Gary Chapman’s Must-Read Advice for Teen Parents
Bestselling author and counselor Gary Chapman offers wise tips to help you push through the insanity of raising teens—toward relational vitality.
Ann Wilson: I think the most sobering question I ever asked myself when my kids were teenagers is what if my children turned out to be like me in every area.
What if they drive a car the way I drive a car? What if they handle anger the way I handle anger? What if they treat their spouse eventually the way I treat my spouse? What if they treat their teenagers the way I treat them?
Ann Wilson: Welcome to Family Life Today, where we want to help you pursue the relationships that matter most. I'm Ann Wilson.
Dave Wilson: And I'm Dave Wilson, and you can find us at familylifetoday.com. This is Family Life Today.
Dave Wilson: So I'll never forget the day that you told me in the kitchen, this is 30 plus years ago, that I had an anger problem.
Ann Wilson: I remember that day.
Dave Wilson: That was a fun day. I mean, it was one of those moments where
Ann Wilson: where you didn't say, Thanks hon, for sharing that. I think maybe I do.
Dave Wilson: No, you know, I remember when you said, literally, I remember your words were, I don't want to bring anything up to you again, because you just blow up in anger.
In the moment, I didn't receive it, but the good thing about it is it forced me to go, do I have an anger problem? And the answer became, yes.
Ann Wilson: Well, you even went to God and asked that question.
Dave Wilson: Yeah, and then I went to my guys that I did life with, and long story short, I started to investigate the root of my anger problem and I discovered what it was because I didn't want to be that guy.
Ann Wilson: Yeah.
Dave Wilson: I think as a parent, we have the same journey we need to take with our kids to help them, whether they're five years old or 15 or 18, know how to manage their anger. And so we've got a guy in the studio today, Gary Chapman, back at Family Life Today. Gary, welcome back.
Ann Wilson: Thank you.
Dave Wilson: Good to be with you. You're over there smiling at my anger problem.
Ann Wilson: You're laughing at my anger problem.
Dave Wilson: That's making me mad right now. But you've written about that in you know, love languages book, which so many people know you from. And then the book called Things I'd wish I'd known before my child became a teenager. We've already talked a little bit about this.
And you shared that beautiful, heart-wrenching story about a moment where you blew up in anger with your son, Derek. But how do we wrestle with them to help them understand like I had to go on a journey and I was 30 some years old to understand anger and some of the root. How do we navigate that with our teenage kids?
Ann Wilson: Well, you know, mismanaged anger destroys more relationships probably than anything else. between husband and wife, or between parent and teenager. Mismanaged anger. There's nothing wrong with anger.
Anger, I believe is a gift of God. The Bible says God is angry every day with the wicked. We get angry because we're moral creatures. And when we encounter something that we believe to be wrong, we feel anger, and we should.
But we have a lot of what I also call distorted anger. We get angry because we don't get our way. And this is most common in the family. If the family can say, you know, from time to time, all of us are going to get angry. So why don't we just agree as a family. that if you get angry with me, you come and say, Dad, I'm angry or mom, I'm angry. Can we talk?
And I'll listen to you. And if I get angry with you, I'll do the same thing. What you're doing is teaching them a skill that's going to serve them well the rest of their lives because we're going to all get angry from time to time. Most families don't talk about anger. They've never had a discussion on anger.
Dave Wilson: Right.
Ann Wilson: But have a discussion on anger and let's say, let's learn how to handle anger in a positive way. And you do that with a teenager, you're doing a great service for the teenager because you're helping them understand the whole thing and learning how to do it. And they're going to need that when they get married.
Ann Wilson: And how do we discover if there are underlying issues, if that teen is continually exploding and they're constantly saying, I'm so angry at you, but they're exploding when they're saying because they're so emotional. How do we deal with that or know, are they angry about this surface thing that they can't go to the party or is there something deeper?
Ann Wilson: I think it's questions parents ask questions of the teenagers. Not when they're angry. But after an anger episode, you know, maybe the next day or the next afternoon, the parent says, John, or Mary, let's talk a little bit about anger. And you know, yesterday you told me that you were very angry with me because Explain it to me a little bit, because I'm trying to learn why you're angry. And I want to know if I can do something different that will help you.
And asking questions of that teenager and when they start talking, keep asking questions. They'll tell you eventually. In fact, I I've said to a father, why don't you ask your son, son, I've been thinking about how I could be a better father. And I'd like to ask you to give me some ideas on how I could be a better father. Your teenager will tell you.
Dave Wilson: They will tell you.
Ann Wilson: And see, part of their anger is probably based on the fact that you're not doing these things that they're talking about. So, if you ask questions and open yourself up for them to tell you how you could be a better mom or better dad, you'll likely discover what's lying underneath the surface.
Ann Wilson: I'm thinking about how our teenagers. I remember when I had a toddler, you know that two, three-year-old toddler, we're in those years where they're just it feels like their emotions are all over the place and they're having tantrums. And then you have a teenager, sometimes that can feel like the same thing going on. And we're talking about your book about teenagers, but how do you manage that with a toddler who just feels out of control, there's no
Dave Wilson: It's like a meltdown.
