Would She Walk Out on Her Marriage?
Troy and Sara Groves once said divorce was not an option. But they didn’t anticipate the struggles they’d face with weaknesses, expectations, and bitterness.
Troy and Sara Groves once said divorce was not an option. But they didn’t anticipate the struggles they’d face with weaknesses, expectations, and bitterness.
The gospel liberates us from the mindset that sex is intrinsic to human fulfillment.
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.
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.
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.
In a weary and wavering land, your home can be a place of love, encouragement, and comfort.
You have strengths your husband doesn’t have. It takes a bit of wisdom and skill to help in a harmonious, nonthreatening way.
We need to be grandparents who focus on what matters, on what lasts.
In the minds of most teenagers, there is no universal standard for sexual morality of absolutes beyond a person’s own view as to what makes sexual activity right or wrong.
Even when we see no visible evidence, we can trust that God is at work.
As a grandparent, do you realize you are second only to the parents in your potential to impact your grandchildren spiritually?
At the Atlanta Mission, men are learning from the Stepping Up video series that the first step to transformation is a willingness to change.
Looking back at how God used an unlikely person to help start FamilyLife.
In a culture of counterfeits and mistruths, marriage needs to be re-branded as an awesome, noble, and challenging adventure.
A husband and wife often begin drifting apart so slowly that they hardly recognize it’s happening.
Your love for your child should define your relationship—just as God’s love defines His relationship with us as His children.