly inform the way he listens and leads, not as someone who has figured it all out but as a fellow traveler on the road towards wholeness.
Trent received is M.Div at Southern Seminary,
and His certification in trauma informed coaching through Freedom Movement.
Family
Trent and his wife Emily have been married for over 21 years. Together, they are raising their three children: Abby Grace, Isaac, and Eli.
Their life is grounded in the everyday work of faith, family, and learning to trust God in both clarity and uncertainty.
Why “Even Still”
Because faith doesn’t always move forward in straight lines.
Sometimes it feels like holding on.
Sometimes it feels like starting over.
Sometimes it feels like sitting in questions longer than you’d like.
And yet,
Even in the darkness,
The questions
The uncertainty,
Even still,
Hope remains.