Back to Home

My name is Denisse Medina Soto.

I was born in Ecuador on June 20, 1991, and I currently live in the beautiful city of Córdoba, Argentina. I am an evangelical Christian, and my faith is the foundation of everything I am and everything I do.

I dedicate myself to providing emotional and spiritual counseling, with a special focus on inner healing processes. I accompany women who have gone through difficult situations—whether emotional pain, confusion about their personal worth, or wounds from the past—helping them discover their true identity, restore their self-esteem, and above all, understand what God says about them. My mission is to be a channel of love, truth, and hope for those who feel they have lost their direction or their value.

I grew up in a dysfunctional home, in an environment marked by my parents’ separation, addictions, constant arguments, and deep emotional wounds. From a young age, I lived with my two brothers, my grandparents, my mother, and my stepfather, within a complicated family dynamic where no one knew God and pain felt like part of everyday life.

During my teenage years, I absorbed that reality and made it my own. I didn’t know any other way of living or relating. Everything began to change when I was 16 years old, after my mother attended an encounter with God that radically transformed her life. From that moment on, little by little, our entire family came to know Jesus. What once was chaos began to turn into a home where love, peace, and healing started to flourish. Addictions disappeared, and we began to rebuild our relationships from a new perspective: faith.

However, the journey was not free from pain. Years later, we went through one of the hardest moments as a family: the death of my older brother, Christian, at the age of 25. It was a devastating loss that left a deep wound. Yet even in that pain, we held on to God more firmly than ever, and we made the decision to live in order to serve and comfort others—bringing hope to those who also feel they can’t go on.


Academic and Ministerial Training


Mission, Calling, and Current Purpose