Have you ever found yourself wrestling with questions about your faith, wondering if God is still near, still listening, and still good? If so, I want you to know that you’re not alone.
This week on The Love Offering podcast, I talked with Niki Hardy about her book, God, Can We Chat? It’s an honest, refreshing, and grace-filled invitation to bring our doubts and questions to God—without fear, shame, or pretending we have it all together.
So often, we think our faith is only strong if we never question or waver. But Niki reminds us that God isn’t afraid of our questions—He welcomes them. Rather than weakening our faith, honest conversations with God can deepen and strengthen it.
If you’re in a season where faith feels hard, where you feel distant from God or unsure of what you believe, I encourage you to tune in. You don’t have to have all the answers to come to Him—He asks that you come.
🎧 Listen now: The Love Offering – Rachael Adams – Christian Podcast
I’d love to hear—have you ever had a “chat” with God that changed your perspective? I’m always grateful to walk this journey of faith with you.
With love,
Rachael
Takeaways
Doubt can be a catalyst for deeper faith.
Honesty in prayer fosters intimacy with God.
Creating safe spaces for questions is essential in faith communities.
Doubt is a common experience among believers.
Grace allows us to bring our doubts to God without fear.
Jesus invites us to come as we are, doubts and all.
Intimacy with God can be found in vulnerability.
Biblical figures often expressed doubt and questions to God.
Faith is a journey that includes uncertainty.
God’s love is unconditional and ever-present.
Sound Bites
“Jesus invites us to come as we are.”
“Take your questions to God.”
“Honesty is always an intimacy builder.”
“It’s okay to doubt.”
“God loves us because He is love.”
“Grace enables us to say, here it is God.”
“Our doubts don’t break us.”
Chapters
00:00 Introduction to Love and Doubt
05:35 Navigating Faith and Doubt
10:17 Finding Intimacy with God
14:43 Creating Safe Spaces for Questions
18:47 Common Doubts and Questions
24:35 Biblical Examples of Doubt
28:58 The Role of Grace in Doubt
30:21 Closing Thoughts and Prayer
Transcript
Rachael Adams (00:03.254)
Welcome to the Love Offering Podcast. I’m your host, Rachel Adams, author of Everyday Prayers for Love: Learning to Love God, Others, and Even Yourself. Each week, we dive into meaningful conversations about how to live out the greatest commandment: loving God with all of our heart, soul, mind, and strength, and loving our neighbors as ourselves. Through inspiring stories, practical tips, and biblical truths, I hope to encourage you to love boldly, live faithfully, and reflect God’s love in every area of your life. Today I’m thrilled to welcome my friend, Nikki Hardy, author of God Can We Chat? In a world where doubt often feels like a threat to our faith, Nikki’s book invites us to bring our questions to Jesus, to come as we are, whether we’re doubting believers or believing doubters, and to discover that our questions can be the very catalyst for a deeper, more honest relationship with God.
Hello, Nikki, and welcome back to the Love Offering podcast. I’m always happy to chat with you.
Niki Hardy (01:06.6)
Thank you, Rachel. It’s great to be here again.
Rachael Adams (01:09.774)
So your book invites us to take Jesus at His word and come as we are with all of our doubts and questions. So I got to see a lot of the behind-the-scenes of this book. So I am excited to hear and let everybody else hear what inspired you to write about this and what you hope readers discover in its pages.
Niki Hardy (01:30.77)
Well, the inspiration, unfortunately, came from my downward spiral in my faith, Rachel, which is probably not something you want to hear, but often books are written by authors who’ve lived through it and, well, in my case, and still kind of living through it. So, as you know, I had lost my mom and my sister to cancer, and I was diagnosed. And through that, I had all sorts of questions for God was angry at him, and I asked him why and all these things, but I still somehow believed and trusted him. Fast forward another eight, 10 years, and the pandemic hits, shifting us as a country, a world, and a church. Why church worldwide? Also, as a church that we were pastoring at the time. And there was social and racial unrest. Christians were divided.
You know, I don’t need to explain what happened. And for me at that time, everything- God, faith, church- is a new collective noun that I started to feel hard about. I felt disappointed, disillusioned, and confused, and my faith slowly unraveled. And I got to the point, and I remember I was outside, it was early morning in August, a couple of years ago, and I was walking Charlie, our lovely, but rather ridiculous golden doodle, and you’ve met him. And I got to the point on the path where I realized I felt lost. And I wasn’t geographically lost; I knew exactly where I was, but I was spiritually lost. And then I got back and Al was at home and he had worship music playing and he was having his quiet time. And, of course, I rolled my eyes with the maturity of a pubescent teen, thinking, he’s just so spiritual. He can keep calm and pray no matter what. As I went upstairs, the familiar words of Amazing Grace followed me. And I thought at that moment, that’s not how I feel.