Ann Wilson: Yeah, it's the meltdown tantrum.
Ann Wilson: Well, for one thing, you don't let it work. That is, they're having a tantrum because you wouldn't get them this cookie or whatever, you know. Don't break down and give them the cookie.
Ann Wilson: So if they're in the aisle checking out and they see the candy and they're screaming because they want it.
Dave Wilson: They fall on the, yeah, they fall on the floor and they're in the cart screaming their head off, you're saying, don't give in.
Ann Wilson: Don't give in. Don't give them the cookie because then you're teaching them how to get a cookie. And they'll do it every time. You don't let it happen. And you say to them, if you want to lay there and scream you can, but you don't get a cookie. They learn the screaming doesn't work.
Dave Wilson: So if you ask your teenage son or daughter how I can be a better parent, and you don't like what they say, and you get angry. What is that saying?
Ann Wilson: It's saying you have an anger problem too. And see that's typically the deal. If you ask yourself, where did my son learn this? Chances are, if you look in the mirror, you may well see why they learned it.
Dave Wilson: And I know when Ann said that to me, our kids were little at the time. I mean toddlers, probably the oldest might have been five or six. I knew if I don't get a grip on this now, it will be a legacy. It'll be something I pass on.
And long story short is I realized and when I used to preach on this, I would literally take an extension cord and wrap it around my waist and say, you've got to go find what that's plugged into. You know, you think it's your spouse. You know, if I weren't married to you, I wouldn't be It may be somewhat that, but it isn't.
There's something you got to dig around and go find it. And and obviously, as I searched through my life, it's like, oh, I'm still mad at my dad for walking out when I was seven with his girlfriend. Here I am in my 30s. I need to go on a journey to forgive him. So I go on that journey. Again, thinking it'd take a week, because I'm a pastor, and I know Ephesians 4:32, forgive as you've been forgiven. It took four or five years before I actually got to the place where I gave up my right to punish him.
How important is that in teaching our teenagers to forgive, to let go? I mean, I went on that journey, but now, you know, you've got a son or daughters, 15, 16, and they've got forgiveness issues. Maybe with you, maybe with other friends. How important is it to help them walk through a journey of forgiveness?
Ann Wilson: Well, if they don't learn to forgive, they will separate themselves from everybody they encounter. Because if you get close to anybody, they will sooner or later say something, do something that's going to hurt you.
And so it puts an emotional barrier between the two of you, and it will not go away with the passing of time. If they apologize to you, then the biblical response is you forgive them. You remove the penalty, you remove the emotional barrier, now our relationship can go forward. If you don't forgive them, the barrier stays there. And it will build into a wall after after a period of time.
If the person doesn't apologize to you, I like to use the word release. You release them to God. You say, Lord, you know what they did to me, and you know how they treated me, and I've gone to them, and I've explained it to them, and they don't agree and they don't apologize. So I'm going to put them in your hands. You're releasing them to God. And you're putting them in good hands, because God loves them. If they ever confess to God, God will forgive them. If they don't, then God judges them the Bible says.
So I think learning the practice of forgiveness is a skill that's absolutely necessary in adult life or teenage life to have good relationships. You will not have good relationships if you don't forgive. And that means that we forgive our children, our teenagers. When our teenager does something that's horrible and then we confront them and they apologize, we forgive them. You know, and we move on down the road.
Ann Wilson: We don't hold it against them the next day or power act. Yeah.
Dave Wilson: Yeah, so much of what we're talking about really comes down to a spiritual foundation that we have and we're hoping we can impart or guide our kids to. This is a really big question for parents of teenagers, how do we guide them spiritually? How do we navigate alongside them their spiritual walk? Help parents with that.
Ann Wilson: I think one of the most important things in communicating our relationship with God to our children is modeling what we say we believe. I think the most sobering question I ever asked myself, when my kids were teenagers, is what if my children turned out to be like me in every area?
What if they drive a car the way I drive a car?
Dave Wilson: Oh, boy, you didn't have to go there, Gary.
Ann Wilson: My wife right now said, okay.
Dave Wilson: Yeah.
Ann Wilson: What if they handle anger the way I handle anger? You know, what if they treat their spouse eventually the way I treat my spouse? What if they treat their teenagers the way I treat them? And it's on down the line. It's a sobering question, but if you honestly ask that question, you get an answer. And you will know where you need to change.
Dave Wilson: I mean, I read that toward the back of your book. And Gary, I'm telling you, it was a sobering question. I was like, wow, what a great gut check. Yeah. Because if you don't like your answer, guess what? Change it.
Ann Wilson: Right? Absolutely. Because they're going to be far more impressed than far more impacted by what they see in our lives than by what we tell them. We can teach them whatever, all the biblical things, we can teach them. But if they don't see it in our lives, they're not likely to respond to it.
Ann Wilson: We've said this before, but I feel like I did a pretty good job of laying the foundation spiritually for our kids when they're little.
