Spiritual Development - FamilyLife® Family and Marriage, Help and Hope for Marriages and Families Tue, 21 Nov 2023 10:15:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.2 https://www.familylife.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/51/2018/09/Favicon-Icon_32x32.png Spiritual Development - FamilyLife® 32 32 Parenting for Faith that Goes the Distance: Dr. Collin Outerbridge https://www.familylife.com/podcast/familylife-today/parenting-for-faith-that-goes-the-distance-dr-collin-outerbridge/ Tue, 21 Nov 2023 10:15:00 +0000 https://www.familylife.com/?post_type=wpfc_sermon&p=164208

What can you do right now to parent kids toward faith that lasts a lifetime? Dr. Collin Outerbridge shares research and practical strategies.

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What can you do right now to parent kids toward faith that lasts a lifetime? Dr. Collin Outerbridge shares research and practical strategies.

Show Notes and Resources

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Find out more about Collin Outerbridge at nonachurch.com/pastor at check out his podcast 
Dive more into hoow digital screens influence us.. 
Every Donation Makes and Impact| Make Twice as Much Impact with Your Gift
Find resources from this podcast at shop.familylife.com.
See resources from our past podcasts.
Find more content and resources on the FamilyLife’s app!
Help others find FamilyLife. Leave a review on Apple Podcast or Spotify.
Check out all the FamilyLife’s podcasts on the FamilyLife Podcast Network

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Raising Kids Who Keep the Faith: Dr. Collin Outerbridge https://www.familylife.com/podcast/familylife-today/raising-kids-who-keep-the-faith-dr-collin-outerbridge/ Mon, 20 Nov 2023 10:15:00 +0000 https://www.familylife.com/?post_type=wpfc_sermon&p=164165

What can parents do to shape a faith that sticks with our kids? Dr. Collin Outerbridge offers practical ideas from extensive research.

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With the tidal waves of influence surrounding Gen Z, what can parents do to shape a faith that sticks with our kids? Dr. Collin Outerbridge offers practical ideas from extensive research.
Show Notes and Resources

BLACK FRIDAY SALE: Weekend to Remember gift cards are now 50%
Find out more about Collin Outerbridge at nonachurch.com/pastor at check out his podcast
Here is Colin’s series: Kids These Days on YouTube.
Dive more into hoow digital screens influence us..
Every Donation Makes and Impact| Make Twice as Much Impact with Your Gift
Find resources from this podcast at shop.familylife.com.
See resources from our past podcasts.
Find more content and resources on the FamilyLife’s app!
Help others find FamilyLife. Leave a review on Apple Podcast or Spotify.
Check out all the FamilyLife’s podcasts on the FamilyLife Podcast Network

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Is Your Christian Kid Ready for College? Jeff Myers https://www.familylife.com/podcast/familylife-today/is-your-christian-kid-ready-for-college-jeff-myers/ Tue, 14 Nov 2023 10:15:00 +0000 https://www.familylife.com/?post_type=wpfc_sermon&p=163888

Summit Ministries President Jeff Myers helps you navigate the challenges, combat anxiety, and advocating for truth as you send a Christian kid to college.

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Sending your Christian kid to college can flood you with emotion—and perhaps no small degree of fear. Author and Summit Ministries President Jeff Myers helps you navigate the challenges, combat anxiety, and advocating for truth that transforms the world in times of crisis.

Show Notes and Resources

Find out more about Jeff’s ministry at summit.org
Learn more about Summit Basecamp; Speak with clarity and wisdom on the important issues facing Christians today
Purchase Jeff’s book: Truth Changes Everything 
Find resources from this podcast at shop.familylife.com.
See resources from our past podcasts.
Find more content and resources on the FamilyLife’s app!
Help others find FamilyLife. Leave a review on Apple Podcast or Spotify.
Check out all the FamilyLife podcasts on the FamilyLife Podcast Network

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When Kids Ask Hard Questions: Jeff Myers https://www.familylife.com/podcast/familylife-today/when-kids-ask-hard-questions-jeff-myers/ Mon, 13 Nov 2023 10:15:00 +0000 https://www.familylife.com/?post_type=wpfc_sermon&p=163844

Author and Summit Ministries president Jeff Myers helps parents set the stage for authentic faith when kids ask tough questions.

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When kids pose tough questions about a complex world—what’s it look like to parent well? Author and Summit Ministries president Jeff Myers helps parents set the stage for authentic faith that goes the distance.

