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Hope grows in small moments, not big plans

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

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Candace Bure at 50: Redefining Success Through Faith, Family, and Wild Hope

A Life Reimagined

At fifty, many people slow down—counting achievements, reflecting on milestones. But for Candace Bure, this milestone became a catalyst for something deeper. Decades in the spotlight—first as a child actor, then as a mother, a public figure—have led her to a quieter, more intentional kind of success.

Now, with two grandchildren on the way, she’s shifting her focus. Fame takes a backseat to what truly matters: the values she wants to instill in the next generation. No longer chasing accolades, she’s building a legacy rooted in faith and family.

Wild Hope: A 30-Day Journey Through Struggle and Belief

Her latest project, Wild Hope, isn’t just another self-help guide. It’s a 30-day expedition into resilience—a blend of Scripture, personal reflections, and probing questions designed to help readers find strength in life’s ordinary battles.

Bure’s core belief? Hope isn’t a passive wish—it’s an active choice. A daily decision to trust something greater than yourself, even when the path isn’t clear. Critics may question her unapologetic faith, but she stands firm: lasting hope comes from beyond ourselves.

Motherhood as the Ultimate Teacher

Raising three children with her former-athlete husband gave her an up-close view of how faith shapes a family. Watching her kids navigate their own struggles, she’s seen firsthand how belief isn’t about perfection—it’s about perseverance.

“I still mess up,” she admits. “But the key is getting back up.”

Faith, to Bure, isn’t a one-time commitment—it’s a lifelong evolution. A practice of learning, stumbling, and rising again.

The Simple Power of Love and Hope

Wild Hope delivers a powerful message: no matter how fractured life feels—loss, failure, exhaustion—love and hope remain within reach. Faith, she argues, is the steady hand that keeps us moving forward.

It’s a radical idea in a world obsessed with achievement: success isn’t just what you accomplish, but who you become along the way.

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