What's in the Way of Your Friendships: Drew Hunter
Friendship hasn’t always been this hard. Author Drew Hunter looks at historical friendships, and some of the ways we get it wrong.
Drew Hunter: Just thinking about the marks of friendship and what real friendship is, just apply that directly to marriage. Think, have I been expressing affection? Do I let Christina know that I love her and do I show that with my words, my actions, how I care for her? Does she know in her bones that I love her?
Dave Wilson: Welcome to FamilyLife Today, where we want to help you pursue the relationships that matter most. I’m Dave Wilson.
Ann Wilson: And I’m Ann Wilson, and you can find us at FamilyLifeToday.com. This is FamilyLife Today.
Dave Wilson: You remember Paul early on? A guy I met playing pickup basketball. Long story, didn’t really have a great home life, so he came in and ended up living with us. Single guy and now he’s married with kids. It's an unbelievable story, but he became a really close friend. He was probably 20 years younger than me.
Ann Wilson: Maybe 20.
Dave Wilson: So he’s almost like a son, but one day we’re in our kitchen and Paul comes over and gives me this really tight hug. His beard is right by my cheek.
Ann Wilson: I watched this and you were so uncomfortable.
Dave Wilson: I remember he hugged me really tight and he said, "Dave Wilson, I just love you. Thank you for impacting my life." And then he won’t let go. So he says, "Hey, this is making you uncomfortable, isn’t it?" And I’m like, "Well, yeah, a little." So then he squeezes harder and he won’t let go. He goes, "You’ve got to embrace this. This is just me saying you’ve been an important man in my life." I remember thinking that really felt uncomfortable, and I shouldn’t be uncomfortable.
Ann Wilson: Why do you think it was uncomfortable?
Dave Wilson: I think my background is I never had a dad. Our family never hugged.
Ann Wilson: Your mom kissed you on the lips all the time.
Dave Wilson: I always hated that. I liked it, but I didn’t like it, especially when friends would come over and she’d kiss them. It was uncomfortable, but I thought it shouldn’t be uncomfortable. Paul, a young man, was mentoring me, teaching me this shouldn’t be an uncomfortable thing. As a man and even as a father of sons, I’ve tried to be better.
We walked into the studio this morning and Rick grabbed you and he hugged you real tight. He said, "Let me give you an uncomfortable hug," and I’m like, "Do you know what we’re talking about today?" He’s going to be editing this program later. But we’ve got Drew Hunter in the studio for day two. Drew wrote a book about friendship, that we are actually created by God for friendship. You hear me talk about this. How does that hit you? As a man, is that something that’s uncomfortable for you?
Drew Hunter: The story you just shared? It’s not anymore. I think it would have been at one time. I think I’ve just recognized how important encouragement, affirmation, honesty, and expressed affection are for human relationships and for friendship. And for men. That’s actually a lack of those things is a reason contributing to why friendships can stay so tepid and superficial because we don’t have that kind of open honesty and transparency about how we actually feel about one another and care about each other.
Ann Wilson: It’s a beautiful thing. Drew, you’re a dad of four boys and you’re a pastor in Zionsville, Indiana. Your oldest son is 12. So are you still hugging him a lot? And will there ever be a day that you won’t?
Drew Hunter: I hope not. I want to have them filled with love and affection, so I tell them I love them often. I want to express that in all of life and plenty of big hugs.
Dave Wilson: We had your friend Dane Ortlund on. We’ve had him on several times on FamilyLife Today and we’re going to play a clip because he makes a comment about this thing that’s pretty beautiful and I’d love to hear your thoughts.
Dane Ortlund: I’m 43, my dad is 72. To this day, when I walk into my parents' home in Franklin, Tennessee, he gives me a big hug. Maybe it lasts a few seconds too long. I’m kidding. It’s a real hug. Most of the men at my church, when I give them a hug, we’re both like, okay, let’s release really fast here before this gets awkward. Give a good hug and you’re communicating I have sincere affection for you.
Drew Hunter: I resonate with that. I’ve hugged Dane many times and he’s a man who models encouragement and expressed affection better than most people I know. He’s modeled that for me really well also.
Ann Wilson: I like the legacy of his dad doing that and then he’s just carried it on.
Drew Hunter: It’s a picture too that as I think about my boys, I’m their father, but ideally what father-son relationships can turn into is friendship. As they grow older, nothing’s ever going to change about the parent dynamic nor should it. But a layer added to that is friendship. That’s what Dane’s expressing with his dad as well. So I look forward to my boys growing into my closest friends as well over time.