What is more accurate is that I once was found, but now I’m lost. And it felt like my faith was dying by a thousand paper cuts. And I had questions for God that no matter how much theology I dived into, no matter how much chatting with other people or going to apologetics, I couldn’t find that certainty, peace, or assuredness that I needed. That’s when I decided I was at the crossroads of faith and doubt, staring down one path that looked like it was going down the faith part. Still, I had so many questions down that path, and it sometimes felt like I would have to align myself with people, systems, and institutions that I was beginning to feel increasingly uncomfortable with. But then I didn’t want to go down the doubt path either. I didn’t want to go down that because that felt like it would lead to deconstruction and deconversion. And my faith was super precious, and I loved God still. That’s when I realized, what if I just sat down at the crossroads of faith and doubt and chatted with God? I realized that when I take my doubts and confusions to God, they change from being my faith script tonight to its superpower and can draw me closer. So that’s the inspiration. That was a very long story. I do apologize for the book.
Rachael Adams (05:35.425)
It’s so relatable, and I appreciate your vulnerability and honesty because so many of us wrestle with the same things. And so the fact that you are willing to share your experience, I think, will help so many other people be willing to share their experience too. And so I have more questions to ask you, but we will take a brief break to hear a word from today’s sponsor. And when we return, we’ll dive into how embracing our doubts can lead to the intimacy and rest that our souls crave.
Rachael Adams (06:09.93)
Welcome back. We are talking to Nikki Hardy, the author of God Can We Chat. And so, Nikki, in the midst of our fear, doubt, anger, or confusion, how can readers and just us in general experience the kind of intimacy with God that your book promises?
Niki Hardy (06:13.33)
Well, you remember, Rachel, that Jesus says to us, Know, come to me all you who are weary and heavy laden and I will give you rest. And it’s a response; it’s our RSVP to that invitation that we get from Jesus. And I love the way Eugene Peterson puts it in the message. He says, Come to me all you who are weary and heavy burdened, walk with me, work with me, learn the unforced rhythms of grace and live lightly and freely. And for so many of us, those questions and doubts feel heavy; they weigh us down, and we feel burdened by them and by the fear that we’ll lose our precious faith. Most people who doubt and wrestle are wrestling because their faith is precious, and they care about it. And so he invites us to come to him. And I love that image of walking with him, chatting with him along the dusty roads as he walks the Holy Land to all the places he went. And what if we can do that? And so as we do that and as we take our questions to him, which does take some honesty and vulnerability, because as you said, most of us, you know, most of us feel like this way, but the biggest lie of all is I’m the only one. I shouldn’t say anything, especially not in church and other people are more spiritual. The other lies, and I talk about five of them in God Can We Chat, is that I need proof and answers to be sure. I’ve got to have an answer. Or I can’t tell God that. There’s some shame and embarrassment by either the ferocity of our questions and how deeply we feel them or how embarrassing they might feel or blasphemous, all these things. Or we say, I can’t question God. You know, we’ve been told time and time again, and Jesus does say, you know, don’t doubt, have faith. So we feel like we shouldn’t say anything. And so coming back to that, Jesus says, come on, walk with me, work with me, learn these unforced rhythms of grace, and it’s that grace that enables us to go, okay, I’m gonna stand before you, raw and naked in all my questions, Lord. And know that there is nothing I can say, no doubt I can have, no question or hurt or anger that I can express to you that’s gonna make you’re gonna walk away. And so when we do that, we really can find that intimacy, find that rest. And I always say we might not see that certainty that we think we need, but ultimately, we find the rest, the peace, and the intimacy that most of us have been craving all along.
Rachael Adams (09:35.566)
Yeah, why are we so afraid to go to him in our communication? Because he knows our thoughts and our hearts anyway, right? Where nothing is hidden from him. And so he knows that we’re wrestling. And so, go ahead and be honest. And I think you will find that piece you’re talking about.
Niki Hardy (09:46.157)
Exactly! Yeah, I think it’s so funny how it’s like, I know he knows, he knows I know he knows, and I know he knows he knows. And it’s like, but I’m still thinking, can I? And then suddenly you go, God, yes, this is my question. This is what I’m wrestling with. And it’s like, okay, come to me.
