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Grandparenting when Kids Walk Away from Faith: Dr. Crawford Lorrits & Larry Fowler of the Legacy Coalition

April 10, 2026
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Grandparents and parents face heartbreak when kids walk away from faith—or when rules block spiritual talks. Dr. Crawford Loritts and Larry Fowler (Legacy Coalition) show how leaning in with persistent love, humility, gratitude, and creative prayer keeps relational doors open. Through stories, apologies, and benchmarked traditions, they reveal how small, consistent faith-filled actions can shape family legacies—even amid fractures, resistance, and messiness.

Crawford Lorrits: If you have integrity without humility, it sets you up for self-righteousness, that you just do everything right. The truth of the matter is, I think one of the greatest things we can teach our children and our grandchildren is how to be grateful.

Ann Wilson: Welcome to FamilyLife 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 FamilyLife Today.

Dave Wilson: We’ve got Dr. Crawford Lorrits in the house and Larry Fowler talking about legacy and grandparenting. We’re going to jump into it.

Ann Wilson: And even what do you do if you can’t talk to your grandkids about Jesus because you're not allowed to.

Dave Wilson: That’s a tough one.

Dave Wilson: Now, what do you say to the parents or grandparents who have tried to do it right, and now they’re looking at some fracture in their legacy? Kids or grandkids walking away from the faith. There’s a lot of struggle going on.

A few years ago, Bob Lepine, Ann, and I did a workshop and said, "Adult parents of adult kids, come let's talk." And then we did an open mic, "Hey, any question you want to ask." It was tragedy. Just weeping of, "I did everything right, and..." So what do you say?

Ann Wilson: And even those stories of saying, "I’m a grandparent, I want to impact my grandkids spiritually, and I’m not allowed to."

Larry Fowler: It's heartbreaking and it's also extremely common. Most all families are messy. And if they’re not, if somebody out there doesn’t think they have a messy family, just wait a generation and it'll probably happen down the future, or have another kid.

So that's part of it, just to realize number one, realize that you're not alone. God has His own timing for things and He can still bring them back. We want it to happen quickly, but sometimes that's not God's timing. But there is a lot that grandparents can do that are in that situation.

Ann Wilson: Yeah, let's talk about some of those. What are the things we can do as grandparents?

Larry Fowler: Let me start with one, and then we’ll go to Crawford for one, I’m sure he has a lot too. But one of the things that I think that Christian grandparents make a mistake of doing is they lean out when they really need to lean in.

If they have a son or daughter or grandchild that is making bad decisions, that's the time to lean into the relationship, love on them unconditionally, love them more, communicate with them more, talk with them more. Don’t pull back and pull away because you're offended or even horrified by the bad decisions that they make.

You need to represent God to them, and God leans in with love toward us through the person of Jesus Christ and the work of the Holy Spirit. We need to represent Him well in doing that.

Ann Wilson: What would leaning in look like? Let me give an example of these, and then you guys show us what it looks like to lean in. When we were on that cruise, one person came up and said, "My daughter is practicing witchcraft." Another parent came up crying, saying, "My son has married a man." If they’re not leaning back, how do they lean into those relationships?

Crawford Lorrits: I think it's connecting with their hearts and making sure that you are available to them. You stay engaged with them. It doesn’t mean that you preach at them, it doesn’t mean that you articulate how wrong they are. They know how you feel.

It’s calling them, it's listening to them, it's checking in on them, it's doing the things that you know that they like and making yourself available to them. The worst thing you can do is to reject them.

And somehow or another, we have this crazy sense that if they’re living in sin, I need to show—well, yeah, they are living in sin maybe. Does God walk away from them? Your presence needs to be felt.

And the other thing is to understand, and this, you’ve got to be careful as Christians. We quote Proverbs and these other verses as promises that, "Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old, he will not depart from it." Well, my problem with that is, number one, is that a promise or a proverb?

It's a proverb, meaning that it's likely if you do that. But even a closer examination of that verse is that train up a child according to their proclivities, or their natural bent, and then when they’re old, they won't walk away. And there's no guarantee. And you've got to understand that you can’t be your child's will or your grandchild's will. No one can.

But what you can do is continue to believe God, love them, pray for them, pray for open doors to enhance the communication. But we need to love them in such a way that they’re delightfully confused. They cannot argue with our sincere commitment to them.

"You know that I care about you. You know that I love you. You know that I’m always there for you. And no matter what you do, that's never, ever, ever going to change." And that degree of throwing them off of their equilibrium by you continuing to press into them is powerful. But that's what God does to us. He keeps pursuing us. He keeps loving us. That's what you have to do.

