Tag: faithjourney

  • 🌿 The Power of Eve and Rediscovering God’s Original Design for “the Helper”

    For most of my life, I lived with what I now recognize as a Cinderella Complex—the belief that I was the helpless princess waiting for a handsome prince to rescue me. That mindset led me through a series of painful relationships, a disastrous marriage, and eventually a heartbreaking divorce. In an attempt to escape the pain of living near my ex-husband and the woman he left me for, I rushed into another marriage—this time to a Christian man—hoping he would be the one to finally make me whole. But in reality, it felt like I had jumped from the frying pan into the fire.

    In the midst of my confusion and heartache, I’ve had many honest conversations with God. I’ve told Him I don’t ever want to miss His will again. And through different confirmations, He’s shown me that He is interested in this marriage—that there are deep, precious lessons He wants to teach me through it, lessons that will ultimately bring glory to His name. The very first one He began to reveal was the true role of a wife.

    She wasn’t created as an assistant. She was created as an answer.

    Somewhere along the way, the word “helper” was watered down — turned into something quiet, background, optional. But in God’s eyes, the woman was never a backup plan. She was a divine solution.

    🌧 A World Half Covered

    Imagine a battlefield. A soldier stands alone, armor on, sword shaking in his hand. The enemy surrounds him. He’s called by God to stand, to lead — but every arrow coming at him is finding its mark. He wasn’t built to do this alone.

    Then someone steps onto the battlefield. Not behind him — beside him. Shield raised. Eyes sharp. Praying under her breath. Covering his back.

    This is ēzer.


    1. “Helper” — The Word That Describes God

    “I will make a helper suitable for him.” – Genesis 2:18

    The Hebrew word for helper is ʿēzer. And most of the time this word appears in the Bible, it’s referring to God Himself.

    • “The Lord is my help (ʿēzer) and my shield.” – Psalm 33:20
    • “God is our refuge and strength, a very present help (ʿēzer) in trouble.” – Psalm 46:1

    So when God said Eve would be Adam’s “helper”, He wasn’t talking about an assistant or a housekeeper.
    He was describing someone who would reflect His own nature — His strength, His support, His presence in the battle.

    Eve was created to:

    • Stand beside Adam as an equal and strong ally
    • Protect him in prayer and purpose
    • Strengthen him when he is weary
    • Carry God’s presence and wisdom into the home
    • War spiritually on his behalf, like God wars for us

    This is not a weak design. It is a warrior’s design.


    2. A Helper Who Covers — Not Controls

    Being an ēzer does not mean:

    • Controlling your husband
    • Criticizing him when he fails
    • Acting superior or self-righteous

    It means:

    • Praying when he is under attack
    • Encouraging when he feels inadequate
    • Speaking life when he hears only failure
    • Standing firm in faith when he can’t
    • Covering him — like God covers us

    Submission is not silence, and helping is not weakness.
    It’s choosing to fight — but fighting for him, not against him.


    3. Why Your Role Matters More Than You Know

    Men carry a weight from God — the call to lead, protect, provide, and carry responsibility. But God never intended for him to do it alone. Eve was the answer to “It is not good for man to be alone.”

    Without an ēzer:

    • His faith can grow tired
    • His vision can become blurred
    • His heart can grow isolated

    With an ēzer:

    • His faith is strengthened
    • His purpose is sharpened
    • His heart is covered in prayer

    Satan hates marriages like this — because a praying wife is dangerous.


    4. Scriptures to Stand On

    Here are key verses that reveal the power of a woman’s role:

    ScriptureWhat It Shows About a Wife’s Role
    Genesis 2:18God created her as an ēzer — a strong ally.
    Proverbs 31:12She brings her husband good, not harm, all her days.
    Proverbs 31:23Her husband is respected — because of her influence.
    1 Peter 3:7She is a co-heir of grace — equal before God.
    Ephesians 5:21–25Marriage is mutual submission and sacrificial love.
    Proverbs 31:25“She is clothed with strength and dignity.”

    5. A Prayer for Wives to Pray Over Their Husbands

    Lord, thank You for the gift of my husband.
    Thank You for calling me to be his ēzer — his God-given ally, intercessor, and encourager.
    Today, I stand in prayer over his life.
    Cover his heart with Your peace.
    Strengthen his mind with Your truth.
    Protect him from the lies of the enemy and the weight of this world.
    Give me wisdom to speak life and love, not criticism.
    Teach me to fight for him on my knees — not with my words.
    Let our marriage reflect Your heart: unity, honor, strength, and grace.
    In Jesus’ name, Amen.


