Our greatest need is not to be loved, but to learn how to love one another. Gary Thomas explains we need to learn how to spread His love to others, starting with our spouses.
Our greatest need is not to be loved, but to learn how to love one another. Gary Thomas explains we need to learn how to spread His love to others, starting with our spouses.
A good marriage isn’t about finding the right person, it’s about building into the spouse you already have. Gary Thomas shares three pillars to building your marriage to last a lifetime.
President of Walk Thru the Bible, Chip Ingram; author Bob DeMoss; and renowned pastor and author John Piper talk about the influence media has on our culture and on us as individuals.
If you’re willing to wade into the deep waters, God will help you put the pieces of your broken relationship back together. You can survive—and even thrive.
Dave and Ann Wilson talk about how unresolved conflict builds bigger walls within a marriage, and they share the most important key for building stronger relationships.
Dave and Ann Wilson relive the details of a particular story of conflict from their marriage. They explain how they resolved it, and how it brought them closer to one another.
Conflict in marriage is neither good nor bad. Dave and Ann Wilson say it can even improve your relationship when it is resolved constructively.
Author and blogger Sheila Wray Gregoire shares what she’s learned about conflict resolution in over 20 years of marriage.
Sheila Gregoire, author of “9 Thoughts That Can Change Your Marriage,” reflects on her early years of marriage. After she decided to change her way of thinking, her marriage began to improve.
Doug Sherman, founder of Career Impact Ministries; author Patti Sprinkle;and Ray Miller, a business consultant and founder of Track 3, talk to parents about teaching your kids to work.
Corwin Anthony of Athletes in Action talks about encouraging and spiritually supporting players in the NFL.
Raised in Ukraine by her abusive mother, Diana Prykhodko fled to the streets of Kiev when she was just 9 years old. Through a series of God-orchestrated events, Diana was adopted into an American family.
Instead of focusing on treating the symptoms, identify the underlying “disease” in your marriage with these six suggestions.
Five issues that warrant outside intervention.
Trusting my husband was not an option, but I wondered if I could trust God.
What will your daughters remember as your best advice to them? Join Barbara Rainey as she shares wisdom from letters she wrote to her daughters.
It was one of the biggest conflicts of our marriage. And as I sat there full of anger and self-righteousness, I knew that I hadn’t handled it correctly.
Barbara Rainey encourages young women in their roles as wives and mothers and shares the need for older women to pass down wisdom to the next generation.