Drugs, suicide attempts and jail time: How God helped restore Sharon Dutra's life

Most childhood memories involve special family moments, playful times and plenty of laughter. For Sharon Dutra, it was a very different story.

Sharon was born in Los Angles. Her mother left when she was just five years old, and her father was an alcoholic who was married four times by the time Sharon was 17.

'You're losing your best friend little by little': Life after an Alzheimer's diagnosis

January is Alzheimer's awareness month. 

Today, more than half a million Canadians are living with dementia, including Alzheimer’s disease. By the year 2050, more than 1.7 million people in Canada will be living with dementia, according to the Alzheimer's Society of Canada.

How God can use you – one at a time – to change the world

No one wants to spend their lives being time-wasters, space-takers, binge-watchers, or game-players. We all want to be difference-makers. But where do you start?

In One at a Time, bestselling author and pastor Kyle Idleman uniquely reveals how Jesus valued people and shows us Jesus' way of changing the world--by loving people one at a time.

New film shows true story of young boy, a lost dad, and generosity

Inspired by a remarkable true story, 5000 BLANKETS is a new film spreading hope to families across Canada and the United States. 

Twenty years ago, Cyndi and her son, Phillip Pruitt, age six, were introduced to a world that broke their hearts when Phillip’s dad’s life was changed by mental illness. A search for him on the streets of Ft. Worth, Texas, opened their eyes to the hardship faced by the homeless population in their city.

Audaciously alive: How God saved Roxanne Harris from a debilitating and rare autoimmune disease

Just two weeks after the birth of her fourth child, Roxanne Harris was diagnosed with a rare and devastating autoimmune disease.  

"I couldn't move anything in my body. The pain was so astronomical," said Roxanne. "I wasn't prepared for what it all entailed when they were trying to figure out what was wrong with me. I kept thinking that, honestly, they would say the big C word."