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In Part 2 of my conversation with Nick Williams we lean into something many of us know we need—but often avoid: restorative healing.
The reality is, healing isn’t always smooth or predictable. It can feel clunky, uncomfortable, and even uncertain at times. But that doesn’t mean God isn’t real and present.
This conversation challenges the idea that faith is just about knowing the right things about God. Instead, it invites you into something deeper—actually experiencing Him. That starts with a willingness to be open, to engage in prayer even when it feels imperfect, and to trust God in the middle of the process.
If you’ve been keeping your faith at a distance—intellectual, controlled, or surface-level—this episode will push you toward something more real, more honest, and ultimately more transformative.
By JD ShinnIn Part 2 of my conversation with Nick Williams we lean into something many of us know we need—but often avoid: restorative healing.
The reality is, healing isn’t always smooth or predictable. It can feel clunky, uncomfortable, and even uncertain at times. But that doesn’t mean God isn’t real and present.
This conversation challenges the idea that faith is just about knowing the right things about God. Instead, it invites you into something deeper—actually experiencing Him. That starts with a willingness to be open, to engage in prayer even when it feels imperfect, and to trust God in the middle of the process.
If you’ve been keeping your faith at a distance—intellectual, controlled, or surface-level—this episode will push you toward something more real, more honest, and ultimately more transformative.