Rachael Adams (10:17.984)
Yeah. Your approach isn’t about providing all the answers or settling every theological debate. Instead, you show us that honest questions can strengthen our faith. Can you explain how you see the role of doubt as possibly benefiting our spiritual journey?
Niki Hardy (10:36.572)
Yeah, well, I think when we take our doubts and use them as a springboard or catalyst—or let me rephrase that—they are a catalyst to something. And we get to choose whether they’re a catalyst to springboard us towards God or away from God. And we get to choose whether we say, God, here they all are in their messy, uncertain confusion, or we say, I better bury them, or I better slide out the side door and hope nobody notices, and we fade away. And so we get to choose what we do with our doubts. We’ve all got them. And call them doubts, call them questions, call them confusions, hurts, it encompasses them all but we get to choose and so by choosing to take them to God, just like Job did, just like Moses did, just like Sarah did and Mary and I mean, the Bible is full of people who doubted and took their doubts to God and continued to doubt in conversation with God. That’s when it builds that intimacy. And that’s when it, cause we’re being honest with him. And honesty is always an intimacy builder.
Rachael Adams (11:59.937)
And I’m just thinking that God is always pursuing us as you’re talking. And like from the very beginning with Adam and Eve, he was asking questions like, where are you? You know, and so I think he’s doing the same thing with us. He is pursuing us just as much as we are pursuing him. And he wants that intimacy with us, which is so amazing that we have a God who wants to hear from us, who is listening and will answer, right?
Niki Hardy (12:21.266)
Exactly, and I think for those listeners who are saying, well, hold on, you didn’t answer the point you made about Jesus saying, don’t doubt, but have great faith. And we are, you know, he does say this; it’s in red letters in the Bible. But I think the problem we get into when we get our knickers in a twist about this is when we assume the tone with which he says it. And I think for so long, I believed he said, don’t doubt, feel, like it was a command. But what if it was more his father’s heart saying, don’t, don’t doubt, believe that there’s no need to doubt because I am here. Together, we’re gonna figure it out. Together, we’re gonna walk through this. Together, I will strengthen you. And so when we shift how we perceive God is saying, don’t doubt, rather than, don’t doubt you stupid woman, you know, get yourself together and have more faith. He says, don’t, come on, believe, I’ve got you.
Rachael Adams (13:36.621)
Yeah, it’s not a reprimand. It’s an encouragement. I, know, thinking about Jesus with doubting Thomas, which immediately when I think of doubt, think of him bless his heart, but it’s like Jesus is like, no, let me show you here. Touch them. Like, it’s okay. Like, here are my hands; touch them. And so I think he, it’s that same posture in my mind that he wants for us. Like, come on, come to me.
Niki Hardy (13:58.59)
Yeah. And he calls us, the people who didn’t get to poke around in Jesus’s fresh wounds, blessed, because we believe and haven’t seen. And so, if you’ve got faith, the size of a mountain or a city block, great, you’re blessed. You’ve got atomic faith, great, you’re blessed. Doesn’t matter.
Rachael Adams (14:23.766)
Yeah. We will take another brief break to hear a word from today’s sponsor. When we return, we’ll explore how engaging with our doubts can actually bring us together as a community of believers.
Rachael Adams (14:43.0)
What practical steps can believers take, whether in church or small groups or at home, to create safe spaces where questions are welcomed rather than shunned?
Niki Hardy (15:01.235)
That’s a great question. That’s such a good question because we have, I think as a wider church, focused on this part of having great faith and not believe, not doubting and not having questions and you can’t stand up in the middle of a church service can you and say excuse me, can you unpack that a bit because I have questions about that and so creating spaces that foster curiosity that build in discussion and prayer and even the chat guided prayer guide that I have in the book going through these and saying it’s okay to doubt. We can preach it from the front and then we can create Bible study groups. can start doing things, engaging with the community, the wider community around our church is to say, we are a safe space to ask your questions of faith because this is one of the reasons people don’t come to church is because it’s not a place that you can necessarily ask your questions. And so how do you get from outside the church to inside the church if you can’t ask your questions? And so as communities, we can really embrace this curious faith and doubting in conversation with God.