    💛 Final Thought

    You were never called to be silent or small — you were called to be essential.
    To stand beside, not behind.
    To cover, not control.
    To help — with the strength of the One who helps you.

    This is the power of Eve. This is the calling of every woman who chooses to walk in God’s original design.

  • I Fall Forward because Mercy Triumphs

    There’s a verse in the book of James that says, “Mercy triumphs over judgment” (James 2:13). Every time I read it, I’m reminded of the incredible mercy Jesus showed to us — the mercy that changed everything. He didn’t just forgive our sins in a moment; He forgave them for all time. His sacrifice on the cross was the ultimate act of mercy — not only covering our past, but securing our future in His grace. Because of that mercy, even when I fall, I know His forgiveness is already waiting for me. It doesn’t push me away in shame; it pulls me closer. His mercy gives me the confidence to run to Him, not from Him.

    And that changes the way I see others too. If Jesus could show that kind of mercy toward me — complete, undeserved, and unconditional — how can I withhold mercy from someone else? It’s so easy to judge, to measure people by their mistakes or by what we think they deserve. But mercy reminds us that none of us stand where we do because we earned it. We are here because grace met us where judgment should have fallen.

    When Jesus walked this earth, He never turned away the broken, the outcast, or the sinner. Instead of condemning, He restored. Instead of shaming, He lifted up. His mercy was not passive — it was powerful. It transformed lives. Every act of compassion Jesus showed was a reflection of the Father’s heart: mercy triumphing over judgment.

    This verse also reminds me of another one: “Though the righteous fall seven times, they rise again” (Proverbs 24:16). That’s what grace looks like — not a license to fall, but the strength to rise. God’s grace doesn’t erase our humanity; it redeems it. It allows us to fall forward, not backward. Each stumble becomes an opportunity to encounter His mercy again.

    And the truth is, even those of us who boldly declare, “God is good,” have only tasted a fraction of that goodness. His mercy is deeper, His grace is wider, and His love is far greater than we can ever comprehend. His goodness doesn’t just meet us at our best moments — it meets us right in the middle of our mess.

    So today, let’s allow this truth to change how we see both God and others.
    If mercy triumphs over judgment in His heart, let it triumph in ours too.
    If His grace keeps lifting us every time we fall, then may we also be the kind of people who help others rise again.

    Because the more we understand His mercy, the less room there is for judgment.
    And the more we see His goodness, the more we realize — we’ve barely begun to grasp just how good He really is.

  • From Cancer to Complete Healing: A Miracle Only God Could Do

    Jesus healed me from colon cancer just eight months after my mom passed away from the same disease. When doctors discovered her cancer, the tumor was the size of a tennis ball. When they found mine, it was the size of a baby’s head—at least, that’s how the doctor described it.

    I had watched my mom fight a long, painful two-year battle. She was a strong believer and often said she was “believing for her healing.” Yet privately, she would confess to me that she wasn’t sure what she had done wrong for God to give her cancer.

    I told her, “Mom, God didn’t give you cancer.” But I also knew why her healing never came. She couldn’t bring herself to forgive—especially not my dad, who had hurt her deeply for years, nor certain family members she felt had wronged her. She had walked with the Lord for many years, but to her, forgiveness seemed too simple, almost unfair.

    I believe this struggle came from wrong teaching about the love of God, from well-meaning but misguided preachers who had unintentionally planted distorted ideas. Coupled with a lifetime of rejection, those wrong beliefs kept her from stepping into the freedom Jesus had already provided.

    I watched my mom fight desperately for her life, placing much of her hope in chemotherapy, even as her condition worsened and the cancer spread. To this day, I often say my mother didn’t die from cancer—she died from chemotherapy. I swore that if I ever got cancer, I would never go through it.

    But my mother was determined to live for us, her children. She worried constantly that my father—who was notoriously bad with money—might remarry and squander everything she had worked so hard to provide. I was desperate for her to live too, because she was the glue that held our family together.

    Growing up, our home life was often tense. My parents fought constantly—sometimes over the pressures of running the family business, but also because my father struggled with anger he couldn’t control.