And then you demonstrate, and I think the key to grandparenting too is—now, there's all kinds of issues involved, and I think Larry and others have talked really articulately about this—that there are times in which your children will block you just because of where they are or may not be spiritually.

But you’ve got to go with what you can get. You’ve got to go with what you can get and as early as possible connect with their hearts. And you don’t withdraw more than you deposit, and you start traditions with them.

When our grandsons reach 13 years old, we have a ceremony with them. I give them a Bible that I’ve preached through and had my devotions in, and I write in the flyleaf of the Bible the family tree going back to Peter, and we have a celebration with them. I want to benchmark their souls.

Karen does something similar with our granddaughters. I think having traditions and these kinds of things, it gets back to making it normal, "This is who we are." And yet keeping the door open because when they wander, not everyone's going to say yes to Jesus. When they wander away, they know that this is stability over here. This is love. This is grace.

Larry Fowler: I have a foundation I can return to. I can come back. I have a story. What do grandparents do when they are told they can’t talk about God? I had a lady stand up in a class that I was teaching early on in our Legacy Coalition ministry, and she said, "Mr. Fowler, this sounds really good, but my son has said I can see my granddaughter or I can talk to her about God, but I can never do both because the minute that I mention God to my granddaughter, I’ll never be allowed to see her again."

Now, this is a lady that's a strong believer, and of course, she would want to talk to her granddaughter about God, right? But she respected what her son said and didn’t mention God, but she also leaned into the relationship.

I heard what happened after she said that to me—it was in a church that I was familiar with—and I found out that not long after that, she leaned in by saying, "I’m going to take this granddaughter on a weeklong trip to New York City." Now, this is from California to New York, so that's leaning into the relationship. All alone, week together.

They are sightseeing, and they get in a cab to go from one place to the other, and after they get out of a cab and the cab drives away, the granddaughter goes, "Oh no!" and she had left a very expensive camera that her dad had given her for the trip in the cab.

And the granddaughter says, "Well, I hope we’ll get lucky and somebody will find it." Grandma says, "Well, I’m going to pray." She didn’t mention God, she just said, "I’m going to pray." The very next people that got in the cab saw the camera, took the effort to find out from the cab driver where he had picked up his previous fare.

And when the grandma and granddaughter got back to their hotel, the camera was at the registration desk waiting for them to check in. And grandma says, "See, my prayers were answered." Now, she leaned in, she respected what her son had to say. I am absolutely confident that granddaughter will never forget what happened. So God can provide ways, even in difficult situations.

Dave Wilson: That’s a great story. I mean, do you feel like there's a way as grandparents we can over-grandparent? Can we get too involved?

Larry Fowler: Well, we say often you're still the parent, but you must no longer parent (verb) unless invited. Grandparents can overdo it very, very quickly.

Ann Wilson: Does anyone else find that difficult? Not with my grandkids, with our kids. Like, "Guys, I could help you. I can see the problem, and I could fix it. I want to say it so bad." And that right there, the comment that you made, Larry, makes me stop. Like, oh.

Crawford Lorrits: There's a tension that needs to be maintained. I think you want to raise children—and your vision is to raise grandchildren—who are independently dependent upon God. That means that you’ve got to watch the control level because you don’t want to handicap them.

All of us are going to be very dead one day, unless Jesus comes back, and you don’t want to develop passive children or passive grandchildren. There's a strength that they need to have on their own. Their faith needs to be embraced on their own. They need to have a toughness in their souls, and that only comes through making mistakes and having God come in and intervene.

And I think as parents or grandparents, just because you can doesn’t mean that you should. I have seen hyper-control grandparents who are trying to do to their grandchildren what they’ve done to their kids. And their kids can’t make choices, they can’t make decisions, or they can’t stand being around them.

And so I think you need to count the cost in this thing. "What do I want them to look like, and what kind of decisions will they be able to make when I’m dead and gone?" And that's what we need to be thinking about. Pain and adversity can be the very best things our kids and grandkids can walk through. It's a gift.

Larry Fowler: Detachment therapy has become a really, really big deal. And some people say that detachment as a solution for conflict in the family has become an epidemic. Counselors are saying to people, "Just cut off the relationship." Instead of doing the hard conversations to fix it, just cut off the relationship.

And it’s just absolutely tragic that that has become much more common. But I hear from grandparents, "I’m not allowed to talk to my kids anymore. I don’t know what I did." Well, the fact you don’t know doesn’t mean you didn’t do anything.