Show Notes and Resources

Find out more about Jeff’s ministry at summit.org
Learn more about Summit Basecamp; Speak with clarity and wisdom on the important issues facing Christians today
Purchase Jeff’s book: Truth Changes Everything 
Find resources from this podcast at shop.familylife.com.
See resources from our past podcasts.
Find more content and resources on the FamilyLife’s app!
Help others find FamilyLife. Leave a review on Apple Podcast or Spotify.
Check out all the FamilyLife podcasts on the FamilyLife Podcast Network

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The Power of Praying Together: Paul Miller https://www.familylife.com/podcast/familylife-today/the-power-of-praying-together-paul-miller/ Tue, 17 Oct 2023 09:15:00 +0000 https://www.familylife.com/?post_type=wpfc_sermon&p=161277

Could you create a culture of prayer in your family? Bestselling author Paul Miller gets passionate about the power of praying together.

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Could you create a culture of prayer in your family—with an impact on generations? Bestselling author Paul Miller gets passionate about the power of praying together. Get inspired to reconnect with a God bigger than our expectations.

Show Notes and Resources

Connect with Paul Miller at seejesus.net or on Instagram @seeingjesus
Get Paul’s book, A Praying Church
Take a prayer course by Paul Miller
Check out more episodes from Paul Miller 
Find resources from this podcast at shop.familylife.com.
See resources from our past podcasts.
Find more content and resources on the FamilyLife’s app!
Help others find FamilyLife. Leave a review on Apple Podcast or Spotify.
Check out all the FamilyLife podcasts on the FamilyLife Podcast Network

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How do I Teach My Kids God’s Ideas on Marriage? Sam Allberry https://www.familylife.com/podcast/familylife-today/how-do-i-teach-my-kids-gods-ideas-on-marriage-sam-allberry/ Mon, 18 Sep 2023 09:15:00 +0000 https://d1ueb8h0efn28g.cloudfront.net/?post_type=wpfc_sermon&p=158437

Author and pastor Sam Allberry knows parents need key discussions with kids about the ways God's design and ideas for marriage get it right.

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If you’re starting to talk to your kids about God’s design for marriage when they’re preteens or teens—you might be too late. Author and pastor Sam Allberry knows parents need key discussions with kids about the ways God’s ideas for marriage get it right—and he’s authored a children’s book to generate the conversations you need.
If marriage points to Christ and the church, then maybe anniversaries are more significant than weddings. Because anyone can make a promise, but not everyone keeps a promise. And it’s the keeping of the promise that really points to the faithfulness of Christ to His people. — Sam Allberry
Show Notes and Resources

Connect with Sam Allberry at samallberry.com or on Instagram @samallberry
Revitalize your marriage: 50% off Weekend to Remember Getaways, Sep 4-18! Strengthen bonds, create lasting memories. Learn more at weekendtoremember.com
Buy Sam’s book , God’s Signpost: How Marriage Points Us to God’s Love
Discover more resources by Sam Allberry 
Intrigued by today’s episode? Hear another episode of Sam Allberry on FamilyLife Today, asking the question, Is God Anti-Gay?
Find resources from this podcast at shop.familylife.com.
See resources from our past podcasts.
Find more content and resources on the FamilyLife’s app!
Help others find FamilyLife. Leave a review on Apple Podcast or Spotify.
Check out all the FamilyLife podcasts on the FamilyLife Podcast Network

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How To Help Your Kids Find God’s Peace https://www.familylife.com/articles/topics/parenting/foundations/spiritual-development/how-to-help-your-kids-find-gods-peace/ Tue, 28 Mar 2023 15:31:27 +0000 https://www.familylife.com/?p=146919

Do we have to be perfect parents if we want our kids to find God’s peace in this life? Hardly! But we do need to point them to the One who is perfect.

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Our kids live in a crazy world. The news offers a constant stream of war, devastation, and disease. Social media paints unrealistic pictures of life and friendships. The demands of academics, sports, and clubs pile up. It’s no surprise that anxiety and depression are rising among children and teenagers.[1]

Feeling overwhelmed is often par for the course for kids.

As parents, how can we help our children find peace? More specifically, how can we teach our kids not only about God’s peace, but also how to experience that peace in their day-to-day lives? In our own journey of parenting (and after spending a couple of years writing a book about peace), my husband and I have found three meaningful ways to help our children live in the peace Jesus offers.

1. Clarify and reinforce your child’s identity in Christ (and in your family).

All the daily pressures our children face can cause them to wonder: Where do I fit in? Who am I? Am I loved? Do I have value and worth apart from what I can produce or prove?

