
MARRIAGE DEVOTIONAL: SEASONS OF STRESS
A change of season can be hard on your marriage. Here's your secret to growing closer to your spouse during seasons of stress.
A change of season can be hard on your marriage. Here's your secret to growing closer to your spouse during seasons of stress.
Hosted by Jim Daly, President and CEO of Focus on the Family, this half-hour program is the cornerstone of Focus on the Family's home-strengthening outreach. Focus on the Family provides biblically-based advice for marriage and parenting with heart-touching stories and help for families.
Hosted by Jim Daly, President and CEO of Focus on the Family, this half-hour program is the cornerstone of Focus on the Family's home-strengthening outreach. Focus on the Family provides biblically-based advice for marriage and parenting with heart-touching stories and help for families.
At birth, his parents told him he wouldn’t make it through the night, and now he’s a medical doctor. Hear one family’s amazing story of overcoming the obstacles of living with Cerebral palsy and how God brought them through it.
At birth, his parents told him he wouldn’t make it through the night, and now he’s a medical doctor. Hear one family’s amazing story of overcoming the obstacles of living with Cerebral palsy and how God brought them through it.
Disagreements are a part of life, especially married life. But how can you use conflict to actually achieve deeper intimacy with your spouse? Marriage experts Les Leslie Parrott describe how you can share your feelings without ending up in a shouting match.
Talking to your son about puberty can feel overwhelming. Yet, you can support, encourage, and love your son with this important knowledge.
Dr. John Gottman and his researchers can predict with almost 95-percent accuracy whether a couple’s marriage will succeed or fail. Their predictions are based on how couples fight – not how frequently or even the content of their disagreements – but how couples actually engage in conflict. They discovered four elements to conflict – which Dr. Gottman calls “The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse” – that are destructive to a relationship: Criticism Defensiveness Contempt Stonewalling If the Four Horseman mean certain destruction, how can couples avoid them?