    When my mom became ill, my husband, our 10-year-old daughter, and I lived upstairs in their large house, while my parents stayed downstairs. My father had asked me to “come home” and help him run the business that my mom had mostly carried on her own. At first, she wasn’t happy about it—she didn’t want me drawn into the stress of life with my dad. But later, she told me how grateful she was to have me there to help care for her.

    My father did what he could, but he was too entangled in his own demons and fears to ever make her the true priority she needed to be.

    Words can’t truly capture what it’s like to watch your own mother die an agonizing death. At the time, I was also struggling in my marriage, and just like my mom, I found myself consumed by negative thoughts. Fear, worry, and unforgiveness kept me awake at night, making it hard to pray with any real faith.

    When she finally took her last breath, I felt a wave of relief that her suffering was over. But almost instantly, I was overcome with guilt for feeling that way. My relationship with my father unraveled further after her death, as I carried bitterness toward him for the way he had treated her. Only later would I come to see that he, too, was battling unhealed wounds and demons that made it impossible for him to love her—or us—the way he wanted to. But at the time, all I could see was the pain.

    Exactly one week after her memorial service, I felt a strange, dull ache on the right side of my belly. I dismissed it as indigestion, something I had struggled with all my life. Over the next eight months, the ache would come and go, sometimes intensifying into pain, but never lasting long enough for me to think it was serious.

    Then came weeks of persistent diarrhea and rapid weight loss. Even then, I didn’t think much of it—even though these were the same signs my mother had ignored. I think I was in denial. Finally, I went to the doctor, assuming I had a bladder infection. She ran a urine test and then suggested a blood test “just to eliminate anything sinister.” I agreed, went on with my day, and didn’t even bother to pick up the bladder infection medication from the pharmacy.

    The next morning when I arrived at my office, the night watchman rushed to my car. He said the doctor had called several times, urgently trying to reach me. I had my cell phone switched off and was running late, still oblivious to the seriousness of it all. I called her immediately, and she answered on the first ring:
    “Carol, you need to drop everything and either call an ambulance or get someone to drive you to the hospital right now.”

    Tests revealed a massive tumor the size of a baby’s head lodged in my colon. Emergency surgery was the only option.

    That was the beginning of a line of miracles. The surgeons removed the tumor along with 31 centimeters of my colon. The first miracle: I didn’t need a colostomy bag.

    The surgery lasted several hours. I spent days in a high-care ward, fed through tubes, waiting for the biopsy results. The waiting was unbearable. Finally, my surgeon came to see me. I woke up to his kind face leaning over me, his hand gently holding mine. Knowing how recently I had lost my mother, he had tears in his eyes when he told me the tumor was cancerous. He tried to encourage me, but all I could hear were the words: “You have cancer.” They echoed endlessly in my mind.

    The next miracle came in the form of a beautiful Christian nurse. As soon as the doctor left, she came and prayed with me, speaking healing scriptures over me. Fear and torment still plagued me, especially at night. Thoughts swirled: Who will take care of my little girl if I die? How will she cope? Will I suffer the same way my mom did? Sleep became impossible. Eventually, the doctor prescribed sleeping tablets, which helped, but deep down I wished I had been stronger at taking every thought captive to the truth—that by His stripes I was already healed, and I didn’t need to fear.

    Still, God knew what I needed. That nurse was His gift to me, a messenger of His presence. And when I was moved to the general ward, He surrounded me with even more encouragement. Friends and members of my church family came daily to pray, to lift me up, and to remind me of God’s promises.

    A week after I returned home, I had an appointment with the oncologist to discuss treatment. Now I was the one with cancer, and though I had always sworn I would never undergo chemotherapy, without the revelation yet that my healing was already complete, I considered it. All I could think about was my little girl, only ten years old. I was determined to fight for her sake.

    But then came the miracle that changed everything. The oncologist looked at me and said they had removed every bit of cancer from my body with the surgery. I was cancer-free.

    It took hours for the reality to sink in. Me? Cancer-free? It was a miracle I hadn’t even dared to hope for. God, in His mercy and grace—despite my doubts, fears, and unbelief—had completely healed me.

    And I can tell you today: God is still in the miracle-working business. You just have to believe Him and His Word. He is faithful. He is true to it.

