What do difficult days, disability and donkeys have in common? They’re all pathways to finding Jesus, according to Jill and Paul Miller.
What do difficult days, disability and donkeys have in common? They’re all pathways to finding Jesus, according to Jill and Paul Miller.
Relationships on planet Earth: They’re inevitably linked to hurt. Author Heather MacFadyen believes there’s a deep humility in choosing to occupy our sacred spaces of pain—to the glory of God. Show Notes and Resources Find out more about Heather McFayde…
We share “storm stories” of other believers, and how they walked through their own storms with hope in Christ alone.
Ann Voskamp talks about the thrill of “giving it forward.” Whether it’s through a smile, a financial blessing, or a cup of cold water, we can always find ways to be the hands and feet of Jesus.
Dena Yohe, Dennis Rainey, and Rebecca and Jake Mutz talk about their moments of profound grief, and how it infiltrated their faith and caused it to grow.
Every marriage has a crisis year. For Dennis and Barbara Rainey, that year was 1976. Hear a story of trial and triumph as Dennis Rainey details how God took him through the valley of suffering.
In the midst of deepest suffering, where is God and why doesn’t He deliver us and answer our prayers?
Jerry Sittser talks about the years after the accident when he focused on raising his children as a single dad.
As we live our lives, we are writing a story. The best stories include challenges and adversities.
If suffering is so integral to human sanctification, why do we, as humans fear and avoid it?
John and Donna Bishop recount God’s goodness even after John’s memory was erased.
John Bishop’s memory loss couldn’t change the way he and his wife, Donna, love.
John Bishop’s memory was erased by illness. Hear about his courageous journey back!
When the tragedy of losing a child strikes your family, the pain and the desire to place blame can often overwhelm a marriage.
When Steven Curtis and Mary Beth Chapman adopted a second Chinese orphan, they had no idea of the journey on which they were about to embark.