A huge part of helping our kids walk in peace is to start by affirming—and consistently reaffirming—their identity in Christ. We need to tell them they are valuable because they were created and are loved by the Lord of heaven and earth (Psalm 139). We also need to tell them they are always loved by us, too, and our love for them and their place in our family doesn’t change, even when their circumstances do.

When our children were tiny, we started telling them: “God loves you, and I do too. I love you always and forever and no matter what!” It’s a refrain they’ve heard thousands of times. No matter what mistakes they make and no matter how they fail, I want them to remember they are loved by God and by their parents and they will find a safe place in our home.

For our kids to walk in peace, they need to know they are loved and wanted in our family. They need to know their identity is secure. Just as we need to be reminded of our ultimate identity in Christ apart from our work or performance, our kids need the same.

Gather tools for robust parenting that echoes for generations with the Art of Parenting.

2. Lead by example.

Our kids are swimming in the emotional waters of our homes, and sometimes, the anxiety they’re feeling is coming from … us. If we’re constantly talking about how stressed out, worried, or overwhelmed we are—and if we’re snapping at our kids or responding to them in fear—they’re going to digest that stress.

Additionally, if we talk about looking for peace primarily through making more money, taking vacations, or buying a bigger house, we’re communicating that peace comes through our situations or possessions.

Does that mean we have to be perfect parents if we want our kids to walk in peace? Hardly! But we do need to point them to the One who is perfect. Because true peace—the kind of peace that can’t be taken away—comes from only one source: Jesus Christ.

Vacations aren’t bad, and smoother circumstances are a gift! But if we want our children to live with a peace that isn’t shaken by circumstances or trials, we need to point them to a relationship with the unchanging King (Hebrews 13:8). Jesus alone is the One who can meet the soul-deep need our children have for ultimate security, trust, and steadfastness.

So how do we lead by example and become peaceful parents? We spend time with the Prince of Peace Himself through things like consistently reading the Bible and attending a gospel-centered church. As we grow in our own relationship with the Lord, we can show our kids we seek Him when life is stressful or overwhelming. We point them to the clear path for finding true peace in the only Person who will never let them down.

3. Rely on biblical truth.

The Bible declares this wonderful truth: “Great peace have those who love your law” (Psalm 119:165). When we love God’s Word and spend time in His Word, we will experience more peace.

This is true for our kids, too. You can offer your children a practical way to fight anxiety and fear with biblical truth. Write Scripture verses on their mirrors in dry-erase marker. Jot down a verse or two on index cards they can tuck into their lockers or backpacks. Verses like Philippians 4:6-7, John 14:27, and 1 John 4:9-10 are wonderful verses to keep close.

Consider playing worship music in the car when you’re together or in the background at home. Talk about their day, offer them intentional time, and consistently reaffirm they are loved by the Lord and by you. And don’t dismiss Christian counseling. It can be a huge gift for kids (and parents!) who need more support.

Finding peace in Christ

The culture tells our kids peace comes from easy circumstances and a sense of tranquility based on good grades, good looks, or cool friends. But Jesus is clear that more than a fleeting emotion, peace means being at rest—being content—exactly where you are because of who God is and because of your relationship with Him through Christ. As we point our children to Christ through solidifying their identity in Him, modeling how to trust Christ with our own stress, and relying on the Word of God, we are showing them true peace is possible in a crazy world.

[1] https://ccf.georgetown.edu/2022/03/24/research-update-childrens-anxiety-and-depression-on-the-rise/


Copyright © 2023 by Ann Swindell. All rights reserved.

Ann Swindell is the author of The Path to Peace: Experiencing God’s Comfort When You’re Overwhelmed (Bethany House). She is the owner of Writing with Grace and lives in West Michigan with her pastor husband and their two kids. You can connect with her online at AnnSwindell.com.


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How Can I Help My Kids Avoid a Crisis of Faith? https://www.familylife.com/articles/topics/parenting/foundations/spiritual-development/how-can-i-help-my-kids-avoid-a-crisis-of-faith/ Wed, 08 Mar 2023 20:16:03 +0000 https://www.familylife.com/?p=145963

If trends continue, by 2050, 35 million youth may undergo deconversion. How can we help prevent a crisis of faith in our kids?

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For Christian parents, one of our biggest fears is that our kids will renounce their faith. It’s hard to imagine anything more heartbreaking than a child walking away amidst a crisis of faith—one we hold intimately.

And yet for a growing number of parents, that fear is reality: children who have asked their small groups not to contact them, scoffed at a parent’s references to faith, and closed their Bibles in disgust for the last time.