Rachael Adams (16:26.136)
And I asked that question, Nikki, because I think your book would make us such a good book club. I can see my Bible study group doing it. Let’s meet once a week and chat as girlfriends, have coffee, go through some of these, flesh out some of these doubts, and be open about them. And so as you, as you’ve written, you know, these, these can we, can we chat about X, Y, and Z? What are some of the biggest doubts you have found? I don’t know, maybe for yourself or just believers in general as you’ve been as you’ve been writing this book.
Niki Hardy (17:00.626)
The third part of the book has 18 to 20 questions, and they’re the most asked questions that all my readers and I struggle with. So I emailed my community and my readers and said, if you could, you know, sit down with God and ask him one question, what would it be? And the emails flooded in, absolutely flooded in. And they were things like, why did you answer her prayer and not mine? Did we pray incorrectly? Why did my son die? Is the Bible your word? Because there seems so much that doesn’t sit well with your character. There are all sorts of things; you name them. We are doubting it, whether it’s God’s word, how we pray, or his closeness and character, all sorts of different things. Many of your questions will stem from what you’ve been through. A lot of the time, you know, if you’ve been through a lot of church hurt, then your questions might revolve around, well, why do your people do such un-Christ-like things? Why is it that I hear love and peace and forgiveness preached in church, but I don’t receive it from Christians outside church? All these sorts of questions came flooding in. And so in the book’s God Can We Chat kind of practical part where I lead readers in a conversation with God, these are the things that we’re diving into and taking to God.
Rachael Adams (18:47.598)
What have you been taking to God lately? What have you been chatting with him about lately?
Niki Hardy (18:53.628)
Well, you’re going to laugh. And I think you already know this, Rachel, because we’re in a writing group together. But one of my biggest has been writing this book. I’ve been doubting writing my doubt book. The irony has not been lost on me or anyone else who’s been party to that. But in terms of whether this is really what you want me to do, Lord? I think many people have questions about what they should be doing and their purpose, you know, how they live out their faith. And so, for me, this was a really big one. And I kept saying, Lord, you’ve got to make it clear if you don’t want me to do it. And so it’s hitting the shelves. So I’m assuming he’s given it the go-ahead. But that’s something I’m taking to God. I’m always taking my children to God. They are in their mid-20s. They’re all leading their faith adventure. And that can be challenging. So, always taking them to God, sometimes more spiritually than others. Sometimes, it’s like the “owe me God” prayer, which isn’t the best prayer I’ve ever prayed, but it’s real, it’s honest.
Rachael Adams (20:03.882)
And you were genuine and honest, and we appreciate that about you. I am just thinking about the woman listening. It’s like, okay, I’ve tried to talk to God, and I’ve not heard him talk to me back. How would you encourage her to keep listening and keep talking?
Niki Hardy (20:19.186)
It is tough. It can feel hard when God is on mute, and we can’t hear him. And I would encourage you that you’re not different from anyone else. Like everyone else in the flock, you are a sheep and can hear your shepherd’s voice. And so, sometimes, it’s a matter of tuning in. I think of it as tuning an old radio dial. Sometimes, it’s a little fuzzy, but then it gets clearer, and slowly, we become more familiar with what God’s voice sounds like. I’ll give you an example, Rachel, that might help readers like this.
When we were deciding whether to move to America, was this what God wanted for us? Moving three kids across the pond and planting a church was a big decision. This wasn’t, you know, what colour socks should I wear this morning, God? Not that I pray about that. But we needed a firm yes or no. And so I was praying up a storm. We were praying separately as a couple to come together and see whether God was saying the same thing to both of us because we assumed he would call us a married couple. And I was praying and praying, God, to make it certain, Lord, I can’t hear you, Lord, would you tell us so that we know that we are doing the right thing. And I was praying for a revelation for him to write it in the sky. I wanted to hear an audible voice, all these things. I was even praying, Lord, would you stop me in the checkout line as I’m bagging my bananas and have an out-of-town prophet tap me on the shoulder and say, does the girl’s name Charlotte mean anything to you? You know, I was going for it. And I just didn’t hear anything for so long. Then, one morning, I was walking our youngest into school, and there was chaos of young children everywhere, with book bags and all this stuff. And I was standing next to my friend, praying alongside us. And I just turned to her, and it was like I had to exhale. My shoulders relaxed, and I said, We’re going to go. And she looked at me, and she said, yes, yes you are. And then we got back to the hubbub of, you know, kids and you know, shoelaces, snotty noses, and all that kind of stuff. And what I say to people is in that moment, having prayed for a revelation, I got a realization. And sometimes, it’s an inner knowing. And often, when we teach a class about hearing God’s voice and in the back of the book, actually in the back of God, can we chat?