  • 101 Disastrous Dates in America: The Grand Finale (Endgame of Embarrassment)

    If Jackie was disappointed in my failure to snag Larry as my dream husband, she didn’t let on. Instead, she shifted gears with military precision, employing a new tactic: advertising me like some foreign exchange prize cow to every tall, available student in her class.

    Shockingly, this actually worked. She managed to wrangle one chap into agreeing to a double date with her and her husband — which, to be fair, was probably just as much about her escaping diapers and textbooks for a night of fun as it was about helping me find everlasting love.

    We met at some pub in the Tampa Bay area. The moment I was introduced to Nameless Guy, I caught a flicker of disappointment in his eyes — the kind you see when someone realizes their “mystery blind date” is less Scarlett Johansson and more awkward South African import with a dodgy perm. To make matters worse, he was clearly a few years younger than me. Good-looking, yes — but in that way late-twenties men are when they still have a wide selection of hot blondes queuing up at their feet.

    I spent the evening sinking further and further into my wine glass, feeling like this was yet another lost opportunity in the ever-growing graveyard of my love life. Jackie didn’t bother pushing the match any further — his body language was practically screaming, “Abort mission!”

    A few weeks later, Jackie’s husband came home with a new “opportunity”: apparently, one of the officers at the local penitentiary where he worked was interested in taking me out. That’s right. I had now officially reached the level of being pimped out to random corrections officers. My romantic prospects were no longer dazzling or exotic — they were, quite literally, prison-adjacent.

    At this point, I began to wonder if I should just take holy orders and become a nun.

    Of course, I couldn’t refuse, and this time Jackie had clearly abandoned any hope of transforming me into a siren. “Officer Fino” arrived around 5:30. It was still hot as hell—easily in the 100s—and I’m pretty sure you could hear my heart tumble down the stairs when we stood watching him step out of the car.

    He was a large man with a round, tomato-red face, topped with what looked like a fiery orange Brillo pad trimmed into a military buzz cut. Jackie’s husband was grinning at me—not mocking, not teasing, just wearing the earnest look of a Labrador proudly delivering a dead pigeon to your feet. Meanwhile, Officer Fino’s car appeared to be held together with duct tape, prayer, and possibly a misplaced dream.

    So out I went, teetering in my lead-lined shoes, to meet Officer Fino in the driveway, already composing the letter I’d write to myself later: Dear Diary, never trust a man whose vehicle looks like it moonlights as a science experiment.

    Out I went, dragging my concrete shoes across the driveway like a prisoner on death row. Officer Fino extended a damp-looking hand, which I shook with all the enthusiasm of a woman about to be marched into a swamp. Up close, his face was even redder, as though he’d been slow-roasted under the Texas sun for the past decade, and the orange buzz-cut gave him the air of a traffic cone brought to life.

    He grinned, revealing a set of teeth that suggested a long and meaningful relationship with Mountain Dew, and launched straight into small talk about how “it ain’t usually this hot this time of year.” I tried to laugh politely, but it came out as more of a strangled gasp, like someone who’s just been stabbed in the back but doesn’t want to make a fuss.

    Behind me, I could hear Jackie’s husband cheering me on silently with his face pressed against the window, like a proud parent watching a toddler’s first school play.

    So there I was, in 100 degrees, nodding along to a man who looked like he could double as a road hazard sign, trying to convince myself that this was all perfectly normal.

    He drove me to a diner that looked like it had been constructed out of spare parts from a swamp boat. The kind of place where mosquitoes pay rent and the neon sign flickers just enough to remind you that electricity is optional.

    Inside, it was clear they hadn’t spent a single dime on décor—unless you count the framed photo of an alligator wrestling competition as “art.” The menu was basically a love letter to fried things. Definitely no kale smoothies or artisan salads here. In fact, if you’d even whispered the word “salad,” I’m fairly sure someone would have thrown hushpuppies at you.

    Naturally, wine was not on offer. I was forced into beer, which I despise, and did my best to sip it without gagging. (Honestly, beer tastes to me like someone rinsed a loaf of bread and strained it through a gym sock, but apparently everyone here thinks it’s nectar of the gods.)

    My date, bless him, was a perfectly pleasant fellow, but as he launched into tales of his upbringing in some rednecked part of the country, I found myself smiling and nodding while not understanding half of what he was saying. His drawl was so thick it was practically another language. I caught “huntin’,” “catfishin’,” and possibly “grandma’s possum stew,” but the rest was lost in translation.

