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Whose God Is This?
Reclaiming Faith Beyond Language, Religion, and Human Filters
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Narrado por:
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Doug Huggins
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Preface
“Be still, and know that I am God.”— Psalm 46: 10 (NKJV)
This book is not a theological manual. It is a heart map—a trace of the places I’ve wandered, the faith I’ve questioned, and the God I’ve encountered outside the walls of religion.
There are stories that begin in clarity—and then there are stories like mine, born in mystery, shaped by struggle, and fueled by questions too heavy for silence.
I’ve lived through seasons where I felt forsaken by the very faith I was taught to trust. I’ve sat in church pews and still felt like an outsider. I’ve performed every spiritual ritual, and yet, my soul remained hungry. What I needed wasn’t another religious routine. I needed God—not a distant doctrine, not a recycled sermon, but a real encounter.
I am not a perfect man. I have doubted, stumbled, and wrestled with truths that didn’t always fit inside the narratives I was handed. But I have also encountered a Presence too deep to deny. A Voice too personal to ignore. A Grace too vast to measure. Everything I’ve written here comes from lived experience—real hunger, real silence, real encounters.
This is not polished theology. It is lived theology. It’s my wrestle. My wonderings. My whispers in the dark. It is about the God I met when all the formulas failed. It’s about unlearning the noise and relearning the nearness. It’s about finding divine presence in the most unexpected places—in hunger, in loss, in joy, in silence, and in rooms where no one else was watching.
I’ve come to believe that some truths can only be found in brokenness. Some revelations are only born when the systems collapse. And some of the most sacred encounters happen not on a stage—but in the solitude of your own soul.
Some may hear these words and disagree. That’s okay. I didn’t write to convince. I wrote to confess. To remember. To witness.
This is for the wanderer. The doubter.
©2025 Fredlyne Evbuomwan (P)2026 Fredlyne Evbuomwan