Ann Wilson: I led a Bible study with the Detroit Lions' wives for about 35 years and there was this one woman, Yvonne, that she would host this Bible study. The Bible study for the women kept growing and growing. I was watching Yvonne and every time someone would come in the door, mind you, these women are from all over the country, they don’t know each other, but they would walk through the door and Yvonne would have this huge smile. She’d see them, she’s from Hawaii, and so every time she’d kiss them on the cheek, she would hug them. Everyone felt like this is the best place in the world and they wanted to be her friend because of her open affection and love for them.
Dave Wilson: It’s interesting, I was thinking the same thing during that season of our ministry with the Detroit Lions. We had a quarterback come into our locker room and an NFL locker room is not a place of a lot of hugs unless you’re winning. After a game, there are a lot of hugs. Not so much in Detroit.
But there was this one quarterback, Josh McCown. He was such a lover of people. He was a joy-bringer. He reminds me a little bit of Dane, actually. He’s a man of God, a man of the Word. He was in Detroit one season, then was traded to another team, played in the NFL like 15 years. Another quarterback came in the same year, John Kitna. That was our starter and our backup. Those two men of God had this unique ability in our locker room.
The whole locker room tilted toward their lockers because John was this strong man of the Word. He had a Bible as big as this table in his locker. Josh was a man of the Word as well, and yet he had this tender, loving, affectionate love for the men. We baptized 27 players that season.
Ann Wilson: And they were really good friends.
Dave Wilson: They were great friends, but as I think about that season, I think a lot of it was John’s strong, courageous commitment but Josh’s tender love for the locker room. When I say the locker room was leaning toward their lockers, they were drawn over there like a magnet. It was this friendship thing you’re talking about, that we’re made for friendship. Even NFL macho men who you think don’t want friendship, they are little boys inside that are longing for another man to see them and acknowledge them and want to have a relationship with them. Is that what God designed us for? Is that what you’ve seen?
Drew Hunter: Absolutely. Even your story reminds me that this isn't for certain personality types. It’s not like that guy’s good at friendship, that’s for him, or he’s really good at encouraging people. Some people can be way out in the lead doing it well, but Romans 12 says outdo one another in showing honor. That’s expressing esteem for one another. That’s what it means to show honor.
Every Christian is called to, in any room we’re ever in, we’ll walk out and someone will have won. They will have outdone everyone else in showing honor. Every Christian is called to pursue being that person who, not like we need to feel like we’re better than people, but there is a godly sense of competition in the sense that in every gathering, someone’s going to have shown the most honor to others and we should all be striving to do that.
Some people are better than others, but we shouldn’t see that as that’s just their thing. That’s not comfortable for me. We all can grow into that. I think there are so many cultural influences that keep people and men from being able to look another man in the eye and say, "I love you. I respect you. Let me tell you something that I appreciate about you that you did for me. I don't know if you noticed I even knew that, but that really meant a lot to me."
That kind of sharing has been very rare in our culture and I think we shouldn’t take that as just reflective of the way the world should be. This is the way it is right now, but how it should be is expressing honor, affirmation, and encouragement.
I read a book called *The Overflow of Friendship* by a historian who is just studying letters between men in the early founding era of America. He says he reads the letters to his students now and their jaws drop because they can’t imagine what it would be like to have this kind of affection and encouragement expressed to one another.
In our world, we’ve so sexualized relationships that we just assume if you’re saying really kind affectionate things to one another, there must be something else going on. He just says not at all. There is not a hint of that in these letters and in these relationships. This is just men expressing love and affection and care for one another. We see that in David and Jonathan. They kiss each other with a cultural greeting. They’re crying when they leave each other. The Bible calls us, all Christians, to encourage one another.
Ann Wilson: What’s the culture, Dave, where the men, wherever they go, they hold hands?
Dave Wilson: I mean, it’s true when I’ve been in the bush in Africa. They do that and it’s just their community. There's nothing sexualized about it at all. It’s exactly what you just said. I know that in the last few years the guys that I have friendships around the country, some of them former NFL Detroit Lions guys, when we hang up, it’s always, "Hey, love you." 20 years ago didn't say that, but it’s a good thing to say to a friend. Obviously, as a dad to your children, but it’s a good thing.
I want to hear you talk about your subtitle: how a friend doubles our joy and halves our sorrow. Talk about that.
Drew Hunter: That line is somewhat modified from J.C. Ryle, who put it similarly and he was picking up a phrase that through history was rolling through the ages. The way that he put it is he says this world is a dark place, it’s a lonely place, it’s a disappointing place. He’s just recognizing the reality of sin and sadness in our life.