    Officer Fino drank quite a lot of beer. To the point where I began nervously calculating the odds of survival on the drive home (and let’s just say, they weren’t in my favor). His car, held together by duct tape and blind faith, meant I wouldn’t be able to drive it myself, even if I dared.

    When he suggested a walk down to the river, I thought it might be a good way to let him sober up—plus, bonus points, fresh air. Unfortunately, “fresh air” in Florida at night is like stepping into a sauna someone forgot to switch off.

    We reached the river’s edge and, to my amazement, there were actual manatees floating about—like giant gray marshmallows drifting dreamily in the water. Magical, really.

    But the magic ended abruptly when my skin suddenly burst into flames. Well, not literal flames, but close. Every exposed inch felt like it was being set upon by invisible needles. He casually informed me it was the “no-see-ums.” Apparently, that’s local slang for “demonic sand-sized vampires with wings.” They may be tiny, but their bite lingers for weeks. Weeks!

    So there I stood: watching gentle sea cows glide by in twilight serenity while simultaneously being eaten alive. Florida romance, ladies and gentlemen.

    Needless to say, poor Jackie’s husband had to invent some diplomatic excuse for why I wouldn’t be meeting Officer Fino again. At this point, I was starting to feel like a full-time burden on both my cousins. I could almost see them silently coming to terms with why I was still single.

    But there was one last matchmaking attempt left in them. Jackie’s husband had a single cousin—Chris—who, conveniently, was “just dropping by for a visit.” I wasn’t sure if my presence was the actual reason Chris suddenly appeared, but Jackie and her husband had done a dazzling job of selling him to me. He was wealthy, he was good-looking, and that was more than enough for me to perk up.

    By the time the day rolled around, I’d put on something short and cheeky, fully reverting to my old “strategy” of distraction—which is really just attraction in a mini-skirt. At that point, I was convinced my only hope of winning someone over was with my legs, because I had zero confidence in my face or my personality.

    He walked in and, inside, I was practically breakdancing with joy—if breakdancing were something one did silently while holding a wine glass. He was exactly what I’d pictured in an American husband: polite, charming, and oozing that “boy-next-door who could also fix your car” energy. We started with small talk, graduated to dinner, and then—because apparently I was auditioning for the role of “all-American beer girl”—I gamely swigged lager as though I hadn’t once choked on a shandy in 1985. Music got louder, voices followed, and before long we were belting out songs in the key of “slightly drunk enthusiasm.”

    He was cool with me at first, which sent my insecurities into overdrive. But as the bottles emptied, his attention warmed. Of course, I couldn’t help wondering if I was truly irresistible… or just a blurry figure being magically upgraded by hops and barley. Regardless, the night ended with me shamefully sneaking into the guest room reserved for him.

    By morning, the spell had well and truly snapped. The man who had been all smiles and choruses hours before was suddenly operating at witness-protection-level avoidance. He packed up, muttered a few perfunctory words, and left me standing there with the grim realisation that my fragile self-esteem had just been punted headfirst into the nearest toilet bowl.

    By this stage, I’d been in America for just over seven months, and honestly, the whole thing had turned into less “romantic adventure” and more “one long episode of me versus my own terrible decisions”. I was so pathetically unhappy that I sat down and wrote an Oscar-worthy tragedy of a letter to my parents, apologising for being a terrible child since birth. (Think: me, aged six, sulking through piano lessons = obvious proof I was destined for ruin.)

    Naturally, my parents were horrified. Within days, the phone rang and their message was clear: “Sweetheart, put an end to this doomed husband-hunting expedition and come home immediately.” Which I did—packing my bags at record-breaking speed, like some sort of defeated contestant being voted off Love Island.

    One week later, I was back in South Africa, mission failed, spirit crushed, ego resembling roadkill. My grand dream of finding an American husband had dissolved entirely, leaving me with nothing but a jet lag hangover, a stack of embarrassing diary entries, and the sinking suspicion that I was destined to be the cautionary tale at future family dinners.

    –o0o–

    For those of you who’ve read these stories, you might think I was being really unfair to the men who tried, in their own way, to date me. And you’d be right. I was unkind—not just to them, but most of all to myself.

