Where Heaven Meets the Heart
Now streaming everywhere.
These songs were written in the spaces between fear and faith, doubt and hope, grief and grace. Some were born from quiet prayers. Others came from wrestling with questions I could not easily answer.
This album is for anyone carrying heavy things… and still searching for light.
Thank you for walking this road with me.
- Eden Hartwell
Between The Earth And Sky
Scripture
“Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.”
- Hebrews 11:1
Reflection
There are moments in life when we find ourselves standing between what we know and what we hope for. Between prayers that have been spoken and answers that have not yet arrived. Between fear and faith. Between earth and sky.
This song was written for those in-between places.
For the moments when the road ahead feels uncertain, when the future cannot fully be seen, and when we are asked to keep walking anyway. Faith is not always loud confidence. Sometimes it is simply taking the next step while carrying questions we cannot yet answer.
Between the Earth and Sky is about learning that even in the waiting, even in the silence, God is still present. Still guiding. Still working beyond what our eyes can see.
On a Scale of One to God
Scripture
“Is any thing too hard for the Lord?”
- Genesis 18:14
Reflection
There are moments when the problems we carry feel impossibly large. Fear grows louder than faith. Anxiety convinces us that what stands in front of us is greater than what stands beside us.
On a Scale of One to God was written from that place of perspective shifting - the realization that even the heaviest burdens, the deepest grief, the hardest battles, and the most impossible situations are still held in the hands of a God far greater than them all.
This song is not about pretending life is easy. It is about remembering that our struggles are not bigger than God’s power, mercy, or presence.
Sometimes faith begins with a simple question:
If God is greater than all things… then why do we keep measuring our problems against ourselves instead of against Him?
This song is a reminder to lift our eyes higher.
Only a Fool
Scripture
“The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.”
- Psalm 14:1
Reflection
Only a Fool was written from the place where doubt, pride, pain, and disbelief collide. It is a song about the tension between wanting to believe and choosing to turn away. About the quiet emptiness that can grow when the heart closes itself off from God.
For some, faith feels natural. For others, belief becomes a struggle shaped by disappointment, suffering, unanswered questions, or the desire to stand entirely on their own understanding. This song does not ignore those struggles - it walks directly into them.
But beneath the wrestle is another question:
What happens when the soul keeps searching for meaning while refusing the possibility of the One who created it?
Only a Fool is ultimately less about condemnation and more about invitation. A reminder that even in moments of doubt, anger, or wandering, the light of God still reaches toward us. Grace is not frightened by questions, and mercy does not disappear simply because faith feels far away.
Sometimes the first step toward truth begins by admitting we cannot carry the weight of the world alone.
Faith Over Fear
Scripture
“For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind.”
- 2 Timothy 1:7
Reflection
Fear has a way of making the world feel smaller. It whispers worst-case scenarios into quiet moments and convinces us to stay still when we were meant to keep moving forward.
Faith Over Fear was written as a reminder that courage is not the absence of fear - it is the decision to trust God in the middle of it.
There are seasons when uncertainty feels overwhelming, when prayers seem unanswered, and when the future appears hidden behind shadows we cannot see through. In those moments, faith becomes an act of surrender. Not pretending everything is easy, but believing that God walks with us even when the road feels uncertain.
This song is for anyone learning to take the next step despite fear. For anyone trying to choose trust over anxiety, hope over despair, and peace over panic.
Sometimes faith is simply lifting your eyes long enough to remember you were never walking alone.
Hardest One to Forgive
Scripture
“And be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ's sake hath forgiven you.”
- Ephesians 4:32
Reflection
Forgiveness is often spoken about as though it is simple. But some wounds settle deep into the heart, and healing them can feel like carrying broken glass in your hands. Sometimes the hardest person to forgive is the one staring back at us in the mirror.
Hardest One to Forgive was written for the moments when regret, shame, disappointment, and old mistakes become difficult to release. For the nights spent replaying failures and wishing we could rewrite parts of our story.
But grace was never meant only for other people.
God’s mercy reaches into the places we struggle to love in ourselves. Into the memories we wish we could erase. Into the parts of our lives that still ache. Forgiveness does not always happen all at once. Sometimes it comes slowly, one prayer, one step, one surrendered burden at a time.
This song is a reminder that healing begins when we finally believe that the grace we so freely hope exists for others may also exist for us.
