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Introduction by Billy Graham
My friends, grief is one of the deepest valleys we will ever walk through. When death takes someone we love, words often feel hollow and questions rise in our hearts. Why now, Lord? Why them? Why me?
But let me remind you today: death was never God’s original plan. The Bible tells us that death is the last enemy, and yet in Jesus Christ, that enemy has been defeated. He Himself said, ‘I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in Me will live, even though he dies.’
So as we gather our thoughts on sorrow and loss, let us not despair. Yes, we grieve. Tears are holy — even Jesus wept at the tomb of His friend. But we do not grieve without hope. Because of Christ’s death and resurrection, we know that for every believer, death is not a period — it is only a comma. The story goes on. And one day, we shall be reunited in His presence forever.
(Note: This is an imaginary conversation, a creative exploration of an idea, and not a real speech or event)

Topic 1: The Mystery of God’s Timing

Moderator: John Piper
Participants: David Jeremiah, Kay Warren, Philip Yancey, Elisabeth Elliot, H. Norman Wright
John Piper
When someone we love is taken too soon, or lingers in suffering for longer than we can bear, we naturally ask: Why this timing, Lord? We know God is sovereign, but His timing often feels unbearable. How do we reconcile this mystery with our faith?
David Jeremiah
When I think of God’s timing, I’m drawn to Ecclesiastes: “He has made everything beautiful in its time.” But beauty isn’t always visible in the moment. I’ve buried dear friends, prayed for healing that didn’t come, and still had to preach hope on Sunday morning. What I’ve learned is this: God’s timing is never arbitrary. We may not see the tapestry, but the threads are there. Our challenge is to trust that what feels like delay or tragedy to us is never wasted in His eternal plan.
Kay Warren
When my son Matthew died, people told me, “God must have needed another angel.” That wasn’t comforting — it was actually hurtful. I had to come to grips with a harder truth: sometimes I won’t know why. The mystery isn’t meant to be solved but surrendered. For me, surrender looks like leaning into God’s presence instead of demanding His reasons. His timing broke me, but it also drew me closer. Even in unanswered questions, His love is constant.
Elisabeth Elliot
I lost Jim, my first husband, when he was only twenty-eight. His death seemed untimely to all of us. Yet I came to believe that God’s will is not something I must understand; it is something I must trust. His timing is part of His will. Faith is not about clarity of answers, but clarity of obedience. Even in the silence, even in the darkness, God is still God. That assurance carried me when reason failed.
Philip Yancey
I’ve always wrestled with the apparent randomness of life. Some people are spared, others aren’t. I once wrote that faith means believing in advance what will only make sense in reverse. Timing is part of that. The gospel doesn’t promise us explanations, but it does promise presence. Jesus wept at a tomb — He didn’t explain death away, He entered into it with us. That, to me, is the deepest answer to the mystery.
H. Norman Wright
As a counselor, I’ve sat with hundreds who’ve lost children, spouses, siblings. Most don’t want explanations; they want permission to grieve. God’s timing can feel cruel. But grief itself can be holy ground. I encourage people to allow themselves to lament, to feel anger and sadness without shame. Over time, many discover that God’s timing, while incomprehensible, has woven their pain into deeper compassion for others. That doesn’t erase the mystery — but it does redeem it.
John Piper
You’ve spoken of trust, surrender, obedience, presence, and grief itself as holy. But let me ask another pressing question: when God’s timing feels cruel, how do we keep from resenting Him?
Kay Warren
Resentment was very real for me. I wanted to turn away. What stopped me was choosing, over and over, to believe that God is good even when life is not. I gave Him my anger. Strangely, He didn’t condemn me for it — He held me. That honesty became a bridge back to Him.
Philip Yancey
I think of Job. He asked hard, even accusatory questions. God didn’t give him neat answers, but God did meet him. Sometimes resentment is just love that has nowhere to go. Bringing it to God, instead of burying it, keeps the relationship alive.
David Jeremiah
The psalmists cried out, “How long, O Lord?” Resentment fades when we realize those cries themselves are acts of faith. They show we’re still turning to God. The worst thing isn’t shouting at God; it’s silence, shutting Him out.
Elisabeth Elliot
Resentment must be surrendered as well. We cannot hold onto both faith and bitterness. God does not owe us explanations; He offers Himself. And in that offering, bitterness can be transformed into trust — though it may take years.