There’s a whole ton of resource,s and one of them is about hearing God’s voice. And that’s free to anyone who has the book. And we talk about this bubbling up. It’s not something that’s boiled up. Often, it’s an inner knowing. And at first we’re like, well, that’s just me or indigestion or something. But then, as we check it out, is it something biblical or other members of the body of Christ saying, Yes, yes, I think this is right? We go, that’s God, and then the dial gets slightly clearer as we tune it in. So I want to encourage anyone who’s like, yeah. Still, I’ve tried not only to encourage you in that way that it might just be your inner voice that’s speaking with a little more tenderness, but with the chat conversation guide, prayer prompts and journaling prompts, there aren’t tons of them if you’re not a big journaler, but they help bring God’s voice out to the forefront, if that makes sense.
Rachael Adams (24:14.764)
Yeah, it does make sense. You mentioned we talked about Thomas, and then you mentioned Sarah and Moses briefly. So, biblically, there’s, I don’t know, is there an example of somebody in the Bible that you were doubting but then he took his cares and chatted with God, and there was some kind of resolution?
Niki Hardy (24:34.354)
So many, Rachel, so many. We can think of Job, who really went to God. And I’m not sure I’d like what happened to Job to happen to me. God took him on this cosmic journey and said, you know, could you do all this? Know that Job never gets an answer. Job never gets an answer. And it’s awesome that we go to God wanting an answer. But we get more of this sense of peace and living lightly and freely as Jesus says of being willing to live in mystery with God. And we’ve worked out some of the kinks and confusion, and we’re happy to trust God in it. But I’m unsure whether this side of eternity will ever find absolute certainty in some of these questions because they’re huge paradoxes of theology that I don’t think we’re meant to unpack. But, you know, look at someone like Nicodemus, a member of the Pharisees, sneaking off into the darkness of the back alleys of Jerusalem to meet with Jesus. And he goes with all these questions because I’m not sure what drove him into the night, whether it was fear of what was happening socially and community-wise in Jerusalem, the division happening, and the crowds being stirred up. Or maybe, what if he was just fearful of missing the Messiah? They’d been waiting for the Sermon; maybe this was the Messiah, and he might miss it because the Pharisees ignored that. Whatever drove him into the night, I’m always amazed that when he got Jesus alone, he didn’t unroll a list of questions as long as a toilet roll. He just stated the facts about what was happening. And I think we can do that when we come to God. We can say, “This is what I see. Help me understand.”
Rachael Adams (26:53.774)
Gosh, I have so many thoughts based on just what you said. One of them is that it isn’t about any ritual. I guess I’m thinking about the Pharisees. For example, when we chat with God, it is just about having a relationship with Him. I mean, just because you’re going to have a conversation with anybody you want to get close to and have intimacy and know them. It can be just as simple as that, right?
Niki Hardy (27:17.286)
It really can, and that’s why the image of walking with Jesus along the dusty roads of the Holy Land, you know, it’s like, okay, well, maybe I’m not gonna understand everything that he’s doing and why, and why he hasn’t done things the way I would have done, quite honestly, you know, and treated the world and others in the way I would have done, which of course puts me quite squarely on the throne of heaven, which isn’t a good place for me to sit. But yes, you’re right, it’s this conversation. And I can live in a whole ton of mystery with many unanswered questions with God when I’m close to him. But these questions become deal breakers when I’m not close to him. But with that intimacy, so that it becomes like this flywheel. When we go to God, we get closer to God, which means we can live in more mystery. I hate to burst anyone’s bubble, but God is wonderfully knowable, and that’s why we can be in a relationship with him. But he’s frustratingly unknowable. We will never know the true mind, heart, depths, and breadth of God.
Rachael Adams (28:34.254)
I think so many answers are black and white in scripture. But like you said, there are so many things that we will never know until we meet him face to face. And I think that’s where faith comes in. Right. It’s like there’s just, we have to trust and know who he is, that he is a good God who wants what’s best for us. And so to trust in that. I mean, Emma, do you think that’s as simple as that and as hard as that?
Niki Hardy (28:58.343)
Yeah. Yes. Yes. Simple doesn’t mean easy, though. Unfortunately.
Rachael Adams (29:04.334)
Unfortunately, no. So I’ve been asking my guests, “Is there a biblical concept of love that you think applies to this topic today?”
