Note: This article is intended to support and encourage parents of adult children only.
Ages 9-12 (Preteen/Tween)
Have you ever noticed how societal trends can influence the personal identities of an entire generation?
Do you confront your kids when they’re not thinking clearly? Sometimes they will need you to intervene and help them deal with issues.
Navigating the delicate balance between keeping your kids safe and respecting their growing need for independence isn’t always easy, especially in today’s digital world.
Help protect your children from online sexual predators.
Fathers have the awesome responsibility of laying a spiritual foundation in the home. But what does that mean, exactly? How can you be the dad your family needs?
Dads matter. So how can you make a lasting difference in your children’s lives?
Teens need these spiritual insights from their parents, now more than ever.
The purpose for having a phone contract is to make sure everyone in the family is on the same page and in agreement with cell phone expectations. The goals are to encourage relationship, conversation, and responsibility with and without devices.
These six steps can help you to build self-confidence and a positive self-image in your children.
The world regularly teaches us ways to consume in our relationships rather than contributing to them. How, then, can we teach our kids to become contributors rather than consumers?
Your kids will grow to be more healthy and resilient as you start parenting with a clear understanding of what your real job is.
When the countdown to Christmas starts, some kids excitedly open the numbered doors of Advent calendars as they await the celebration of Jesus’ birth.
Will you take the challenge to stop grumbling for a year? Tricia Goyer’s family did.
The Bible tells us to live with an attitude of gratitude, and research tells us that gratitude has a positive impact on our minds and social behaviors. Here are five ways to teach kids gratitude in your home.
The following excerpt is from “Parenting Gen Z: Guiding Your Child Through a Hostile Culture”
Teaching boys to embrace, and name their emotions, is an important part of raising godly young men.
Witchcraft is a difficult subject to broach in Christian circles. Many people are so uncomfortable with it, they don’t even want to discuss it, and don’t believe it is real.
You never know how talking about war might unlock a different view or perspective for both you and your kids.
To be human is to be gendered — male or female. And one of the most important jobs of a parent is to help their children develop as healthy boys or girls and into strong, confident men and women.



