Meet Me in the Middle
Scripture
“Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”
- Matthew 11:28
Reflection
There are seasons in life when the journey feels longer than we expected. The road grows steep, our strength wears thin, and we begin wondering whether we can keep going at all.
Meet Me in the Middle was written for those moments of exhaustion - the places where pride fades, certainty weakens, and all that remains is the quiet hope that God will meet us somewhere along the way.
This song is about surrender in the middle of the climb. About reaching upward even when our hands are trembling. About discovering that grace often appears before we ever make it to the end of the road.
We are not asked to carry every burden alone. Sometimes faith looks less like standing strong and more like accepting the hand extended toward us.
Even in our weariness, God still meets us with compassion, mercy, and rest.
Grace Travels Well
Scripture
“Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamour, and evil speaking, be put away from you, with all malice: And be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted…”
- Ephesians 4:31–32
Reflection
Life moves quickly. Roads grow crowded, tempers rise easily, and it becomes simple to forget that every person we pass is carrying burdens we cannot see.
Grace Travels Well was written from the small ordinary moments where patience is tested - in traffic, in frustration, in interruptions, and in the daily choices between anger and compassion. Sometimes the greatest acts of faith are not found in dramatic moments, but in the quiet decision to respond gently when the world encourages harshness.
This song is a reminder that grace was never meant to stay still. It moves with us into everyday life. Into conversations, conflicts, disappointments, and rushed moments where kindness feels inconvenient.
The way we treat one another matters. A little patience can change the direction of someone’s entire day. A little mercy can soften a heart we know nothing about.
Grace travels farther than we often realize.
I Have Enough
Scripture
“...for I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content.
I know both how to be abased, and I know how to abound...”
- Philippians 4:11–12
Reflection
The world constantly tells us that we need more. More success. More possessions. More approval. More proof that we are enough. It becomes easy to spend our lives chasing things that never truly satisfy the ache inside us.
I Have Enough was written as a quiet response to that endless striving.
This song is about learning to recognize the blessings already surrounding us - the people we love, the grace we have been given, the ordinary moments that hold more beauty than we often notice. Contentment does not mean life is perfect. It means understanding that peace is not always found in having everything we want, but in realizing how much we already hold.
There is freedom in stepping away from comparison. Freedom in gratitude. Freedom in trusting that our worth is not measured by accumulation, achievement, or status.
Sometimes the richest moments in life are the simplest ones. And sometimes the soul finally rests when it stops asking for more long enough to whisper:
I have enough.
I Don’t Want “I Never Knew You”
Scripture
“And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from me...”
- Matthew 7:23
Reflection
Few words in scripture feel more sobering than “I never knew you.” They cut past appearances, past performance, and into the condition of the heart itself.
I Don’t Want “I Never Knew You” was written from a place of spiritual self-examination. It is a song about the difference between knowing about God and truly walking with Him. About the quiet fear of living outwardly religious while inwardly remaining distant from the One we claim to follow.
This song wrestles with questions many believers carry silently:
Is my faith real?
Do I truly know Him?
Am I surrendering my life, or only speaking the language of belief?
But beneath the weight of those questions is also hope.
God does not call us into perfection before relationship. He calls us into honesty, humility, repentance, and closeness with Him. The desire to be known by God is itself evidence of a heart reaching toward Him.
This song is ultimately a prayer - not of fear alone, but of longing. A longing to walk faithfully, love deeply, and remain near to the presence of God rather than simply near the appearance of faith.
Last Page of the Story
Scripture “He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away.” - Revelation 21:4
Reflection Last Page of the Story was written from the belief that the ending has already been written.
The world can feel heavy with fear, grief, conflict, and uncertainty. There are moments when darkness appears to be winning, when hope feels fragile, and when the future seems difficult to imagine clearly. But this song is rooted in the promise that the final outcome does not belong to fear, suffering, or evil.
It belongs to God.
This song is about holding onto the hope that when the final battle comes, God will ultimately triumph, light will overcome darkness, and redemption will have the final word. The story does not end in despair. It ends in restoration, peace, and the fulfillment of every promise God has made.
Faith does not erase the struggles of this life, but it reminds us that the ending is already known by the Author who still holds every page in His hands.
Sometimes hope is found in remembering that no matter how difficult the chapter may feel today, the last page of the story still belongs to God.