But then he says the brightest sunbeam in it is a friend. Friendship halves our troubles and doubles our joys. What I love about that is both its realism—life is hard, we all know this—but then God has shined the light in and the brightest beam is friendship. Both friendship with the Lord Jesus and one another. I want in on that.
The benefits of that is this halving our troubles and sorrows. Cutting those in half and then doubling our joys. That’s been my experience. Any burden I’m going through, if I’m going through it with someone who knows me and loves me, just even them caring about me through this lifts the load off my shoulders. Cuts it in half. I’ve been through stuff in my life where I think if I didn’t have those close friends with me, I don’t know how that would have turned out or what I would have done. There's no way I could have gotten through that.
And then doubling the joys. Everything is better in life with friends. There are so many experiences in life that I’ve had where if you remove friends from those experiences, you can say that was great, you went to this place, you saw those mountains, you experienced that. Yeah, but if you take my friends out of that experience, I wouldn’t be talking about it as an amazing memory. It’s friendship that doubles those joys and just makes life better. So when you ask me what’s best in life, I’m going to start naming people for you because that’s what’s best in life.
Ann Wilson: That’s really good. I’m thinking about Michelle and I have some really pretty amazing friends and Michelle happens to have a shepherding gift too. But when my sister died, I walked into my house after the funeral and my house was full of flowers everywhere and scripture everywhere. I think of how she was just there. She was there sitting, listening, being there, sending me scripture.
Then when I turned 40, this is pretty remarkable. Do you remember this, Dave? She contacted 40 friends. Now if there’s 40, you know they’re not super-super close, but 40 friends of mine. So for 40 days before my birthday, she had someone give me a gift. For 40 days, it was the most amazing birthday ever. But a friend is thinking about you and that’s what I thought, she’s thinking about me. The day before each one of our sons got married, she would always give me this long letter of how she saw me parent that son and how she was inspired by it. I think back on some of the greatest moments of my life, it was Michelle creating these incredible times. I don’t think my life has been so much richer with her. Dave, he’s my best friend, but I also need other women beside me.
Dave Wilson: When her sister died, I did the funeral in a different state. She was in Georgia. She was 44, she had four boys, it was a quick cancer thing. So it was a horrible day. I’m the pastor in the family, so I’m standing up in front of her four boys and her husband and Ann’s dad. I mean, you’re looking at all these people in your family. All of a sudden, the back door of the church opens. We're in some church in the Atlanta area, actually, Tennessee area.
Ann Wilson: Dalton.
Dave Wilson: And the back door of the church opens and five or six of our closest friends from Michigan walk in right before the funeral. One of our friends who has a private jet flew them down. He contacted them and said, "You need to be there with Dave and Ann because you’re their closest friends." What you said, there was sorrow but somehow that halved it. It was just so good to have community in the middle of a valley.
Drew Hunter: Your story about your friend having those 40 notes reminds me too of Christina, who is my best friend. Not the only friend, but best friend. I turned 40 and she contacted a number of my friends and had them just write a note to me just expressing some memory or some appreciation and then she compiled it into a little book.
I was actually having kind of a rough day. Turning 40 hit me in ways I wasn’t prepared for. It is a hard one. I usually do a pretty good job anticipating things, watching other people go through things so I’m not caught off guard, but it did hit me and it was hard. Then I opened that book and started reading and I was in tears. It took a while to get through it, but it was so meaningful and actually just gave me so much hope for the next 10 years to think so many of these rich relationships I have and the memories they shared were from the past 10 or 15 years and the next 10 or 15, Lord willing, can be just as rich. So it’s added so much and that’s the joy in life, what God gives us through the people.
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Ann Wilson: Talk about being a consumer friend. That consumer friendship, what’s that mean?
Drew Hunter: If you contrast consumer friendship with we could call committed or covenantal friendship. David and Jonathan make a covenant of friendship. I don't think that we all need to make covenants of friendship, but it gets at something that’s a contrast with how friendship is normally experienced by some people.
Consumer friendship is the idea that your friendship is there to be used by you. When you want something from them, you can go to them. Networking is huge today, but people can turn friendship and make networking and friendship the same thing in their life. They just see everyone as a potential for something else. Using for a good time and when things get hard in that person’s life, then they don’t show up. They aren’t going to call them because they aren’t deep and connected and they haven’t had a relationship that would be comfortable stepping in in hard times or suffering.
Consumer friendship is like consuming goods. When they’re useful you have them, when they’re not you discard them and you move on. Proverbs talks about that when talking about how often people treat people with money. The rich have many friends, the poor have their friends even leave them. That’s consumer friendship.
