We are living in an age marked by exhaustion. People are tired—tired of conflict, tired of uncertainty, tired of economic pressure, cultural tension, and personal battles that seem to have no end. Anxiety has become common currency. Cynicism is often mistaken for wisdom. Hope, for many, feels fragile.
Yet moments like this reveal something essential: faith is not merely a religious idea; it is a survival necessity.
Faith is what allows individuals, families, and even nations to move forward when circumstances say stop. It carries people through valleys when logic offers no clear path. History shows that the greatest. . .

