When Fox News jumped into publishing in 2020 with a focus on faith, family, and patriotism, Fox News Sunday anchor and evangelical Shannon Bream was a likely choice for an author.

Since its launch, Fox News Books has published 17 titles, with total sales of more than 3.5 million—and nearly half of those sales (almost 1.5 million) can be chalked up to a trilogy by Bream focused on the voices of women in the Bible.

Today, the publisher has announced her fourth title, Nothing is Impossible with God: Eleven Heroes. One God. Endless Lessons in Overcoming, will release March 10.

This time, Bream zeroes in on an array of stubborn, stumbling, doubting, frightened, reckless men in the Bible—from Noah to Peter to Jesus—who endured painful trials and challenges to ultimately "partner with Him to accomplish the (humanly) impossible," writes Bream.

PW talked with Bream about her book of "heroes" who ultimately come to serve God and his people.

Why did you choose this topic now? Is it because the country is amid a challenging time?

It absolutely is. I know that everybody on some level has something they have to overcome. Maybe they're feeling very divided and chaotic over what's happening. Maybe they're facing something upsetting in their family, or a getting a bad health report, or losing a job. There's never going to be a time, unfortunately, that everything will be at peace. So it's always a good time to be talking about how we re-center, how we find peace, how we find comfort in a world that doesn't feel very comforting, frankly, right now.

You introduce the book with your very personal story, about withstanding a painful chronic eye condition by relying on God's promise in Judges 6:16: "I will be with you." Why is that?

God says over and over and over again in the Bible, to people who find themselves in terrible situations, "I'll be with you." He doesn't promise to be a magic genie that makes our life easy and beautiful and palatable, and there will be rainbows and unicorns all the time. But this promise is even more important: "I'm going to be with you in the good days, the bad days, My presence will help you through." And that's been true for me.

Your "heroes" are grouped by themes. Like Jonah, who is stuck for three days in a whale, they don't get God's plan. Like Joseph, who is sold to slavery by his brothers, they're betrayed by their families. Like Elijah, they feel forsaken by God. How did you choose them?

The thing I love about a lot of these stories is that not everybody from the get-go is on board with God, obedient, faithful. Many of them are fighting what he's trying to do or accomplish. Spending some time in the fish, like Jonah, trying to figure things out? I can relate to that.

Every chapter ends with a few questions to prompt readers' thoughts and discussions. What do you think is the hardest question, one that is raised by almost all these stories?

It's why God allows suffering. Our human brains have a really hard time with that. No one wants to suffer. No one wants to see loved ones and people we really care about suffer. We want to know why God would allow that. I don't know that we can get to a perfect understanding of that here on Earth, but my take on that as a Christian is that this world is not what God had planned. It's not the Garden of Eden. I mean, we've been corrupted by sin, and, frankly, human failings have taken root in the world. So, God has given us free will. We can make choices about whether we believe or accept the salvation that he's offering through his Son. Without Christ, we're in a real mess. The book ends with hope, because I want the book to encourage people.

You conclude the book by inviting readers to accept Jesus. Why do you think you became a news broadcaster instead of an evangelist?

I like to think maybe I'm a little bit of both. There's a place for faith woven through everything I do.