Studies show that for every religious conversion, four others undergo a religious deconversion.[1] Nearly one-third of those deconverting are doing so before they turn 30 years old.[2] If this trend continues it will translate into 35 million youth by 2050 who once identified as Christians, raised in at least nominally Christian homes, who no longer follow Jesus.[3]

As disheartening as the statistics are, there is hope. Although no silver bullet will ensure our children will continue faithfully following Jesus, there are things we can do that—from a human perspective—increase the likelihood of enduring faith.

It might surprise you to know the biggest influence on whether a child remains a Christian later in life isn’t their friends, youth leader, or pastor. It’s … wait for it … their parents.[4]

What can parents do to increase the likelihood of their children following Jesus?

An Ancient Crisis of Faith

After listening to dozens of former Christians share their stories and reading hundreds of deconversion testimonies, I’ve become persuaded there are four things we can do as parents to help impart a lasting faith to our children. To frame those four, consider the parable of the Sower (see Matthew 13), where Jesus explains why some people accept His message and others don’t. In the story, a farmer spreads seeds on four different soils. Why did only one accept the seed, whereas the other three didn’t?

According to Jesus, the determining factor was the condition of the soil, the human heart, on which the seed fell. Only one of the three soils was what he called “good” and thus was able to receive the seed. The other soils were too hard, rocky, or filled with thorns for seed to take root.

Farmers are confined to the location of their farms. But they can condition their soil. How can parents hand their kids the best chance, humanly speaking, for hearts which will receive the Word?

1. Choose only the right seed.

Farmers know a successful harvest begins with planting good-quality seeds. And as we select our “seeds” as parents, it’s important to understand one of the most common reasons young people reject their faith. Many parents raise children in a tradition where the seed of basic Christianity and rigid fundamentalism are so tightly bound together the children can’t differentiate between them.

If these children reject the rigidity of their fundamentalist tradition, they also reject basic Christianity. They assume they’re the same.

We need to ensure the seed of faith we instill has a hard center of the essential truths of Christianity, but soft edges of second- and third-level doctrines that ought never to be raised to the level of non-negotiables.

For countless young people, it’s hard enough to continue to affirm the core tenets of the historic Christian faith amid an increasingly hostile culture. And requiring them to also affirm particular positions on nonessential doctrines forms a recipe for disaster.

Am I saying that the second- and third-level beliefs don’t matter? Not at all! But those remain secondary. When they aren’t, the house of faith becomes inflexible and fragile, like a house of cards. Pull out one, and the entire house collapses—and there’s a crisis of faith on your hands.

Gather tools for robust parenting that echoes for generations with the Art of Parenting.

2. Prepare the soil.

Farmers prepare soil for planting by removing rocks and weeds that would hinder seed from setting roots that sustain a plant in adverse conditions. When it comes to deconversion, unmet expectations often prevent good seeds from taking deep root.

Once, early in our marriage, I questioned my wife Nancy’s love for me because she didn’t pack me a lunch for a three-hour drive I was going on. Why? Despite her never telling me she’d make a lunch, when she didn’t—like my mom used to do for my dad—I was at a loss to understand. (I was a jerk.)

When others fail to meet our unstated expectations, disappointment is inevitable—sometimes to the point it can do serious relational damage. For many in a crisis of faith, God didn’t meet their expectations: for a spouse, healing, a child, or a job they deeply desire. They came to believe that God did them wrong.

But God has never promised many of the things we expect.

As parents, we must instill appropriate expectations and beliefs about God in our children’s hearts but also uproot unwarranted expectations.

God is good, and they can trust Him. But God’s goodness doesn’t translate into a pain-free life of material blessings. God will allow hardship, suffering, and pain to touch their lives. They’re likely to experience heartache and loss to such a degree that they might question God’s goodness or even existence.

When doubts creep in about God’s goodness in the face of life’s hardship, Jesus’ death for us proves God has our ultimate good in mind. Why else would He allow His Son to be publicly humiliated, tortured, and killed?

Children with healthy expectations about what it means for God to be good, and who look to Jesus on the cross, have a much better chance of enduring faith.  

3. Provide nutrients.

Whether nitrogen, phosphorus, or potassium, farmers provide nutrients at the right moments for lush growth. What’s the most important nutrient that the hearts of children need? A warm relationship with us.

In 2017, University of Southern California professor Vern Bengtson published a landmark study that followed 350 families over four decades to discover which families succeeded in passing faith to the next generation. His study revealed parents play the most significant role in faith transmission. And those who interact in a warm, affirming, and respectful manner in children’s formative years were more likely to pass on their faith than parents who were pious, but lacking emotional and relational warmth.

