SheTalks Mag Vol 2 Issue 9 September 2025 (2)

THE CRUCIBLE YEARS

In the high-stakes world of executive recruiting, Eve

Nasby built her reputation on identifying potential

where others saw only résumés. But nothing could

have prepared her for the moment she would be

recruited for the most audacious mission of her

career: teaching one billion people to share their

faith in just ten years.

Today, as Executive Director of Just One—a global

evangelism initiative that's capturing attention from

Silicon Valley to seminary halls—Nasby stands at the

intersection of ancient calling and cutting-edge

technology. Her story reads like a modern-day

parable: a woman who emerged from a decade of

silent suffering to lead what could become the most

ambitious faith-sharing movement in Christian

history.

The transformation didn't happen overnight. For

nearly a decade, Nasby found herself navigating what

she quietly describes as "living in survival mode." Her

then-husband was working through untreated PTSD,

creating an atmosphere of unpredictability that left

deep marks on their marriage.

"I spent nine and a half years sleeping in a separate bedroom," she shares with the kind of honesty that

stops conversation. The physical distance in their home became a painful metaphor for emotional wounds

that seemed impossible to heal. When divorce became inevitable, the custody proceedings that followed

tested every reserve of strength she thought she possessed.

Yet in those darkest moments, something extraordinary was being

forged. "I chose to trust that God could bring something meaningful

from this difficult season," she reflects. "And I knew I needed to be

there for my daughter, even when I felt like I was falling apart."

What she didn't know then was that these years of quiet endurance

were preparing her for a calling that would require every ounce of

the resilience being built in the shadows.

THE MOTHER'S COVENANT

If there's one thread that runs consistently through Nasby's story,

it's an unwavering commitment to her daughter. Through bedtime

prayers, impromptu coffee dates, and surprise visits at work, she

made motherhood her north star.

“I never missed a school event or competition," she says with quiet

intensity. "My philosophy became crystal clear: God first, my

daughter second, everything else comes third."

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This wasn't just maternal instinct—it was kingdom preparation. The same fierce love that drove her to show up

consistently for one child would later fuel her passion to reach one billion souls.