Author and podcast host Sadie Robertson Huff emphasizes that the church holds the solutions to the world’s problems and encourages her fans to shine the light of Christ in the midst of a dark culture. Award-winning WHOA Great podcast And the author Live Without Fear and Who do you follow? He told Crosswalk Headlines that Christians are called to bring hope to a broken world.
“Jesus said we are called to be a light to the world,” Huff told Crosswalk Headlines. “We are called to be a city on a hill, not to dim our light and hide under the sand, but to actually let our light shine so that God is given the glory.”
“So I think it’s really tempting when the world gets dark to want to hide. But if we want to brighten the world, we’re literally called to be the light. We, the church, are the solution. Embrace the words of Jesus.”
Hough is a two-time K-Love Fan Award winner for her podcast influence and has a large social media presence with 5 million followers on Instagram and nearly 2 million on Facebook, but she has also been outspoken about the pressures that social media can bring, including “cancel culture and the meanest comments getting the most likes.” [and] Even trades that occur when an algorithm is moving in your direction,” she wrote. February Posts.
“You can control your social media,” she told Crosswalk Headlines when asked what advice she’d give to fans about social media. “You can decide what you post. You can decide what you look at. So I think I have to say, take responsibility, follow the people that are leading you to Christ, and post things that are leading other people to Christ.”
Huff quotes Christ: “Cast your anxiety on the Lord.”
“And that’s something each of us has to do every day to receive God’s grace and strength to get through it.“ She said, “But God is really good, and if you have God in your life, you can get through some really tough times.”
Photo credit: ©Getty Images/Terry Wyatt/Stringer
Michael Faust He has covered the intersection of faith and news for 20 years, and his work has appeared in Baptist Press, Christianity Today, Christian Post, Leaf Chronicle, Toronto Star and Knoxville News Sentinel.





