Happily Married? A 10-Step Relationship Assessment
It’s been a tough year on marriages. But make no mistake: happily married isn’t the same as easily married.
It’s been a tough year on marriages. But make no mistake: happily married isn’t the same as easily married.
Dr. Juli Slattery says that a husband has three needs: respect, companionship, and sex. She also says that by God’s design, a wife has power to meet these three needs in her husband.
As Christian parents, we desire to raise our children to become kids of faith. Filmmaker and actor Alex Kendrick gives us five helpful things to help parents foster an environment for that to happen.
You want to marry your best friend—someone you’d have fun with whether traveling the world or washing your car. But how can you be single and content?
Bob Lepine asserts that gospel unity should always be more important and more powerful than whatever our disagreements are about. Bob reminds believers of the importance of humility, civility, and unity.
Bob Lepine poses this question: How would Jesus want us to represent Him when we talk about politics? According to the Bible, what we agree about Jesus should bind us tighter than our politics should divide us.
Bob Lepine shares in a sermon that there is no guarantee that the gates of hell will not prevail against a nation. But there is a promise from Jesus that the gates of hell will not prevail against His church.
Does God have instructions for grandparents? Mary Larmoyeux, Nancy Downing, Josh Mulvihill, and Anne Dierks share scriptural examples and practical tips for being godly, intentional grandparents.
Dr. John Perkins saw and endured horrific racism. But God convicted him of his own hateful reaction and inclined his heart toward racial reconciliation through the gospel. Listen to his conversation with Kim Anthony.
Jasmine Holmes wants her son to understand he is made in the image of God, to understand the beauty of diversity, and to be a hopeful optimist centered on the gospel of Christ.
Jasmine Holmes knows what strong parenting looks like. But that didn’t shield her from the pain of casual prejudice growing up. Now a young mom, she shows her son he is “fearfully and wonderfully made.”
Tired of self-focused, consumer-centric faith? Turn away from “me-ology,” says Jen Oshman, and learn the powerful theology of saying, “Enough about me!”
Jen Oshman speaks to women about issues of identity and self-image. Discovering who we are and whose we are, says Oshman, is the key.
Do you have a child with special needs? Ginny Owens, Jennifer Shaw, Paul MIller, Sarah Parshall Perry, and Amy Julia Becker share stories of faith, joy, and hardship unique to parenting special children.
Every extended family has in it people who are far from God. But it’s never too late, says Nancy Guthrie, for God to reach the most self-righteous or the most cynical and hard-hearted.
Does political polarization—that ever-increasing gap between political convictions—fill your family conversations with relational razor blades?
Adam Davis, former police officer and author of the book Behind the Badge, shares how he feels the weight of responsibility to God, as a law enforcement officer.
Anger issues make our homes feel like an emotional battlefield. But with planting and perseverance, we may discover the field we’re on is actually a garden.