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In this episode of Hope for the Caregiver, Peter Rosenberger explores the power of questions, the kind that cut through noise, expose truth, and force clarity in moments when something real is at stake.
Drawing from hospital rooms, caregiving, Scripture, politics, and even funeral services, Peter examines why caregivers often learn to ask better questions than the rest of the culture. From Ronald Reagan's famous debate question to God's questions to Job, this episode looks at how honest questions reveal what we truly believe, what we fear, and what we ultimately want our lives to stand for.
Peter also shares practical caregiving wisdom about preparing a home for mobility challenges, including lessons learned from nearly forty years of caring for his wife Gracie who lives with severe disabilities.
Plus: another installment of Hymns Every Caregiver Ought to Know, featuring Charles Wesley's "And Can It Be," and why exhausted caregivers need more than slogans, they need truth strong enough to steady the soul.
By Peter Rosenberger4.8
3333 ratings
In this episode of Hope for the Caregiver, Peter Rosenberger explores the power of questions, the kind that cut through noise, expose truth, and force clarity in moments when something real is at stake.
Drawing from hospital rooms, caregiving, Scripture, politics, and even funeral services, Peter examines why caregivers often learn to ask better questions than the rest of the culture. From Ronald Reagan's famous debate question to God's questions to Job, this episode looks at how honest questions reveal what we truly believe, what we fear, and what we ultimately want our lives to stand for.
Peter also shares practical caregiving wisdom about preparing a home for mobility challenges, including lessons learned from nearly forty years of caring for his wife Gracie who lives with severe disabilities.
Plus: another installment of Hymns Every Caregiver Ought to Know, featuring Charles Wesley's "And Can It Be," and why exhausted caregivers need more than slogans, they need truth strong enough to steady the soul.

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