Dave Wilson: You did a phenomenal.
Ann Wilson: Like reading the Bible, like bringing Jesus and God into the everyday part of life. And yet, I remember asking our young adult children, like, what do you guys remember of me teaching? And I was so depressed, Gary, because there wasn't a lot that they remembered of actual Bible teaching. But they did say, Mom, the thing that we remember is you prayed all the time and you read your Bible.
Ann Wilson: And I thought, well, that's a good thing. Because they see my dependence, my need for Jesus. And also, we talked about earlier, apologizing, asking forgiveness. They knew I did that a lot. And so I think as parents, that's a really good thing to remember like, what are we modeling? I remember sitting at the dinner table thinking, do I have anything to share with my kids of what God has taught me today? And when there was a long gap, I thought, I need to be in the word. I need to be connecting with God more, so I have something to pour out to them.
Ann Wilson: I know that, um, my perspective might be wrong on why so many young people are walking away from church these days. Gary, I'd love to hear your thoughts. My thought is it isn't so much about doctrine or theology. It can be a little bit. I think it's more about modeling. They're seeing the way we live and they're like, I don't I don't buy it.
Ann Wilson: No, I I think you're right. For example, you know, from my perspective, the central lifestyle theme of a Christian is serving others. You know, Jesus said about himself, I did not come to be served, I came to serve and give my life a ransom for others.
So if the parent is modeling a servant's attitude in all of life, the teenager sees that. They don't forget that. And that's why, you know, I would take our children with me on some of the service things, you know, going to the food pantry. You'll like to go with me? Go over and pack food and, yeah, they go. They remember that, you know.
They remember when I would take them in the fall of the year in North Carolina, leaves are all over everywhere. And I'd get them in the car and say, we're going to go find somebody that's older that hasn't got the leaves raked. And I'd knock on the door and say, hi, I'm Gary Chapman. I live down the street here and I'm trying to teach my children how to serve. And we would like to rake your leaves if it would be all right.
And they would say, say what?
Dave Wilson: And I'd repeat my little story.
Ann Wilson: And we never had anybody that wouldn't let us rake their leaves, okay?
Dave Wilson: I bet you didn't.
Ann Wilson: And the kids would rake the leaves and then they'd jump in the leaves, the teenagers, you know, they were young teenagers, jumping in the leaves and all that. And uh we then we'd drive home, I'd say, how how do you guys feel about having helped some people? Oh, Dad, that was so fun, you know. So they see you serving others in whatever ways, you know, you're equipped to serve others.
And that makes a tremendous impact on them. And after all, if they know God, you know, if they've come to the place where they've put their faith in Christ, there's no greater satisfaction than this serving other people. You know, I was walking across the campus of the University of Virginia. I was going to be speaking in Cabot Auditorium. And a side door into that auditorium etched in stone above the door with these words, You are here to enrich the world and you impoverish yourself if you forget the errand.
And I thought, man, what if every university had that as a theme?
Dave Wilson: Yeah.
Ann Wilson: But that's what Jesus demonstrated himself.
Dave Wilson: Absolutely.
Ann Wilson: So that's why I I say our model is so important in teaching them the central motive of the Christian life is we're here to serve other people. And both of them now as adults, that's what they do. I mean, she's a medical doctor, you know, she delivers high risk babies and she identifies with these mothers who are struggling. And my son works with kids on the street, you know, he has for years and people that nobody else would have time for.
Ann Wilson: Which would make sense because your whole life has been dedicated to serving people. You started out serving troubled teens and you said you even took your son with you to do that. What's your love language?
Ann Wilson: Words of affirmation.
Dave Wilson: Okay.
Ann Wilson: And my wife
Dave Wilson: You're amazing, Gary. Awesome having you here. Nobody better.
Ann Wilson: And my wife is acts of service, so I've got to get home and take the trash out.
Ann Wilson: But I think by you modeling, you've every time we've been with you, you've shared stories about people that you've reached, troubled kids that needed help, that needed a parent, and you were there. And so you've modeled that all along the way for your kids and now their lives have been dedicated to serving others. That's really well done.
Dave Wilson: I remember again, it was our youngest, Spring Break, his senior year in high school. And instead of going on some crazy party deal with all these kids, we said, hey, let's do a trip and you can take a buddy. So Cody took Matt and we went, I don't know, where did we go?
Ann Wilson: We went on a cruise.
Dave Wilson: Yeah, we went on a cruise and anyway, we ended up in Florida, probably before the cruise or after. All I remember is in this rental car. We're driving to the airport or something, and somehow I made a wrong turn and we ended up in this little cul-de-sac. And there was a woman in a car stuck in sand. She couldn't get her car out of sand. Now, I'm from Michigan. I've never seen this. I'm like, snow, I can rock your car out of snow, I've done it many times.
But sand, right? And so we drove right by her and I stopped. I said, hey, I think she's stuck. Let's go back and help. They're like, what? What do you mean help? I'm like, I don't know what the situation is, but it looks like she's in a snowdrift and she can't get out. And so we pile out of the car and both of them are like, we're going to go help some strange lady. I'm like, we're going to try. And we go back there, and of course, they're both high school football players, and they ended up pushing this lady out. It was just like getting out of a snowdrift. We get her out of the out of snowdrift.
