Send us a text When life swerves and the plan in your head falls apart, the question under the question is simple: is anyone really in control? We sit with Romans 8:28 and the claim that not everything is good, yet all things can be worked together for good for those who love God and are called according to his purpose. That one line reframes chaos, pain, detours, and silence by rooting our hope in sovereignty rather than outcomes. We start by clearing a common confusion: Scripture never sug...
All content for Faith for Everyday is the property of Edwine Mbuzaa and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Send us a text When life swerves and the plan in your head falls apart, the question under the question is simple: is anyone really in control? We sit with Romans 8:28 and the claim that not everything is good, yet all things can be worked together for good for those who love God and are called according to his purpose. That one line reframes chaos, pain, detours, and silence by rooting our hope in sovereignty rather than outcomes. We start by clearing a common confusion: Scripture never sug...
Send us a text A single line from Psalm 119 can change how you face temptation, fear, and the constant noise about who you are and what your future holds. We take that line—“Thy word have I hidden in my heart”—and turn it from a slogan into a daily strategy for spiritual resilience, exploring why stored truth becomes your first defense and your quiet strength when life presses hard. We begin by reframing what “hiding” means. It is not secrecy; it is storage. When your heart is a vault and pr...
Faith for Everyday
Send us a text When life swerves and the plan in your head falls apart, the question under the question is simple: is anyone really in control? We sit with Romans 8:28 and the claim that not everything is good, yet all things can be worked together for good for those who love God and are called according to his purpose. That one line reframes chaos, pain, detours, and silence by rooting our hope in sovereignty rather than outcomes. We start by clearing a common confusion: Scripture never sug...