Tune in this weekend for some contagious encouragement with Keep The Faith. We guarantee you’ll feel uplifted. You can catch Keep The Faith on Sundays!
HOUR 1
A strength can turn into a weakness if it runs unchecked. Max Lucado explains how the shift comes when you stop letting fear control the story and start using it as a signal instead.
Fear and worry are too heavy to carry alone. That’s why you’re not meant to. Radio host Brant Hansen explains how to share the weight.
HOUR 2
Every life writes its own song—but too often, we hand the pen to someone else. We let opinions, pressures, and expectations choose the melody. Life coach Trish Blackwell says the truth is the song is yours.
Rock bottom isn’t the end—it can be the beginning. Lisa Harper shares how sometimes the lowest place becomes the strongest foundation, the place where God builds freedom.
HOUR 3
Hard choices have a way of freezing us—you want to honor God, but the path forward isn’t always clear. That’s where courage steps in. In her new book, It’s Never Wrong to Do the Right Thing, Nicole C. Mullen shares powerful stories that remind us of that.
Doing the right thing sounds simple—until it costs you. Sometimes the Godly choice leads straight into fear, risk, or uncertainty. But Nicole C. Mullen says that’s also where courage grows, and where God shows up the strongest.
HOUR 4
When was the last time you pressed pause on the noise and hurry—just to notice the simple joys right in front of you? Tim Storey reminds us that slowing down isn’t wasted time; it’s where peace and perspective are found.
Smiles don’t always come easy in tough seasons. But sometimes, all it takes is a shift in perspective to see light again. Chris and Jodi from Love & the Outcome have learned that joy isn’t the absence of struggle—it’s choosing hope in the middle of it.
HOUR 5
It’s tough to grow deeper connections when you feel like you don’t have any at all. James M. Rink says loneliness is real—and more common than we admit. But it doesn’t have to be permanent.
Life can get stressful, but sometimes the best therapy is a good, hearty laugh. Julie Lyles Carr, mom of 8 and author of Raising an Original, knows that family life is full of messy, chaotic, laugh-out-loud moments—if you take the time to notice them!