It may be that you came on too strong, you were too controlling, and you didn’t realize you were blind to the fact that you contributed to it. In fact, I think in virtually all cases of where there's detachment, there's probably some blame on both sides.

Crawford Lorrits: Just triggers a thought in my mind, Larry. I think if you just pull out because there's hurt and there's pain, that solves nothing. Absolutely nothing. I think what makes a relationship rich and wonderful is that you move through conflict and pain. You made a mistake, well, you make it right. You learn how to forgive.

That brings depth. Just the other day, my son said something—my oldest son, Bryan—I was speaking to a group of leaders that he was a part of, and I spent a half day with them. And in introducing me, he made this statement. And this sounds like the hero and I don’t mean it to sound this way, but it underscores a principle here. He says, "You know, I remember my dad's apologies more than I do his sins."

And I said quickly, "Well, if you thought a while, you could remember a lot of my sins. Wouldn't take long." But his point was—and I think that that's what we’re talking about here—are you going to run every time there's a conflict? "Okay, I made a mistake. I over-communicated to you. I didn’t realize that you didn’t want me to take your three-year-old and have waffle fries all in his head at Chick-fil-A. Okay, I’m sorry about that."

So modeling, "How do you handle relationships? How do you handle these things?" That's what we ought to be about. Now, that's a little silly illustration, I know that there's bigger issues than that. Give us all a chance to grow. Grandparents are not perfect, and I think the younger generation needs to stop using the excesses of what grandparents were when they were parents to their kids—the exaggerated excesses—and experience forgiveness.

Karen and I chuckle. Our kids, when they were in their early to mid-20s, early to mid-20s, they became excessively insightful about our deficiencies. They were brilliant about that. But then, you just wait a while, they start having teenagers, all of a sudden we weren’t all that bad. You got smarter as their kids get a little older. Absolutely.

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Dave Wilson: I’m just sitting here thinking of all the character qualities that we want and are really, really important. Obviously, one of them that comes to my mind is integrity, that you can be trusted because your word is your bond. But I don’t know if humility is not number one. It’s so important to be humble enough to say I’m sorry, to say I’m wrong, I messed up.

Because if you're not humble, you're never going to say that. And if you have blown it with your kids—maybe you were too controlling, and you get to the point of like, "I was too controlling, and I’m seeing the fruit of my controllingness now, not only my kids, my grandkids. They don’t want to talk to me, they don’t want to bring their kids around me."

I have to be humble enough to go, "I was wrong. I’m sorry. I will do whatever it takes to make it right, not just with you, but with your grandkids." It’s not about me, it never was about me. I have to be humble to be able to do that.

Larry Fowler: Transparency time again here. Three or four years ago, our daughter and family came out to California where we live for Thanksgiving. And as they walk in the door, my oldest grandson declares that he has decided that he’s going to adopt a vegan diet. I grew up on a cattle ranch. Enough said.

I didn’t say anything though, and Diane accommodated his diet, made sure he had something to eat and everything, and afterwards they went back home. So January comes, and I get a call from my daughter. She said, "Dad, Tyler's really angry at you."

And I said, "What did I do?" And I’m raking my head, trying to think what in the world did I do? And she said, "Well, don’t you remember when you're out there for Thanksgiving and he said he was vegan?" I said, "Yeah, I didn’t say anything." She said, "Dad, you didn’t have to. Your body language said it all."

Well, I want you to know I love that grandson. And I knew I needed to ask his forgiveness. Well, I wanted to make sure that he knew that I was real sincere. So I thought, "What can I do?" So I decided I was going to go on a vegan diet myself for two weeks. It just about killed me.

And my son-in-law heard that I was doing this, and he told Tyler. And so I get a call from Tyler after a couple weeks, and he said, "Grandpa, I hear you're doing the vegan diet." I says, "Yeah, I am Tyler. I am so sorry. I didn’t mean to come across the way I did." And he said, "Well, I forgive you, Grandpa. And by the way, you don’t have to do the vegan diet anymore. Thank you, Jesus." Now Tyler's no longer a vegan, but he worked through that. But you know, if I hadn’t done that, if I hadn’t been willing to ask for forgiveness.

Crawford Lorrits: That tears me up. That's a humble move. That it really is. I want to get back to something that you said though. I actually do believe that gratitude and humility, they’re number one.