Covenantal or committed friendship means like Proverbs 17 says: a friend loves at all times and a brother’s born for adversity. Even in the hardship, you don’t forsake your friend. In fact, Proverbs even says do not forsake your friend or your father’s friend. The context of that proverb is calamity coming into someone’s life. Your friend loses his job, gets diagnosed with cancer, sinks into depression. What do you do? Proverbs says the one thing you can’t do is forsake them. You move close. You express solidarity with them in that.
I remember I was going through a really hard time at one point and Dane, he knew I was going through this hard time and he just showed up one day at my church. He just stood next to me or stood behind me, gave me a hug, and then we had lunch and then he went back because he just knew I was having a hard time in life. So he just showed up. I’ll never forget that. Deeply meaningful. So that’s a covenantal friend, that’s a committed friend in the good times and the bad times, expressing love and solidarity and staying with that person.
Job’s friends are a bad example in so many ways, but they had a decent start. They showed up, they sat with him, they wept with him. And then they said things. Maybe don’t say things if you don’t know what to say.
Dave Wilson: As I’m thinking of a husband and wife, because you talked about you and Christina are great friends, Ann and I are great friends, how do you build a great friendship in your marriage? Because not a lot of marriages have that.
Drew Hunter: Maybe a first step is even if you recognize you don’t have it, just acknowledge that together and just speak openly about what you wish it could be and own your own shortcomings in that. Just thinking about the marks of friendship and what real friendship is, just apply that directly to marriage.
Have I been expressing affection? Do I let Christina know that I love her and do I show that with my words, my actions, how I care for her? Does she know in her bones that I love her? It’s obvious that I do. Not like I know he loves me but it’s like you need to feel it, it needs to be obvious. Communication, transparency is a mark of friendship, so just speaking openly and honestly about our own weaknesses and shortcomings.
First John 1:7 calls us to walk in the light. Walk in the light as He is in the light. That’s not walking in perfection. The context of that is actually just walking in honesty, it’s coming out of hiding. Is there some sin in your life or collection of sins or struggles that you have that you don’t bring to your spouse? Walking in the light is coming out of hiding, out in the light. Real forgiveness, felt forgiveness, and real friendship happen through walking in the light together. Confessing sin, being open, knowing each other, not treating each other as a consumer either but a committed covenantal friend, caring for each other and serving in those ways.
Jesus is the perfect friend. Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends. Love is affectionate, committed, self-sacrificial. Serve in love, confess and apologize when you don’t, be quick to apologize, quick to repent, quick to forgive. All these things that friendship needs need to be in there as well. Taking the first step is owning your own part of that and seeing that you’re the problem.
Ann Wilson: I like thinking about that conversation with a husband or wife of saying I’d love us to be even better friends. What do you think that could look like or what could we do to become better friends? I would add one more: have fun together. You and Christina are about to have a few days together of just having fun and that is another thing that draws you close to one another. This has been great.
Dave Wilson: I would just end with this. Listening to what you just said, Drew, and reading your book, I am such a blessed man because my best friend is sitting right here.
Ann Wilson: You’re my best friend too.
Dave Wilson: No, you are such a great friend. You love me, you speak truth to me, I am so thankful. And I’m sure you feel the same way about Christina. Not all men or spouses get that. It’s a lot of work. If you’re not there, you can get there. God wants you to have it, but it’s on us to pursue it and do the marks of friendship that you talked about.
What a great day with Drew Hunter talking about friendship and community and the power of relationships. By the way, the book again is called *Made for Friendship: The Relationship That Halves Our Sorrows and Doubles Our Joys*.
Ann Wilson: Doesn’t it make you want to have more friends?
Dave Wilson: I’ve got enough. You just need a few, you don’t need a thousand. That’s true, but it’s just so good. You can get your copy by just clicking the link in the show notes at FamilyLifeToday.com. Tell you what, a lot of people don’t know this, but we’re on YouTube.
Ann Wilson: I love watching you two clips. You get a lot more out of it, I think, when you’re watching people.
Dave Wilson: And the next generation’s probably going to watch it rather than just listen to it. So you can do either/or but if you want to watch and enjoy it, YouTube.com/FamilyLife. Just go to YouTube.com/FamilyLife or if you’re a big YouTube person, just go to YouTube and type in FamilyLife one word.
Ann Wilson: I put three words on there and it still worked: FamilyLife Today.
Dave Wilson: FamilyLife Today is a donor-supported production of FamilyLife, a Cru ministry, celebrating 50 years of helping you pursue the relationships that matter most.
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- 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 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
- October Baby
- On Pills and Needles
- One of Us Must Be Crazy
- One With My Lord: Sam Allberry
- 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 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
- Sam Allberry - Gospel Sanity in a Weary World
- 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
- 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 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 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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