H. Norman Wright
From a counseling perspective, resentment is normal. It’s part of grief. But it shouldn’t be the final word. Processing it with God, in prayer, in community, in journaling, allows the heart to move toward healing. God is patient with our resentment.
John Piper
Thank you. One last question: if God’s timing is mysterious and often painful, what practical ways can we help someone live through it day by day?
David Jeremiah
Immerse them in Scripture. The promises of God are an anchor when the waves of grief threaten to overwhelm.
H. Norman Wright
Encourage them to tell their story. Grief unspoken grows heavier. Grief shared begins to heal.
Elisabeth Elliot
Remind them of obedience in small things. Sometimes all one can do is rise, pray, and take the next step. That, too, is faith.
Kay Warren
Presence matters most. Don’t try to fix their grief. Just sit with them, hold their hand, let them know they are not alone.
Philip Yancey
And offer hope, but not in clichés. Hope that acknowledges pain yet points forward — to the resurrection, to the day when timing will no longer wound us.
John Piper
So we end where we began: God’s timing is a mystery, but not an accident. We may never unravel it, but in trust, lament, community, and hope, we live forward in faith until the day all timing finds its fullness in Christ.
Topic 2: Hope of Eternal Reunion

Moderator: Billy Graham (legacy voice)
Participants: Dr. Gary Habermas, Max Lucado, Anne Graham Lotz, N.T. Wright, David Jeremiah
Billy Graham
When we lose a loved one, grief can feel like an endless night. But the Bible gives us a radiant promise: death is not the end. The question before us is this — how does the hope of eternal reunion transform the way we grieve?
Max Lucado
I often remind people that grief is the price of love. But in Christ, it’s not a permanent debt — it’s a temporary loan. The empty tomb means the graves of our loved ones are not permanent addresses. We grieve, yes, but as Paul said, “not as those who have no hope.” That hope changes tears from despair into anticipation.
Anne Graham Lotz
For me, heaven isn’t a vague idea. It’s real, and it’s near. Revelation says God will wipe every tear from our eyes. That means He takes our grief personally. When I think about reunion, I picture not only seeing loved ones again but standing together before Jesus. That vision lifts the weight of sorrow, because our relationships don’t end — they’re redeemed.
Dr. Gary Habermas
As a historian, I ground my hope in the resurrection. The evidence for Christ’s rising is overwhelming, and that anchors every promise about eternal life. If Jesus rose, then our loved ones who died in Him will rise too. That’s not wishful thinking; it’s history with eternal implications. Grief can devastate, but the resurrection gives it a horizon — a day when reunion is certain.
N.T. Wright
Too often we reduce heaven to floating clouds or vague comfort. Scripture paints a more robust picture: resurrection into a renewed creation. The hope of reunion is not an escape from this world, but the transformation of it. Our loved ones are not lost; they await resurrection, as we do, to share in God’s new heavens and new earth. That vision restores meaning to our mourning.
David Jeremiah
When I preach funerals, I remind families that heaven is not the absence of life but the fullness of it. The reunion is not a faint echo of our memories, but a glorious reality where we’ll recognize one another, whole and complete in Christ. That assurance turns gravesides into gateways.
Billy Graham
You speak of anticipation, recognition, and resurrection. Yet many in grief ask: How can I really be sure my loved one is with the Lord?
Anne Graham Lotz
I’ve faced that question myself. Scripture gives us assurance: “To be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord” for those who belong to Christ. Salvation isn’t earned by being good; it’s received by trusting Jesus. That promise steadies my heart when doubts creep in.
Dr. Gary Habermas
Assurance comes through both faith and reason. We can be confident because of Christ’s resurrection, but we also cling by faith to His promise. I tell people, if your loved one trusted in Christ, you can rest in that. It’s not about feelings; it’s about God’s word.
Max Lucado
And God is too kind to let us wonder forever. He gives glimpses — through Scripture, through peace in prayer, sometimes through stories that echo eternity. He knows our hearts need assurance, and He supplies it.
David Jeremiah
Our hope is not vague. It’s grounded in God’s character. He is faithful. If He says eternal life is ours through Christ, then we can believe with certainty that our loved ones are safe in His hands.
N.T. Wright
Assurance isn’t just about where our loved ones are now, but where we all are headed. That larger story of God’s kingdom reframes the question. The hope of eternal reunion is not sentimental comfort, but participation in God’s ultimate renewal.