Ann Wilson: And these teenage guys are big football players.
Dave Wilson: Oh yeah, they're muscle bound, they're going to play college football. And we get back in the car. And I'm not kidding. I don't know what you think, Ann. Of the entire spring break trip, including this incredible cruise, that's the memory that I have and they had. When we all got back in the car, we were like cheering. It was just this endorphins. We were excited like, wow, we actually helped some stranger lady out of just a simple sand thing.
But like you said, is that act of serving others brought something to our soul. So you're saying as a parent, when we model that and get our kids involved in that, it's going to do the same thing for them?
Ann Wilson: Absolutely. Absolutely. You know, certainly reading the scriptures to them, you know, as they're growing up and having them in a youth group at church, all that's very, very positive, you know, and they're hearing all those things at church and other things. But our model in in serving and other things, our model of the way we live our lives is going to have the greatest impact on our teenagers. And those are the things they're going to look back and they're going to remember.
Ann Wilson: Well, what that does too, it takes their eyes off of themselves, which as teenagers, it's easy to be looking at themselves a lot. And that takes us into that mental health or emotional health area, where parents are talking about this so much because their kids are depressed. They're dealing with anxiety. They're not sure how to help. And you talk about this in your book too, of even how the love languages can impact that.
Ann Wilson: If the teenager feels loved first of all, I mean, I think that's one of the most fundamental emotional needs that a child has is to feel loved. And if we understand their love language and they give heavy doses of that love language and we sprinkle in the other four because we want the child to learn, there's more than one way to love, you know.
And that child feels loved, and then they have the demonstration in front of them every day of how to live the Christian life. What this looks like is a life of serving other people. And we bring them into those service things so they get to experience what you were just talking about earlier of helping other people. Because part of the thing with teenagers is, they're trying to find meaning to life. Why am I here? What's this all about?
Well, it's all about serving other people, you know, from the Christian perspective. So if we can help them do that, they feel good about themselves after they've done it, you know, when they push the lady out of the sand, they're feeling good about themselves. And they realize, oh man, this is wonderful. So then they start looking for places where they can serve.
So, yeah, we're we're teaching them by our model to follow Jesus and we're acknowledging that the reason we are doing these things is because we're followers of Jesus. You know, we've given our lives to him and we're his representatives in the world, and we're here to make the world a better place. If they get that image and that picture, they're far more likely to follow through with what they've been taught.
Dave Wilson: Now, did you ever have to go into your son or daughter's bedroom at night after you blew it as a bad model and say, I'm sorry?
Ann Wilson: You know, I don't remember going into their bedroom and doing that, but I do remember telling them I'm sorry on several occasions. But I tried to do it pretty quickly after I'd done it.
Dave Wilson: So don't wait till bedtime, do it.
Ann Wilson: Don't wait till bedtime. You know, just just if you realize you've done wrong, maybe walk around the block if you need to to cool off, but then come back and say, I want to apologize to you.
Ann Wilson: I think Dave brought that up because I would apologize to my kids right away.
Dave Wilson: I wasn't thinking of you. I was thinking of me.
Ann Wilson: No, but then what happens as a parent, I think, I don't know if men do this, but I do this as a mom. I blew it. I apologize. I asked for their forgiveness. But then I go to bed and I just can't get over it. Like, you know, I hear that self-condemnation of what kind of mom would do that. So then I would go back into the room, apologize again. One of our sons wrote about it in the book, because I said, I just couldn't get out of that rut of feeling like, I'm a terrible mom. What kind of parent would do this? And that son said, I don't know why my mom kept coming back in. She apologized. I forgave her right away. But I couldn't get over the guilt. How would you encourage parents with that?
Ann Wilson: It's it's a matter of forgiving ourselves. I was speaking in a prison one night, local prison, and they invited the wives to come in with the men and I did a marriage thing. And in the Q&A, this father said, he was the prisoner. He said, uh, Dr. Chapman, I've asked God to forgive me, and I know he has. And my wife here has forgiven me, and my sons have forgiven me. But what I want to know is, how do I forgive myself? For all the pain that I caused to other people.
And I'd never heard that question before. And I think God just gave me this, you know, was my answer. I said, okay, stand in front of a mirror and talk to yourself. And just say self, you blew it. You blew it big time. And you hurt a lot of people, self. But a holy God has forgiven you because of Jesus and what he did on the cross for you.
And you know, parents sometimes say to me, when their child has done something really, really bad and they're in prison or they've gotten somebody pregnant or whatever and they say, here's what they say in my office. Dr. Chapman, what did we do wrong? And I say to them, God himself had two children named Adam and Eve, and they blew it. And they had a perfect father.
So don't take all the blame for the decisions your adult children make. Because they can make decisions poor decisions with good parents. Now, if you know some things where you failed them, fine, you go apologize to them. But don't just automatically take all the blame on yourself for the poor decisions that your adult children make.
