Your Gift DOUBLES to Launch Our First Animated Feature Film!

The first-ever Adventures in Odyssey animated feature film, Journey into the Impossible,
is officially in production! Will you help bring this powerful story to theaters nationwide? Every dollar you give will be DOUBLED through a $1 million match opportunity — helping reach a new generation with the Gospel.

Choose the amount you’d like to see doubled:

$
Please enter a valid amount

Your Gift DOUBLES to Launch Our First Animated Feature Film!

Will you help bring Journey into the Impossible to theaters nationwide? Every dollar you give will be DOUBLED through a $1 million match opportunity.

Your Gift DOUBLES to Launch Our First Animated Feature Film!

Our first-ever animated feature film is in production! Give now and your gift will be DOUBLED through a $1 million match to help bring this Gospel-centered story to theaters nationwide.

$
Please enter a valid amount

Your Gift DOUBLES to Launch Our First Animated Feature Film!

Your gift today will go 2X as far to help share the Gospel!

Search

Getting Along With Your In-Laws

Share:
A photo of a young couple welcoming their in-laws to their house. Getting along with your in-laws requires civility.
Getting along with your in-laws may not be easy, but these practical tips will help you make the best of it.

In This Series:


  • 1. In-Law Relationships



  • 2. Myths and Realities of Extended Families



  • 3. How Your Relationship with Your In-Laws Impacts Your Marriage


  • 4. Getting Along With Your In-Laws

  • 5. What if an In-Law Doesn’t Accept Me?



  • 6. What If an In-Law Tries to Run Our Lives?



  • 7. Cutting Your Spouse’s Apron Strings



  • 8. Holidays and the In-Laws



  • 9. Advice for an In-Law



  • 10. Dr. Bill Maier on In-Laws


Getting along with your in-laws requires a touch of civility. Consider the story of Stephanie, who complained, “My mother-in-law never approves of the way I do anything. The last time Joe and I visited her it happened again. Just trying to be nice and helpful, I washed all the pots and pans after dinner. No sooner had I finished than she washed them all over again!”

Stephanie is not a newlywed. She has been married to Joe for 15 years. That whole time, she and Joe’s mom have silently struggled with being civil to each other. When Joe’s mom comes to visit, Stephanie really tries to get the house clean and comfortable for her. But after arriving, her mother-in-law pulls out the cleaning supplies and spit shines the bathrooms and kitchen. Stephanie assumes she’s doing this because she thinks Stephanie is a slob and lives in filth.

After the last pots-and-pans fiasco, Stephanie spilled her frustrations to Joe’s older sister, Connie. “I know your mother hates me and thinks I’m a slob and a bad person. I can’t seem to do anything to please her.”

Connie replied, “Stephanie, it’s not about you. It’s about Mom’s compulsion to have everything spotless. I grew up with her. I know her. She was like this before you and Joe even met. When she rewashes the pots and pans, it’s not condemning you — it’s simply that she had different (and what most would consider absurd) standards of what is acceptably clean. Let it go. There are bigger hills to die on.”

While Stephanie couldn’t really forget it and totally let it go, she began to look at her mother-in-law in a different light. She began to look for ways to help that didn’t involve meeting her mother-in-law’s high standard of cleanliness — like running to the grocery store for milk or dropping off the dry cleaning and laundry. Stephanie will probably never have a close relationship with her mother-in-law, but these days they are much more civil to each other.

Civility Tips for Getting Along with Your In-Laws:

  • Be proactive. Do what you can to build the relationship.
  • Don’t compete with other family members.
  • Refocus your perspective by looking for the positive.
  • Accept reality.

As you keep civility a high priority in your extended family relationships, it becomes easier to focus on another effective way of dealing with anger and frustration — remaining calm. What 1 Corinthians 13 says about love can also be true for civility. This really works: Try reading the love passage and substituting the word civility or civil. If you can succeed in remaining civil, you also up your chances of remaining calm even when you are so upset you could just spit nails.

The ABCs of Getting Along with Your In-Laws

Adapted from Pier Forni, Choosing Civility: The Twenty-Five Rules of Considerate Conduct.

  • Smile. People respond better to those who are positive.
  • Be considerate. Ask yourself, “Is what I am about to say going to encourage and build up the other person, or tear him or her down?”
  • Practice restraint and don’t yell or raise your voice.
  • Have the courage to admit it when you are wrong. Avoid ridicule and don’t humiliate or demean the other person. You can express your anger without attacking the other person.
  • Accept kindness from others and let others be nice to you.
Share:

Read More About:

You May Also Like

Photo of an older married couple in a loving embrace, symbolizing that God's intention for marriage is never divorce.
Biblical Marriage

Divorce Was Never God’s Intention

Only one man and one woman existed in the beginning. For that very obvious reason, divorce and remarriage were not options in the divine plan for man.

Father and young son sitting together on couch and talking
Growing Your Faith Together

Why Does God Allow Evil?

While the problem of evil appears complicated, it’s certainly not a theological showstopper. Using Scripture mixed with a healthy dose of logic, you can adequately address your children’s concerns about why does God allow evil?

Easter 2022
Bible

Exploring Easter 2026

April is a special month where we remember the death and resurrection of Christ, a crucial moment in Christian history. For Easter 2026, explore the depth of the resurrection through