Billy Graham
One last question: if we believe in this eternal reunion, how should it shape the way we live now in our grief?
Dr. Gary Habermas
It should free us from despair. Grief is real, but it is temporary. Knowing we will see our loved ones again allows us to walk through sorrow with resilience.
Max Lucado
It calls us to love more deeply here and now. If heaven is reunion, let’s practice it by cherishing one another today.
N.T. Wright
It should fuel our mission. Hope is never meant to be hoarded. We carry the message of resurrection to a grieving world that desperately needs it.
Anne Graham Lotz
It teaches us urgency. Life is short, eternity is long. Let’s live in such a way that when we see our loved ones again, we’ll stand together unashamed before Christ.
David Jeremiah
It inspires perseverance. This world is not all there is. Grief will not have the last word — God will. Until then, we live by faith, pressing on with the hope that sustains us.
Billy Graham
So we close with this: eternal reunion is not a dream, but a promise. Grief endures for a night, but joy comes in the morning — and that morning is forever.
Topic 3: The Role of Lament and Honest Prayer

Moderator: Nancy Guthrie
Participants: Sheila Walsh, C.S. Lewis (legacy voice), Mark Vroegop, Michael Card, H. Norman Wright
Nancy Guthrie
Grief presses us to ask: Is it faithful to question God, to cry out in anger or despair? The Bible gives us the Psalms of lament, yet many Christians feel guilty for not being “strong enough.” How do we rediscover lament as a faithful form of prayer?
Sheila Walsh
For years I thought lament was weakness. But then my life fell apart, and I couldn’t hold the mask anymore. I cried out to God with questions that scared me. Instead of judgment, I found His embrace. Lament is honesty, and honesty is the language of trust. God doesn’t want polished prayers — He wants our whole hearts, even when they’re broken.
C.S. Lewis
When Joy, my wife, died, my prayers became groans. I raged, I doubted, I accused God of being absent. Yet in A Grief Observed, I discovered that my very complaints were evidence of relationship. You don’t rail against silence unless you believe Someone is there to hear you. Lament is not the opposite of faith — it is faith under strain, refusing to be silent.
Mark Vroegop
The church has lost the language of lament, but the Bible has not. Over a third of the Psalms are laments. They give us permission to say: “How long, O Lord?” without apology. Lament is a bridge between pain and promise. It teaches us that it’s possible to weep and worship at the same time.
Michael Card
As a songwriter, I’ve spent my life trying to put pain into words. Lament is not about self-pity, it’s about covenant. God invites us to bring Him our sorrows because He has bound Himself to us in love. When we lament, we join Jesus, who Himself cried, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” There is no more faithful prayer than echoing His.
H. Norman Wright
In counseling, I’ve seen people freed when they realize lament is biblical. Grief bottled up turns toxic. Grief expressed becomes healing. I encourage people to journal their laments, to pray their anger out loud, to cry the tears they’re holding back. God is big enough to carry it all.
Nancy Guthrie
You’ve shown that lament is faithful, not shameful. But many Christians wonder: How do I begin when words fail?
C.S. Lewis
Sometimes all one can manage is silence. But even silence can be prayer if it is offered Godward. The Psalms lend us words when we have none. They were my companions when I could not form prayers of my own.
Sheila Walsh
I often encourage people to start simply: “God, I don’t understand. Help me.” That’s enough. Prayer doesn’t have to be eloquent; it just has to be honest.
Mark Vroegop
Exactly. Lament follows a pattern: turn to God, bring your complaint, ask boldly, choose to trust. When words fail, that pattern can guide us, just as the Psalms do.
Michael Card
And music helps. When words feel impossible, a hymn, a simple chorus, or even just groaning with a melody can become lament. God receives the heart, not just the grammar.
H. Norman Wright
For some, starting means writing a letter to God. “Dear God, here’s what I feel.” That act of naming the pain in His presence begins the process of healing.
Nancy Guthrie
One final question: What fruit can come from lament? Does it simply leave us in sorrow, or can it transform us?
Michael Card
Lament transforms because it keeps us in relationship. It may not change the circumstances, but it reshapes our hearts to cling to God even in the dark.
Sheila Walsh
It also connects us with others. When I lament openly, others feel permission to share their grief. Community deepens when we are real about our pain.