Dave Wilson: What'd you think of today? Gary is always the best. I, I love it when Gary comes in the studio and man, today we get, you know, we get to talk about teenagers. It was great stuff. Again, his book is Things I Wish I'd Known Before My Child Became a Teenager.
Ann Wilson: And I know that you'll probably want to get this book and maybe tell some other people about it. And all you have to do is get your copy by clicking the link in the show notes at familylifetoday.com.
Dave Wilson: If you need parenting help, we would love to help you. We have a site just for you familylife.com/parentinghelp. We put some of our best parenting resources there for you to help you. Please go there, get the help we offer. It's familylife.com/parentinghelp.
Ann Wilson: Family Life Today is a donor-supported production of Family Life, a crew ministry celebrating 50 years of helping you pursue the relationships that matter most.
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- God Who’s Over It, God Who’s In It: Rechab & Brittany Gray
- God’s Very Good Design
- Gods at War
- God's Plan for Marital Intimacy
- Goffs/Millers - Healthy Habits for Happy Marriages
- Good Boundaries and Goodbyes: Lysa TerKeurst
- Good Mood, Bad Mood
- Good Pictures, Bad Pictures
- Gospel Centered Mom
- Grace Filled Marriage
- Grace: More Than We Deserve
- Grandparenting: Dr. Crawford Loritts, Larry Fowler
- Granny Camp
- Grieving a Suicide
- Growing Older without Growing Old: Dennis & Barbara Rainey
- Growing Together in Courage
- Growing Together in Forgiveness
- Growing Together in Gratitude
- Growing Together in Truth
- Having a Marriage Without Regrets
- He Is Enough
- He Is the Stability of Our Times
- Healing Your Marriage When Trust Is Broken
- Healthy Intimacy: Dave & Ashley Willis
- Heavenward: Cameron Cole
- Hedges: Loving Your Marriage Enough to Protect It
- Help For Anxiety in Parenting: David & Meg Robbins
- Help Wanted: Moms Raising Daughters
- Helping Orphans With Special Needs
- Helping Others Build Strong Marriages
- Helping the Hurting
- Hero: Unleashing God's Power in a Man's Heart
- Hidden Joy
- High Performance Friendships
- Holy Is The Day
- Home: A Man's Battle Station
- Homeless Men Stepping Up
- Hooked
- Hope After Betrayal
- Hot Mess to Hopeful: Risen Motherhood for the Worst Days: Emily Jensen and Laura Wifler
- How Churches Can Include Single Parents: Ron Deal and Gayla Grace
- How Do I Love Thee?
- How Empty is Your Nest?
- How Pinterest Stole Christmas
- How to Break the Cycle of Divorce
- How to Lead Your Wife: Rechab Gray & Ike Todd
- How to Listen So Your Kids Will Talk: Becky Harling
- How to Pick a Spouse
- How We Got Here: Luke and Kristina Middendorf
- How We Love
- Hymns for a Child's Heart
- Hymns in the Modern Day Church
- I Beg to Differ
- I Do Again
- I Like Giving: The Transforming Power of a Generous Life: Brad Formsma
- I Still Believe
- I Take You
- I Will Carry You
- If God Is Good
- If I Could Do It Again
- If My Husband Would Change...
- I'm Happy For You, Not Really
- I'm Not Good Enough
- Image Restored: Rachael Gilbert
- In a Heartbeat
- Independence Day
- Indivisible
- In-Laws, Mates, and Money
- Instructing a Child’s Heart
- Internet Safety 101
- Interviewing Your Daughter's Date
- Introducing Athletes to Jesus
- Is It My Fault?
- Is Your Marriage LifeReady?
