Shannon Bream's new bestseller draws on Bible heroes and her own story of faith through suffering
Shannon Bream's latest book, Nothing Is Impossible with God, has landed as a bestseller, and it's not hard to see why. The Fox News anchor, attorney, and author tells the stories of 11 heroes of the Bible while weaving in her own experience of physical suffering and the faith that carried her through it. In a media landscape saturated with cynicism, Bream has built something genuinely countercultural: a book that takes Scripture seriously and trusts her audience to do the same.
The book opens not with Moses or Joseph but with Bream herself. At the age of 39, she was battling severe, persistent eye pain that no doctor could explain. She eventually found her way, through message boards of all places, to one last cornea specialist: Dr. Thomas Clinch of Eye Doctors of Washington. Clinch diagnosed her with a condition other doctors had missed, map-dot-fingerprint dystrophy, also known as Cogan's dystrophy. The treatment was Muro 128 ointment to use at night, eye drops, and tear duct plugs.
It's a quiet story. No dramatic helicopter rescue. No last-rites miracle. Just a woman in real pain who kept looking for answers and found one. That's the template for the rest of the book.
The Bible Without the Bubble Wrap
Bream's approach to Scripture is what makes this project stand out. She doesn't sanitize the stories or reduce them to self-help platitudes. She personalizes them. Her treatment of Joseph in Genesis doesn't skip over the betrayal, the false imprisonment, or the years of silence from God. It sits in the difficulty. When Joseph's brothers come to Egypt for grain during a famine and fail to recognize him, the weight of that moment lands because Bream lets it breathe.
Her reading of Moses is similarly grounded. She traces the full arc: the law requiring all Hebrew male babies to be thrown into the Nile, Moses hidden as an infant and placed in a basket, his rescue by Pharaoh's daughter, and the years he spent raised in privilege while belonging to the enslaved. Bream points out that Moses never lost the link to his own people, killing an Egyptian for beating a Hebrew. That act made him a fugitive after Pharaoh tried to kill him. Fox News reported.
Then comes the wilderness. And Bream finds the real story there. She writes about the burning bush passage from Exodus:
"Moses was faithful, working for his father-in-law as a shepherd. We see no grumbling about how great life used to be at the palace, no daydreaming about going back to the life of a prince — just the methodical work of a dutiful man. God can and will show up whenever you are laboring, whether or not you think anyone else is aware of your diligence."
That's not a prosperity gospel message. It's the opposite. It's a theology of faithfulness in obscurity, of doing the work without the applause. It resonates precisely because it doesn't promise a shortcut.
Why This Book Matters Now
There's a reason faith-centered books keep climbing the bestseller lists even as mainstream media treats religion as either a curiosity or a threat. Millions of Americans are hungry for voices that speak to what they actually believe, not what coastal editors think they should believe. Bream fills that space without pretension.
She also brings a lawyer's precision to narrative. When she describes the Exodus, she frames it with a strategist's eye, noting that God's plan "wouldn't look like any other rebellion in history." As Bream writes:
"It would start with what any strategist would tell you is a terrible mistake — letting your enemy know you're coming."
That's sharp writing. It takes a story most readers have heard since childhood and makes them see it fresh. The Exodus wasn't a guerrilla campaign. It was a confrontation conducted in the open, with plagues announced in advance. The audacity of the plan only makes sense if God is real and sovereign. Bream doesn't argue that point. She just lays out the facts of the narrative and lets the reader arrive there.
Honesty About Human Weakness
What elevates Bream's writing beyond devotional boilerplate is her willingness to be honest about her own limitations. Reflecting on the faith required of Moses' mother to place her infant in a basket on the Nile, Bream is blunt:
"I am nearly 100 percent certain I would not have had such a calm reaction."
That single sentence does more work than a chapter of theological exposition. It acknowledges that the faith described in Scripture is extraordinary, not ordinary. It doesn't pretend the reader would have done better. It creates solidarity between the modern believer and the ancient text by admitting the gap between aspiration and reality.
This is what good faith writing looks like. It doesn't condescend. It doesn't moralize from above. It stands with the reader in the mess and points upward.
A Quiet Rebellion
The cultural establishment has spent decades trying to push faith out of the public square. Books like Bream's keep proving the demand is still there and growing. She anchors the most-watched Sunday morning news program in the country. She's a trained attorney. And she just wrote a bestseller about Moses, Joseph, and the God who shows up in the wilderness.
No apologies. No qualifications. No attempt to make the Bible palatable to people who've already decided against it.
That's not just faith. That's courage.