Mark Vroegop
Lament grows trust. Each time we bring our complaint and still end with “Yet I will trust You,” our roots sink deeper. Lament is rehearsal for hope.
C.S. Lewis
And it purifies love. We discover whether we love God only for His gifts, or for Himself. In lament, stripped of comforts, we learn to love Him still.
H. Norman Wright
The fruit is freedom. People who lament honestly tend to heal more fully. They emerge with compassion, able to sit with others in sorrow without fear.
Nancy Guthrie
So lament is not the end of faith, but a way of holding on when faith trembles. It teaches us to weep, to trust, and to hope — all at once.
Topic 4: Community and Carrying One Another’s Burdens

Moderator: Rick Warren
Participants: H. Norman Wright, Granger Smith, Joni Eareckson Tada, Beth Moore, David Jeremiah
Rick Warren
When someone loses a loved one, the pain can feel isolating. Yet Scripture tells us to “bear one another’s burdens.” My question to you is this: Why is community so essential in grief, and what happens when we try to carry sorrow alone?
Joni Eareckson Tada
I’ve lived with suffering for decades through quadriplegia, and what sustains me is the Body of Christ. Alone, pain can crush you. But when friends pray with me, sing with me, or just sit beside me, my burden is lighter. God designed us to need one another — He never intended grief to be endured in isolation.
H. Norman Wright
As a counselor, I’ve seen the difference community makes. Those who isolate often spiral into complicated grief. Those who open up, even just a little, heal more steadily. Grief needs witnesses — people who will listen without judgment, who will weep with those who weep. That presence is itself healing.
Granger Smith
When my son died, I thought I had to be strong, especially as a father. But the night I stood in church surrounded by people singing worship over me, I realized strength is found in surrender — and in letting others hold you up. Community became God’s hands and feet for me. Without it, I would’ve drowned in silence.
Beth Moore
Grief is one of the enemy’s favorite tools to isolate us. He whispers, “No one understands. Stay alone.” But the Spirit draws us toward fellowship. In community, God often speaks through others’ kindness, words, even their tears. Community doesn’t erase pain, but it prevents despair from taking root.
David Jeremiah
The church is meant to be a family. In Acts, believers shared everything — including their sorrows. When we carry grief together, we embody Christ’s love. Without community, grief becomes a weight too heavy. With community, grief becomes a testimony of God’s sustaining grace.
Rick Warren
You’ve shown how vital community is. But let me ask this: What should community actually do? How can we serve the grieving without causing harm?
H. Norman Wright
The first rule is: don’t fix. Grieving people don’t need clichés or quick solutions. They need presence. A hand on the shoulder, a listening ear, a willingness to sit in silence. That’s enough.
Beth Moore
Yes, and sensitivity matters. Instead of saying, “I know how you feel,” say, “I’m here for you.” We honor people’s pain when we don’t minimize it or compare it. Grief is sacred ground — walk gently.
Granger Smith
Practical help speaks loudly too. Bring meals, mow lawns, help with kids. When I couldn’t even think straight, my community showed up in tangible ways. That was love in action.
Joni Eareckson Tada
And don’t underestimate prayer. Praying aloud with the grieving, lifting their pain to God, reminds them that heaven is leaning in. Prayer turns community from sympathy into spiritual strength.
David Jeremiah
Community should also remind the grieving of hope. Not with shallow words, but with the promises of Scripture, shared gently. We carry burdens best when we carry both the sorrow and the hope together.
Rick Warren
Thank you. One last question: How does carrying one another’s burdens transform not only the grieving, but the community itself?
Granger Smith
For me, grief drew my community closer. People I barely knew became family. When you walk with someone in their darkest valley, bonds are forged that nothing can break.
Joni Eareckson Tada
Serving the grieving enlarges our hearts. It makes us more like Christ, who bore our sorrows. Communities that share grief become radiant testimonies of God’s compassion.
Beth Moore
I believe it deepens authenticity. When churches carry grief together, masks come off. People realize faith isn’t about pretending everything’s fine, but about clinging to Jesus in the storm — together.
H. Norman Wright
Communities that learn to grieve together are healthier overall. They become safe places for vulnerability, which makes them more resilient when future losses come.
David Jeremiah
And ultimately, it glorifies God. A community carrying one another’s burdens reflects Christ Himself. It becomes a living parable of His love for the world.