- It Starts at Home
- It's All About Love
- Jackhammered
- Jeremiah Johnston: Unleashing Peace
- Jerrad Lopes - How to Become a Great Dad
- Jesus Continued
- Jill's House
- Jonathan Ober & Frank Kulgowski: The Mission of Christian Gaming
- Joy to the World
- Jumping Through Fires
- Just a Minute
- Just Say the Word
- Just Too Busy
- Kathy Koch: How to Parent Differently
- Kathy Koch: Start with the Heart
- Katie Davis Majors: Safe All Along
- Keeping the "Little" in Your Girl
- Kevin "KB" Burgess & Ameen Hudson: Dangerous Jesus
- Kiss Me Again
- Kisses From Katie
- Knowing God's Will for Marriage
- Kristen Hatton - Parenting Ahead
- Lasting Love
- Leaving a Legacy of Destiny
- Letters to My Daughters
- Letting Go of Control
- Liberating Submission
- Lies Girls Believe: Dannah Gresh
- Lies Men Believe
- Life in Spite of Me
- Listener Tributes
- Living on the Edge
- Living with Less So Your Family Has More
- Locking Arms, Stepping Up
- Loneliness: Don't Hate It or Waste It: Steve & Jennifer DeWitt
- Long Story Short
- Love is an Attitude
- Love Is Something You Do
- Love Like You Mean It
- Love Like You Mean It 2025
- Love Renewed After Shattered Dreams
- Love Renewed: Adam and Laura Brown
- Love Renewed: Clint and Penny Bragg
- Love Renewed: Hans and Star Molegraaf
- Love Renewed: Lance and Jess Miller
- Love Renewed: Scott and Sherry Jennings
- Love Thy Body
- Love to Eat, Hate to Eat
- Love, Sex, and Lasting Relationships
- Loving the Little Years
- Loving the Way Jesus Loves
- Loving Your Man Without Losing Your Mind
- Made for Friendship: Drew Hunter
- Made to Last: Bryan & Stephanie Carter
- Making Love Last
- Man Alive
- Manhood
- Mansfield's Manly Men
- Marking Memorable Moments
- Marriage and Family for God's Glory
- Marriage Forecasting
- Marriage Matters
- Marriage Secrets That Almost Broke Us: Ron and Nan Deal
- Marriage Tested in the Furnace
- Marriage Undercover
- Married to an Unbeliever
- Marry Well
- Mastering the Money Basics
- Mean Mom's Guide to Raising Great Kids
- Measure of Success
- Melissa Kruger: Parenting with Hope
- Men and Women: Enjoying the Difference
- Michael & Lauren McAffee: Beyond Our Control
- Michael Kruger: Surviving Religion
- Military Wife: Beth Runkle
- Miller/Hudson: Sleeping On It
- Mingling of Souls
- Misled: 7 Lies That Distort the Gospel: Allen Parr
- Money and Marriage God's Way
- Money Saving Families
- Moral Purity in Marriage
- More Than A Carpenter (updated): Sean McDowell
- More Than a Wedding: A Closer Look
- More than Championships
- Moving from Fear to Freedom
- MWB Reaction: Collin and Stacey Outerbridge, Joseph Torres, Anna Markham
- My Life as a So-Called Submissive Wife
- Never Walk Away
- No Greater Love
- No Room at the Inn
- Not Alone
- Now that We're a Family: Elisha and Kathryn Voetberg
- October Baby
- On Pills and Needles
- One of Us Must Be Crazy
- Oops, I Forgot My Wife and Kids!
- Organic Mentoring
- Orphan Justice
- Our Adoption Story
- Out of a Far Country
- Out of the Depths
- Overcome Pain to Love God's Word Again - Faith Womack
- Overcoming Emotions that Destroy
- Overcoming Lust
- Parent Fuel: For the Fire Inside Our Kids
- Parenthood: Adam and Chelsea Griffin
- Parenting Beyond Your Capacity
- Parenting by Design
- Parenting Heart to Heart
- Parenting is Your Highest Calling and Other Parenting Myths
- Parenting Panic: David & Meg Robbins
- Parenting With Kingdom Purpose
- Partner as First Priority: Ron Deal and Gayla Grace
- Picking Up the Pieces
- Planning for Oneness
- Planting Scripture Seeds
- Playing Hurt
- Politics--According to the Bible
- Practicing Affirmation
- Pray Big for Your Family
- Praying With Jesus
- Preach the Whole Gospel
- Preston and Jackie Hill Perry: Beyond the Vows
- Preston Perry: How To Tell the Truth
- Psalm 127
- Pure Eyes, Clean Heart
- Pure Pleasure
- Put the Seat Down
- Putting Christ Back in Christmas
- Putting Your Parents in Proper Perspective
- Raising Emotionally Healthy Boys: David Thomas
- Raising Emotionally Strong Boys - David Thomas
- Raising Unselfish Children
- Reaching Out to the Orphan
- Real Mom Advice: Welcome to the No Judgment Zone--Mom Panel Discussion
- Real Moms, Real Jesus
- Rebooting Christmas
- Rebuilding a Safe House
- Reclaiming Easter
- Reflecting on Twenty Years
- Reflections of Life: A Personal Visit With Bill Bright
- Refreshment for Families
- Rekindling the Family Reformation
- Rekindling the Romance in Your Marriage
- Relationships Done Right: Sean Perron and Spencer Harmon
- Remarriage After Loss: Ron Deal and Rod & Rachel Faulkner Brown
- Reset: Powerful Habits to Change Your Life: Debra Fileta
- Respectable Sins
- Restore the Table - Ryan Rush
- Rethinking Sexuality
- Rich in Love
- Richer by the Dozen - Bill and Pam Mutz
- Rick Altizer & Rachelle Star: He Calls Me Daughter
- Rid of My Disgrace
- Road Trip to Redemption
- Romance for Dummies
- Romance in the Rain
- Ron and Nan Deal: Mindful Marriage
- Runaway Emotions
- Ruth Chou Simons: Now and Not Yet
- Ruth Chou Simons: When Strivings Cease
- Sacred Home: Jennifer Pepito
- Sacred Influence
- Same Sex Marriage
- Say Goodbye to Survival Mode
- Say it Loud!
