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Steady Saints

Steady Saints

Written by: Nathan Pali
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About this listen

Steady Saints is a Christian history podcast about ordinary believers who lived extraordinary faith.

While history often remembers dramatic martyrs and famous reformers, this podcast tells the quieter stories of faithful Christians who endured hardship, persecution, doubt, obscurity, and slow progress—yet kept walking with God anyway.

Each episode explores a real person, moment, or movement from post–New Testament church history, bringing to life the perseverance, humility, obedience, and steady devotion that carried the Christian faith forward across centuries. From the early church and underground believers to missionaries, revival leaders, and everyday saints, these are stories of faith that didn’t burn fast—but burned long.

This is not a podcast about celebrity Christians or perfect heroes. It’s a narrative-driven journey through church history, showing how God worked through imperfect people, long obedience, unanswered prayers, and quiet faithfulness.

Through storytelling and historical context, Steady Saints reveals how spiritual endurance shaped the church far more than moments of sudden greatness.

If you’re interested in church history, Christian biography, faith stories, Christian perseverance, spiritual endurance, and learning how ordinary believers lived out extraordinary faith—this podcast is for you.

Steady Saints Faith that endured. Stories that still matter.

© 2026 Steady Saints All rights reserved.
Christianity Ministry & Evangelism Spirituality
Episodes
  • Blamed for the Fire: How Rome’s Greatest Disaster Changed Christianity Forever
    Jan 20 2026

    Rome’s worst disaster didn’t just destroy buildings — it reshaped an entire religion. This episode chronicles the Great Fire of 64 AD and the turning point when Christians went from a strange Jewish sect to enemies of the state. We’ll explore Roman attitudes toward Christianity, Nero’s political calculations, and the brutal executions that shocked even pagan observers. It’s a chilling story of power, propaganda, and how suffering became central to Christian identity.

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    9 mins
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