Rick Warren
So we see: grief is never meant to be borne alone. In carrying each other’s burdens, we discover both healing and holiness — a foretaste of the eternal fellowship to come.
Topic 5: Transforming Pain into Purpose

Moderator: Levi Lusko
Participants: Lysa TerKeurst, Nick Vujicic, Christine Caine, Sheila Walsh, Max Lucado
Levi Lusko
When loss leaves us broken, the question arises: Can this pain serve a purpose beyond itself? I’ve seen God use the death of my daughter to open doors for ministry, but it’s a long, costly road. How have you seen pain transformed into purpose?
Lysa TerKeurst
After my marriage struggles and health battles, I didn’t want my pain to be my platform. But I found that God often entrusts us with sorrow so we can serve others. Sharing my story of heartbreak has allowed me to stand beside thousands walking through theirs. Pain becomes purpose when we surrender it, not when we try to control it.
Nick Vujicic
I was born without arms and legs. For years I begged God for a miracle. The miracle didn’t come the way I expected. Instead, He gave me purpose. My greatest limitation became the very thing He uses to reach millions. Pain isn’t wasted when we give it back to Him — it becomes a megaphone of hope.
Christine Caine
I think of Joseph, who said to his brothers, “You meant it for evil, but God meant it for good.” That doesn’t minimize the suffering; it magnifies God’s redemption. My own abuse could have destroyed me, but by God’s grace, it propelled me to fight trafficking through A21. Pain becomes purpose when it fuels us to bring freedom to others.
Sheila Walsh
I’ve battled depression and deep loss. For years I hid it, thinking it disqualified me. But when I began speaking honestly, women told me, “Your story saved me.” That’s when I realized: God doesn’t waste wounds. Our scars can become signposts of His faithfulness.
Max Lucado
The cross itself is the ultimate picture of pain turned into purpose. Humanity’s darkest day became salvation’s brightest dawn. When I walk with grieving families, I remind them: if God can redeem the cross, He can redeem your loss. It may not happen quickly, but His story is always larger than ours.
Levi Lusko
You’ve all shown how God can use sorrow for good. But here’s a hard question: How do we prevent pain from becoming bitterness instead of purpose?
Christine Caine
Bitterness grows when pain turns inward. Purpose grows when we turn it outward — toward God and toward serving others. The key is where we direct our wounds.
Sheila Walsh
Exactly. I had to choose whether to let depression isolate me or to let God use it to connect me with others. Bitterness isolates; purpose connects. That choice comes daily.
Lysa TerKeurst
Bitterness is often rooted in trying to make sense of what may never make sense. Purpose doesn’t require answers; it requires surrender. I’ve learned to release the “why” and cling to the “Who.”
Max Lucado
Forgiveness is essential too. If we cling to resentment — against others, against God, even against ourselves — purpose cannot grow. Forgiveness tills the soil for purpose to take root.
Nick Vujicic
Bitterness tells us we are victims forever. Purpose reminds us we are victors in Christ. The shift happens when we say, “This will not define me. God will.”
Levi Lusko
Thank you. One last question: What practical steps can someone take to begin turning their grief into a God-given purpose?
Nick Vujicic
Start by sharing your story. Even if it’s messy, even if it’s just with one person. Your story can be the key to someone else’s prison.
Sheila Walsh
Find a safe community. Healing often begins when someone else says, “Me too.” Purpose often emerges from shared pain.
Lysa TerKeurst
Ask God to show you one small way your suffering can serve someone today. Don’t think grand scale. Start with faithfulness in the little things.
Christine Caine
Look for the need that resonates with your wound. Often God calls us to fight the very darkness we once endured.
Max Lucado
And keep your eyes on eternity. Even if you don’t see the full purpose now, remember that nothing given to God — not even your tears — is wasted.
Levi Lusko
So we close this journey with hope: pain does not have the final word. In God’s hands, sorrow becomes seed, wounds become witness, and grief becomes a gift that births purpose for generations to come.
Final Thoughts by Max Lucado

My friends, grief never truly leaves us. It changes shape, it softens with time, but it always reminds us of the love we shared. Yet here’s the wonder: in God’s hands, even grief can be redeemed.
Picture your tears as seeds. They fall into the soil of sorrow, but in time, God brings forth a harvest of compassion, service, and renewed hope. One day, in heaven, those tears will be wiped away, and all that remains will be joy.