- Screens and Teens
- Season of Change
- Secret Thoughts of an Unlikely Convert
- Secrets
- Seeing the Power of God Among Us
- Set-Apart Femininity
- Setting Up Stones
- Seven Reasons Why God Created Marriage
- Sex and Money
- Sex and the Single Christian Girl
- Sex and the Single Girl
- Sex, Dating and Relationships
- Sexual Problems in Marriage
- Sexual Sanity for Men
- Sexual Sanity for Women
- Shame Interrupted
- Sharing Christ with Word and Deed
- Sharing the Love and Laughter
- Shattered
- She Still Calls Me Daddy
- Shelterwood
- She's Got the Wrong Guy
- Shift: Building a Spiritual Legacy for the Next Generation
- Simple Truths
- Single and Free to be Me
- Singleness Redefined
- Sis, Take a Breath: Kirsten & Benjamin Watson
- Six Conversations in an Isolated World: Heather Holleman
- Sleeping Giant
- Smart Phones for Smart Families
- So You're About to Be a Teenager
- Something About Us
- SOS: Sick of Sex
- Soul Surfer
- Speak Life to Your Husband When You Want to Yell at Him - Ann Wilson
- Speaking Your Spouse's Love Language
- Special Kids with Special Needs
- Spiritual Life Coaching
- Spiritually Single Moms
- Start Your Family
- Starting Your Marriage Right
- Stay at Home Dads
- Stay In Your Lane: Worry Less, Love More, and Get Things Done: Kevin A. Thompson
- Stay-at-Home Dads: A Passing Fad or a Choice That's Here to Stay?
- Step Parenting Wisdom
- Stepdads, a.k.a. Unsung Heroes: Ron Deal and Gil Stuart
- Stepfamilies and Holidays
- Stepfamily: Blender or Crockpot
- Stepping Up
- Stepping Up to Manhood
- Steps to Manhood
- Stories Behind the Great Songs and Traditions of Christmas
- Strength in Softness: Redefining Success for Women - Allen and Jennifer Parr
- Strong Fathers, Strong Daughters
- Stuart Scott: When Children Lose Their Faith
- Stumbling Souls: Is Love Enough?
- Surprise Child
- Surprising Secrets of Highly Happy Marriage
- Surrender
- Symphony in the Dark
- Talking Smack
- Tea Parties With a Purpose
- Teaching Generosity to Your Family
- Teammates in Marriage
- Tech Savvy Parenting
- Technical Virginity
- Ten Questions Every Husband Should Ask His Wife
- Ten Urgent Steps for Spiritually Healthy Families
- Teresa Whiting: Overcoming Shame
- The "Anything" Prayer
- The 10 Habits of Happy Moms
- The 7 Hardest Things God Asks a Woman to Do
- The Accidental Feminist
- The Anatomy of an Affair: Dave Carder
- The Art of Effective Prayer
- The Art of Parenting: Identity
- The Art of Parenting: Mission and Releasing
- The Art of Parenting: What Kids Need
- The Best Gifts for Wives and Husbands
- The Book of Man
- The Bullying Breakthrough
- The Busy Mom's Guide to Romance
- The Christian Lover
- The Clay Pot Conspiracy: God's Plan to Use Weakness in Leaders—Dave Harvey
- The Color of Rain
- The Complex World of a Blended Family
- The Connected Child
- The Controlling Husband
- The Creator’s Guide to Marital Intimacy
- The Dad I Wish I Had
- The Dark Hole of Depression
- The Dating Manifesto
- The Early Seasons of a Woman's Life
- The Emotionally Destructive Relationship
- The Enticement of the Forbidden
- The First Few Years of Marriage
- The Forgotten Commandment
- The Fruitful Wife
- The Gentlemen's Society
- The Good Dad
- The Good News About Injustice
- The Gospel Comes With a House Key
- The Grace Marriage: Brad & Marilyn Rhoads
- The Grace of Gratitude
- The Heart of Jesus: How He Really Feels About You: Dane Ortlund
- The Jesus Storybook Bible
- The King of Kings
- The Leader's Code
- The Life Ready Woman: Thriving in a Do-It-All World
- The Love Dare for Parents
- The Marriage Prayer
- The Masculine Mandate: God’s Calling to Men
- The Missional Marriage
- The Mission-Minded Family
- The Mom Guilt Spiral: Abbey Wedgeworth
- The Mother-Daughter Duet
- The Mystery of Intimacy in Marriage
- The National Bible Bee 2009 Winners
- The Neighborhood Café
- The New Passport to Purity
- The Passionate Mom
- The Pastor's Kid
- The Person Called You
- The Poverty of Nations
- The Power of A Wife's Affirmation
- The Power of God's Names
- The Power of New Covenant Love
- The Profound Power of a Legacy
- The Protectors
- The Realities of Remarriage
- The Refuge of Faith
- The Reluctant Entertainer
- The Resolution for Women
- The Respect Dare
- The Ring Makes All the Difference
- The Road to Kaeluma - Landon Hawley and Perry Wilson
- The Sacred Search
- The Season of Gratitude
- The Second-Half Adventure
- The Secret Life of a Fool
- The Secret of Contentment
- The Shepherd Leader at Home
- The Smart Stepdad
- The Smart Stepmom
- The Soul of Modesty
- The Sticky Faith Guide
- The Toxic War on Masculinity: Nancy Pearcey
- The Unveiled Wife
- The Upside Down Marriage
- The Very First Christmas
- The World's Largest Neighborhood Easter Egg Hunt
- Things That Go Bump in the Night
- Things We've Learned from Dennis and Barbara Rainey
- This Changes Everything
- This Is My Destiny
- Three Essentials for Every Married Woman
- Three Gospel Resolutions
- Three Marks of A Covenant Keeper
- Thriving at College
- Tim & Aileen Challies: Seasons of Sorrow
- Time-Saving Mom: Crystal Paine
- Tips for Smart Stepoms
- To Have and To Hold: Tommy Nelson
- To Own a Dragon
- Tongue Pierced
- Transcending Mysteries
- Transformed
- Treasures in the Dark
- Treat Me Like a Customer
- Trent Griffith: Do You Hear What I Hear?
