Dr. Scott Stanley offers couples practical advice on establishing patterns of healthy conflict in their marriage.
Marriage
Culture says that chemistry and compatibility are keys to an enjoyable marriage, but character and commitment are really the essential qualities.
We will all blow it sometimes. But if you really strive to limit your reckless words, you will create a climate that fosters openness and closeness in your marriage.
Differences can be part of what draws two people together, but the ways couples handle conflict are strongly related to how they will do in the future.
Only you know the best relational investments for your marriages. Thriving couples proactively invest in each other and in their marriages.
Choosing to invest in your marriage helps to strengthen the lifelong commitment that is foundational to your relationship.
The great commandment teaches that self-care is not selfish — it’s actually foundational to a healthy marriage.
The great commandment teaches that self-care is not selfish — it’s actually foundational to a healthy marriage.
Authors Greg and Erin Smalley offer couples practical tips on improving communication in their marriage.
By developing a healthy pattern of coping with stress and change, you’ll be more likely to deal with issues as a married couple.
In John 5, Jesus heals a crippled man and then tells him to pick up his mat and walk. Can our “mats” help us be grateful to and dependent on God—even in marriage?
Print this out and take it on your date!
Working together as a couple to conquer back-to-school stress.
Francis Chan discusses how having a marriage focused on a mission will require commitment and sacrifice, asking couples if their view of the future is big enough.
Thanks to Boundless.com a young couple discovers online inspiration to help guide their relationship.
In this first article of Shaunti Feldhahn’s three-part series, she shares how believing the best about your spouse, even when you’re hurt, makes for a happier marriage.
In this third article of a three-part series, Shaunti Feldhahn explains how doing the “little things” that matter to your spouse can make for a happier marriage.
While reconciliation is God’s desire for struggling couples, there are all sorts of situations that can bring a marriage to the crisis point. Dr. Gary Chapman offers hope and help for the separated.
What if reconciliation proves to be impossible and divorce is inevitable? Dr. Gary Chapman offers hope to individuals starting again on their own.
Print this out and take it on your date!


