If you have integrity without humility, it sets you up for self-righteousness, that you just do everything right. The truth of the matter is, I think one of the greatest things we can teach our children and our grandchildren is how to be grateful. The expression gratitude means that you're needy. You're needy, you're dependent on someone, and you're thankful that they have come through for you.

And I think that that's the posture that we need to teach them. I think self-reliance is overrated, and it's going to blow up on you down the road. But I think it's the humility that causes you to engage, that causes you to pick up the phone and say, "Hey, amen. I grew up on a ranch." That's hilarious.

Ann Wilson: So you’re saying you teach that through example.

Crawford Lorrits: You teach it through example. And I’ll never forget this, our youngest son—I won't go into detail as to what he did—but he had done this behavior that I told him not to do. Well, he was in middle school, and this one morning I thought he had done it again and I just put the hammer down. I just said, "Brendan, you're not going to see the light of day. And I don’t care what—Dad—nothing. Okay?" And I just kept zeroing in on what was going to happen to him.

And so we get in the car, and of course we’ve got to pray before you get to school. So we get in the car, and my daughter, oldest daughter Heather, she was in the backseat. She knew I was hot, so she didn’t say much to me. I drop Brendan off, and then she says, "Dad, Brendan really didn’t do that, not this time." Well, there's some other stuff he did, I’m sure.

So sure enough, and I was going to my office, and the Holy Spirit is just, "Okay, okay, you need to say I’m sorry." I turned around, pulled him out of class, and told him, "I am so, so sorry. Will you forgive me?" It’s those kinds of things that you need to embrace so that they see the reality of your fallenness, but they also see you correcting that and moving toward wholeness. And so that's all a part of it that gives access to their hearts.

Dave Wilson: And you said earlier, it’s not about strategies, it’s about modeling and living it, and you're showing them, "This is what Christ looks like."

Hey, I have one quick thought, and that's just to ask Bruce. He’s a dad of little girls, four daughters. I mean, we’re all older generation people. Here's a guy at the very beginning of legacy. I just wondered if Bruce had any thoughts. And Chanceal's in there too, who knows what they’re thinking.

Guest (Male): You don’t have to be a grandparent to think about legacy. Thankfully, the Holy Spirit sweetly convicts, and I’m thinking, do I want my ten-year-old, seven-year-old, four-year-old, one-year-old to think, "Dad sure had a witty sarcasm that sometimes tore my mom down?" Or do I want the legacy of, "Wow, did my dad just treasure my mom?"

I think about my dad. He was my mom's biggest fan. But I think right now, maybe the legacy I’m leaving is dad sure tries to be witty. So that's what I’m thinking. And I’ve said that to Maria before, I’m like, "What if this was the day that we look back on and it's like, that's when I started just really building you up and that's what characterized our talk?" So that's what you guys got me thinking about. So thank you.

Dave Wilson: That’s good, Bruce. Wow. So talk about how people can watch the Legacy Summit in their homes.

Larry Fowler: Yeah, and you guys have all been part of that. We stream it to churches all across North America. And that will take place in the fall. Churches have the choice of when they are actually hosting that, usually somewhere between mid-September and mid-October.

And of course, just go to LegacyCoalition.com/summit and there you can find a list of all the churches across North America and even in other countries where the conference is taking place, and you’ll get to see Crawford and Dave and Ann on the screen right there in your own church.

Dave Wilson: Some of us are prettier than others. That would be her. And by the way, we’ll put that link also in our show notes at FamilyLifeToday.com. So just click on that link.

Ann Wilson: This has been powerful. I think I cried about four times.

Dave Wilson: Me too. What’s up with that? Crawford’s making me cry. Oh my gosh. It’s called torture. No, this has been so good. You guys, thanks.

Dave Wilson: Hey, let me just pause and say this. Our financial partners are the heartbeat of this ministry. And when you join this monthly giving community, you're not just donating, you're building something eternal.

Ann Wilson: And we’d be so honored to have you on the journey with us. We really would. So here's the question: will you join us today?

Dave Wilson: I hope your answer is yes. And if it is, go to FamilyLifeToday.com. You can click the donate button right there and become a part of the monthly partner program. FamilyLife Today is a donor-supported production of FamilyLife, a Cru ministry, celebrating 50 years of helping you pursue the relationships that matter most.

This transcript is provided as a written companion to the original message and may contain inaccuracies or transcription errors. For complete context and clarity, please refer to the original audio recording. Time-sensitive references or promotional details may be outdated. This material is intended for personal use and informational purposes only.

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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 Wilson are co-hosts of FamilyLife Today©, FamilyLife’s nationally-syndicated radio program.

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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