- True Success: A Personal Visit With John Wooden
- Trusting God While Treating Cancer
- Turn Around at Home
- Turning Your Heart Toward Your Children
- Twenty-Five Ways to Lead Your Family Spiritually
- Two Hearts Praying as One
- Uncommon Trust: Learning to Trust God When Life Doesn't Make Sense--Erik Reed
- Undaunted
- Undefiled
- Understanding and Honoring Your Wife
- Understanding Your Child’s Bent
- Unfavorable Odds
- United
- Unraveling the Messiah Mystery
- Unshaken
- Untangling Your Faith--from the Questions Jesus Asked: Amberly Neese
- Upon Waking: Jackie Hill Perry
- Us In Mind: Change Your Thoughts, Change Your Marriage: Ted Lowe
- Waiting for His Heart
- Walking by Faith, Not by Sight
- War of Words
- Warrior in Pink
- Water From a Deep Well
- We Still Do: Michael and Cindy Easley
- Weekend to Remember Getaway Sampler
- Wellness for the Glory of God
- We're in the Money ... Now What?
- What Did You Expect?
- What Do You Think of Me?
- What Does the Bible Say About Homosexuality?
- What Every Husband and Wife Needs to Know
- What God Wants for Christmas
- What He Must Be
- What Husbands Wish Their Wives Knew About Men
- What I Want My Children to Know
- What If Parenting Is the Most Important Job in the World?
- What is the Meaning of Sex
- What To Do About Motherhood Guilt: Maggie Combs
- What's God Think about My Anxiety? Ed Welch
- What's in the Bible?
- Whats's Best for Children
- When Faith Disappoints: Lisa Victoria Fields
- When Sinners Say 'I Do'
- When Sorry Isn't Enough
- When the Bottom Drops Out
- When the Hurt Runs Deep
- When Your Husband is Addicted to Pornography
- Why Do We Call It Christmas?
- Why God is Enough
- Why I Didn't Rebel
- Winning the Drug War at Home
- Winsome Persuasion
- Women of the Word
- Woodlawn
- Word Versus Deed
- You and Me Forever
- You Are Not Who You Used to Be
- You Are Redeemed: Nana Dolce
- You Are Still a Mother - Jackie Gibson
- You Paid How Much for That?
- Your Child and the Autism Spectrum
- Your Interculturual Marriage
- Your Kids at Risk
- Your Marriage Matters
- Your Marriage Today and Tomorrow
- Your Mate: God's Perfect Gift
- Your Presence Matters
- Your Stepfamily: Standing Strong
- Youth Sports Pressure: Brian Smith & Ed Uszynski
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About FamilyLife Today®
FamilyLife Today® is an award-winning podcast featuring fun, engaging conversations that help families grow together with Jesus while pursuing the relationships that matter most. Hosted by Dave and Ann Wilson, new episodes air every Tuesday and Thursday.
About Dave and Ann Wilson
Dave and Ann have been married for more than 40 years and have spent the last 35 teaching and mentoring couples and parents across the country. They have been featured speakers at FamilyLife’s Weekend to Remember® since 1993, and have also hosted their own marriage conferences across the country.
Dave and Ann helped plant Kensington Community Church in Detroit, Michigan where they served together in ministry for more than three decades, wrapping up their time at Kensington in 2020.
The Wilsons are the creative force behind DVD teaching series Rock Your Marriage and The Survival Guide To Parenting, as well as authors of the recently released books Vertical Marriage (Zondervan, 2019) and No Perfect Parents (Zondervan, 2021).
Dave is a graduate of the International School of Theology, where he received a Master of Divinity degree. A Ball State University Hall of Fame Quarterback, Dave served the Detroit Lions as Chaplain for thirty-three years. Ann attended the University of Kentucky. She has been active with Dave in ministry as a speaker, writer, small group leader, and mentor to countless women.
The Wilsons live in the Detroit area. They have three grown sons, CJ, Austin, and Cody, three daughters-in-law, and a growing number of grandchildren.
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