    That’s how I ended up in the ridiculous position of leaving behind my entire life in South Africa to come to America in search of a husband. Who does that? Someone who doesn’t believe they are enough on their own. Someone who is so desperate for love outside of themselves that they forget it has to start within.

    The truth is, there was never much hope of me seeing the good in anyone else when I couldn’t recognize the good in myself. When you judge others only on appearance, while ignoring the depth of their character, it’s not really about them—it’s about the mirror you’re holding up to your own self-loathing.

    The bottom line is that I had been living outside of the Kingdom of God for so long that my entire identity was rooted in the world’s standards. Success, appearance, relationships—these were the things I believed defined my worth. So when I first arrived at Jennifer’s and started going back to church, it felt torturous. My perspective of God the Father was so twisted that I couldn’t grasp His love.

    I was the proverbial prodigal child, but the truth is, I wasn’t even at the pig pen yet—I was still making my way there. And for years, that’s exactly where I lived: in the pig pen of self-loathing, striving, and broken choices. You’ll read more about that in the chapters to come.

    This is the real reason my search for a husband in America was such a complete failure. I wasn’t ready, because I hadn’t yet returned to the only One who could restore my heart. My Heavenly Father wasn’t just waiting for me to come home—He was the home I had been searching for all along.

  • A Woman After God’s Own Heart

    I’ve been trying—for what feels like the hundredth time—to follow a Bible reading plan that takes you through the entire Bible in a year. I’ve started this project before, full of enthusiasm and good intentions, only to lose steam a few weeks or months in. I would fall behind a few days, feel guilty, and then quietly give up when the distance between me and the plan felt too wide to close.

    But this year has felt different.

    I’ve given myself grace for the days I fall behind and have remained determined to keep going. I’ve stopped reading just to check a box and started reading to listen. Each day I ask, “God, what do You want me to see in this?” And what I’ve found is that when I lean in—even when I’m tired or distracted—He speaks.

    Lately, He’s been speaking through the story of David.

    For most of my life, I saw David as one of the Bible’s heroes. The boy who slayed Goliath. The worshipper. The king. The man after God’s own heart. I’d heard about his affair with Bathsheba, and I assumed that was his one dark moment—his single failure.

    But as I read through 1 and 2 Samuel, I was stunned.

    Not only did David commit adultery, but even after being forgiven and restored, he went on to disobey God repeatedly. He made choices that led to pain, destruction, and death. And yet—God still loved him. God still used him. God still called him His own.

    David’s Repeated Disobedience

    InfractionScripture ReferenceWhat Happened
    Polygamy2 Samuel 5:13David took many wives and concubines—against God’s design for marriage.
    Adultery with Bathsheba2 Samuel 11David saw a woman bathing, took her, and got her pregnant—knowing she was another man’s wife.
    Murder of Uriah2 Samuel 11To cover up the pregnancy, he arranged for Bathsheba’s husband to be killed in battle.
    Parental Negligence2 Samuel 13–18He failed to confront his son Amnon for raping Tamar, leading to Absalom’s revenge and rebellion.
    A Prideful Census2 Samuel 24David ordered a military census in pride and self-reliance. God responded with a deadly plague.
    Trusting in Enemies1 Samuel 27Out of fear, he sought safety with the Philistines and even offered to fight for them.

    As I read these stories—these painful, messy, complicated accounts—I heard the Lord whisper something that shifted everything in my spirit—it was as if a veil had been lifted, and suddenly I saw His heart more clearly.

    “I knew everything David would do—and I still chose him. I still loved him. I still delighted in him.”

    And in that moment, I felt His presence wash over me.
    “I knew everything you would do,” He said, “and I still chose you. I loved you then and I love you now. I took delight in you then, and I delight in you now. You are a woman after My own heart.”

    I’ve carried shame for years—for decisions I made, for paths I took, for times I knew better and still chose wrong. But God isn’t looking for perfection. He’s looking for a heart that turns back to Him, again and again. David was deeply flawed—but he was also deeply surrendered. He repented. He worshipped. He trusted. And God, in His mercy, stayed close.

    If you’ve ever found the Bible boring or irrelevant, maybe it’s because you’ve been skimming the surface. But underneath the words is the heartbeat of a God who sees you fully, loves you deeply, and delights in speaking to you through every page.

    You won’t just find history in these stories—you’ll find hope.

    And perhaps, like me, you’ll begin to believe that you too…
    are someone after God’s own heart.