Until that day, let us walk together, carrying one another’s burdens, turning our pain into purpose, and fixing our eyes on Jesus — the One who conquered death and now waits to welcome us home.
So grieve with honesty, pray with courage, love with tenderness. And remember this: the grave is not the end, because the Savior is alive.
Short Bios:
Billy Graham
One of the most influential evangelists of the 20th century, Billy Graham preached the gospel to millions worldwide. Known for his clear, compassionate messages of hope, he emphasized salvation in Christ and the promise of heaven.
John Piper
A Reformed pastor and theologian, Piper is founder of Desiring God. He is known for teaching on God’s sovereignty and how Christians can glorify God even in suffering and loss.
David Jeremiah
Pastor of Shadow Mountain Community Church and founder of Turning Point Ministries, Jeremiah is a widely respected Bible teacher. His sermons and books often address hope, heaven, and perseverance in faith.
Kay Warren
Co-founder of Saddleback Church with Rick Warren, Kay speaks openly about mental health and grief after losing her son. Her ministry helps believers walk honestly with God through tragedy.
Philip Yancey
A bestselling Christian author known for books like Where Is God When It Hurts? Yancey wrestles with tough questions about faith, suffering, and grace in a thoughtful, accessible style.
Elisabeth Elliot
Missionary and author, Elliot endured the loss of her husband Jim to martyrdom. Her writings, including Through Gates of Splendor, inspire trust in God’s will amid suffering.
Dr. Gary Habermas
A leading Christian philosopher and historian, Habermas specializes in the resurrection of Jesus and its implications for eternal life. He offers both intellectual and spiritual grounding for hope in grief.
Max Lucado
Pastor and bestselling author, Lucado is beloved for his simple, hopeful style of writing. His books emphasize God’s grace and comfort in times of sorrow.
Anne Graham Lotz
Daughter of Billy Graham and respected Bible teacher, Lotz is known for her strong, scripture-centered preaching on God’s promises, eternity, and the hope of heaven.
N.T. Wright
A New Testament scholar and former Bishop of Durham, Wright has written extensively on the resurrection and Christian hope, especially in Surprised by Hope.
Nancy Guthrie
Bible teacher and author who lost two children, Guthrie speaks deeply on grief, lament, and God’s promises. She also leads GriefShare ministries and retreats.
Sheila Walsh
Author, singer, and speaker, Walsh has shared openly about depression and loss. She encourages Christians to bring raw honesty before God and receive His grace.
C.S. Lewis
Beloved Christian writer and apologist, Lewis penned A Grief Observed after the death of his wife. His candid reflections show how lament can coexist with faith.
Mark Vroegop
Pastor and author of Dark Clouds, Deep Mercy, Vroegop teaches on lament as a biblical response to suffering, helping churches recover this lost practice.
Michael Card
Christian songwriter and author, Card emphasizes lament as worship. His music and books encourage believers to bring sorrow and honesty into God’s presence.
H. Norman Wright
Christian counselor and prolific author, Wright specialized in grief recovery. His book Experiencing Grief has guided many through loss with gentle wisdom.
Rick Warren
Pastor of Saddleback Church and author of The Purpose Driven Life. Warren, who lost his son to suicide, speaks with authenticity on how the church must walk with grieving families.
Granger Smith
Country musician turned pastor, Smith shares his story of losing his young son and how faith and community carried him through grief.
Joni Eareckson Tada
Author and speaker who has lived with quadriplegia for decades. She offers unique insights on suffering, community, and God’s sustaining grace.
Beth Moore
Bible teacher and author, Moore is known for her warmth and encouragement, reminding believers of God’s presence in times of trial and loss.
Levi Lusko
Pastor and author of Through the Eyes of a Lion, written after the sudden death of his daughter. He speaks on finding strength in grief through an eternal perspective.
Lysa TerKeurst
Author and president of Proverbs 31 Ministries, TerKeurst writes vulnerably about heartbreak, resilience, and trusting God when life shatters.
Nick Vujicic
Born without arms and legs, Vujicic overcame despair to become an international evangelist. His testimony shows how God redeems suffering into purpose.
Christine Caine
Evangelist and founder of A21, Caine shares her own story of abuse and redemption, urging Christians to turn pain into mission and service.
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