What does this look like? Being unconditionally supportive. Providing consistent religious role modeling. Raising, but not forcing, religious beliefs and practices on our children.[5]

A related nutrient stems from what psychologists refer to as CREDS, or Credibility Enhancing Displays. These are choices with a personal cost, motivated by faith commitments. Studies clearly show that when parents live their faith in ways that cost them something, it contributes to their children remaining Christ-followers: What mom and dad believe needs to be seriously considered given what they sacrifice.

Costly displays don’t have to be grandiose. They’re more likely to be those small choices we make daily. It’s loving football but choosing to go to church rather than watching the game. It’s sending money to a missionary or giving it to a charity instead of buying a coffee, even though you love coffee. It’s getting up early and reading your Bible when you could be sleeping. When children observe these displays, it enhances our credibility that Jesus is the way—and may short circuit a future crisis of faith.

4. Respond to threats.

Insects, disease, and drought can damage seeds to the point they’re unable to thrive. Insecticides, herbicides, and irrigation systems aren’t foolproof measures, but give the seed a fighting chance.

Philosophical objections, moral criticisms, and historical challenges to Christianity are more accessible and abundant than ever. Scores of former Christians attribute their loss of faith to information they stumbled upon online that challenged the truth of Christianity. The Internet has bloomed a thousand atheist apologists, damaging the faith of Christian young people.

Apologetics, like irrigation, isn’t a surefire answer to intellectual doubts. It can’t prove that Christianity is true, but it can show Christianity is reasonable to believe. Not all questions need to be answered to become or remain a Christian. But our children must know it’s okay to have questions and ask them. Certainty, not doubt, is the opposite of faith. Nor is faith a blind leap in the dark. Instead, faith is acting on the hope that you have sufficient reason to believe it is true (Hebrews 11:1,6). Apologetics can help provide those reasons, diffusing intellectual threats to a growing faith.

A Crisis of Faith—or a Harvest of Righteousness

As parents and as the church, we’re raising our children in challenging times. Statistically, we’re on the cusp of potentially witnessing the single largest generational loss of souls in history—those raised in the church yet no longer calling themselves followers of Jesus.[6] While these critical measures won’t guarantee, they will set up children to hear, understand, and receive the gospel in a way that will endure.


Copyright © 2023 by John Marriott. All rights reserved.

Dr. John Marriott is the Director of the Biola University Center for Christian Thought. He teaches in the Philosophy department at Biola and teaches at Talbot School of Theology. John serves as a consulting editor for the theological journal, Sacrum Testamentum, and acts as the Director of Cultural Engagement for the Renaissance Group. Learn more at www.johnmarriott.org, and visit www.losingmyfaith.org for more resources.

 

[1] https://www.pewresearch.org/religion/2015/05/12/americas-changing-religious-landscape/

[2] https://www.pewresearch.org/religion/2022/09/13/modeling-the-future-of-religion-in-america/

[3] “The Great Opportunity: The American Church in 2050” https://www.thegreatopportunity.org

[4] Vern Bengtson, Families and Faith: How Religion is Passed Down Across Generations. (Oxford University Press, 2017).

[5] Vern Bengtson, Families and Faith.

[6] The Great Opportunity, pg.9

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David Eaton: Phones for Teens: How to Deal https://www.familylife.com/podcast/familylife-today/david-eaton-phones-for-teens-how-to-deal/ Fri, 14 Oct 2022 09:00:00 +0000 https://www.familylife.com/?post_type=wpfc_sermon&p=136846

The drawbacks and dangers of phones for teens can feel intimidating. Author David Eaton offers tips to turn teen's phones from a liability to an asset.

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David Eaton: How to Love Your Teenager https://www.familylife.com/podcast/familylife-today/david-eaton-how-to-love-your-teenager/ Thu, 13 Oct 2022 09:00:00 +0000 https://www.familylife.com/?post_type=wpfc_sermon&p=136667

Overreacting with your teen? Author David Eaton knows the anger is real and stakes are high. Grab ideas on how to love your teenager even when they blow it.

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Overreacting with your teen? Author David Eaton knows the anger is real and stakes are high. Grab ideas on how to love your teenager even when they blow it.
Show Notes and Resources

Check out David Eaton’s Ministry, Axis to get the latest tools for your child’s teen years
Find resources from this podcast at shop.familylife.com.
Find more content and resources on the FamilyLife’s app!
Help others find FamilyLife. Leave a review on Apple Podcast or Spotify.
Check out all the FamilyLife podcasts on the FamilyLife Podcast Network

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