Dr. Meg Meeker asserts that kids mostly just want their mother’s time and attention, so moms should relax and leave the competition to others.
Dr. Meg Meeker asserts that kids mostly just want their mother’s time and attention, so moms should relax and leave the competition to others.
Dr. Meg Meeker encourages mothers to “jump off the train” of perfectionism and to simplify their lives by setting up boundaries and trusting their instincts.
Bruce Ware helps equip parents to teach their children about the Holy Spirit in terms that even boys and girls can understand.
When I’m in a hurry, I tend to plow over my children.
Bruce Ware encourages parents to use God’s wonderful creation and other everyday examples to give their children a sense of awe at the thought of God.
Bruce Ware urges parents to use the ordinary moments of life to introduce their children to God and grow disciples in the faith.
Karen Ehman encourages women to be realistic about how much time they have and to focus on the things that really matter.
Seeing the fruit of correcting your children requires delayed gratification.
Karen Ehman tells how astonished she was when she had her first child and realized that motherhood was actually hard.
If you could have a “do over” in life, what would you want to redo? Barbara Rainey and Karen Loritts comment on the hardest part of living out biblical womanhood in their own lives.
Barbara Rainey talks about the high and noble calling of being a wife. Barbara acknowledges that while marriage is sweet, it’s not easy, especially when dealing with differences.
What are you more focused on? Your husband’s faults or his virtues? Barbara Rainey, creator of Ever Thine Home®, talks to wives about being their husband’s biggest supporter.
Sarah Parshall Perry, who is raising two sons with autism, along with a daughter, tells how she’s learning to relinquish control to God even in the middle of an unpredictable, chaotic life.
Sarah Parshall Perry, a wife and mother of three, realized soon after getting married how much of a control freak she really was, and the effects of it on her marriage weren’t pretty.
There is no such thing as a superhero mother. Here’s how to stop trying to do it all and start learning to be you.
Truly excelling as a mom is not about showing our kids how amazing we are, but how much we need Jesus.
Looking back on my life, I have found one of the most helpful ways to gain perspective on your current situation is to see life in terms of seasons.
John Majors and Michelle Hill talk to parents about how, with God’s help, kids can do more than anyone ever expected them to.