Niki Hardy (29:19.706)
I think the biblical concept that runs through this, that is woven through us chatting with God about our doubts and growing closer to Him one day after time, is the concept of grace. He loves us anyway. His love is there for us not because we deserve it but because He is love. He’s not just loving; He’s love itself. And so He loves us because he loves us. After all, he loves us because that’s who he is. And so that grace enables us to say, okay, here it is God, these are all my questions, these are all the things I’ve been doubting about you and your church and the world and other people, here it all is. And I’m absolutely confident that you still love me and I still want to keep walking with you. And that is grace. And that, to me, is the biblical outworking of love and His love offering to us.
Rachael Adams (30:21.646)
Yeah, he is love itself. So good. So, tell us something you are loving right now.
Niki Hardy (30:28.912)
Well, you know I’m a fresh air junkie and all things nature and outside. So I love that the plants and the trees are just beginning to bud, bloom, and burst through the frozen earth. So I’m loving that.
Rachael Adams
I had the opportunity to go to Nikki’s lake house; she has these beautiful trails. As you were talking about walking with Jesus, I was actually envisioning your trails and just talking. You know, we were a group of friends that were all together, having great conversation, walking outside, and enjoying God’s creation. And so it can be, again, as simple as that.
Niki Hardy (32:01.531)
Yeah. Walking and talking. And yes, I mean, we were talking for all the readers and myself who struggled to hear God or know that, struggle to believe that we’ve heard God, because often we have heard God, we’re just not sure that we’ve heard God. The perceived wisdom is that we must do it sitting in a chair. And we have to be still because we know be still and know that I’m God. But that is still as often we hear it is about to stop fighting. To me, stopping fighting means getting out and walking on a trail. And I can hear God’s voice so much more clearly when I’m connected to nature, even if my potted plants at home surround it, or I’m looking out the window at the clouds. I’m more able to tune in to what God is saying. Often, he speaks through nature, using it as a metaphor and other things. So if you are struggling to hear God or know that it was God, whatever it is, I would encourage you to get outside and encounter some nature.
Rachael Adams (33:25.964)
Yeah, that always works for me, too. So, Nikki, I know I want to stay connected with you, and I’m sure listeners will want to. So tell us how we can do that, how we can purchase your book, and all the other things.
Niki Hardy (33:38.128)
Yeah, so all things about the book are at godcanwechat.com and during launch time you can actually get the audio book for free when you order God Can We Chat, which is really exciting. I got to narrate it, so it comes with this free accent. So that’s at godcanwechat.com, and you can find me at Nikki Hardy and Instagram at Nikki. Hardy, but you can get that free audio. You can get the first three chapters for free if you want also to give it a go.
Rachael Adams (34:17.646)
We will include that in the show notes, but we appreciate you joining us today. And I’d be honored if you would close us in prayer.
Niki Hardy (34:25.476)
Of course, I’d love to. Lord, we thank you for being a God who loves us so much. You want to walk and talk with us. You want us to give you our weariness, burdens, questions, doubts, and confusion, and you want to help us live lightly and freely. Lord, thank you for your grace. And I pray now for each of us who is struggling with questions, concerns, and confusion, maybe even feeling disappointed and just not right with our faith. Lord, would you come meet with us, give us the courage we need to step into your presence and share it all and chat with you. Thank you that you want nothing more than to grow deeper and stronger in relationship with us. Help us hear your voice and know your presence. In Jesus’ name, amen.
Rachael Adams (35:30.156)
Thank you so much, Nikki, for joining us today and for sharing your insights on how our questions can be the beginning, not the end, of an honest relationship with God. Friends, if today’s conversation encouraged you, please share it with someone who might need to hear this message of hope and sincere faith. Remember, our doubts don’t break us. They build us closer to the God who loves us unconditionally. We appreciate you listening today. If you enjoyed this episode, please leave a review and visit my website at rachaelkadams.com for more resources, including the Love Offering Calendar and the What Makes You Lovable quiz. Remember to pick up a copy of Everyday Prayers for Love and Nikki’s book, God Can We Chat, which is available wherever books are sold. A special thank you to Life Audio for supporting this podcast and making it possible. To find out more great podcasts, visit lifeaudio.com. Until next time, let’s make our lives an offering of love.
Niki Hardy (36:20.21)
Thank you.
*Transcript created by AI
Connect with Niki:
https://www.nikihardy.com/
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