Now That We're A Family
En podcast av Elisha and Katie Voetberg
398 Avsnitt
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166: What People Don't Tell You About Socialization and Homeschooling
Publicerades: 2022-07-12 -
165: Mennonite Culture, Raising Wild Boys, and Hospitality // Interview With Heidi Marie
Publicerades: 2022-07-05 -
164: Why We Don't Dance Together // Our Worst Memory From Dating // Katie's Perfect Day
Publicerades: 2022-06-28 -
163: Courageous Parenting // Interview With Isaac Tolpin
Publicerades: 2022-06-21 -
162: Interview With Mother Of 11, Jenise Johnson
Publicerades: 2022-06-14 -
161: How We Battle Fear and Anxiety
Publicerades: 2022-06-07 -
160: How To Be Your Dream Home // Revised and Updated
Publicerades: 2022-05-31 -
159: Why Every Christian Should Homeschool With Retired Navy Seal and Father of 7, Bill Rapier
Publicerades: 2022-05-24 -
158: When You Have Zero Margin In Your Marriage
Publicerades: 2022-05-17 -
157: Training To Be Spies And The One Oversight That Sets People Up For Failure.
Publicerades: 2022-05-10 -
156: End Times, Apostasy in The Church, Overcoming Trauma After The Pandemic with John Eldredge
Publicerades: 2022-05-03 -
155: Are We Done Having Kids? Our Thoughts on Head Coverings
Publicerades: 2022-04-26 -
154: Beauty In Battle // How To Fight In Marriage With Jason and Tori Benham
Publicerades: 2022-04-19 -
153: Books That Shaped Us // A List
Publicerades: 2022-04-12 -
152: Read It, See It, Say It, Sing It: A Method For Memorizing Large Passages of Scripture with Our Children Interview With Hunter Beless
Publicerades: 2022-04-05 -
151: Boundaries, Pitfalls, and Opportunities Raising Children
Publicerades: 2022-03-29 -
150: Eric Ludy // Saying No To Christian Work
Publicerades: 2022-03-22 -
149: When Your Spouse Fails To Meet Your Expectations
Publicerades: 2022-03-15 -
148: Elisha's Biggest Insecurity and What Katie's Most Proud Of
Publicerades: 2022-03-01 -
147: Victory Over Pornography // Interview With Chad Johnson
Publicerades: 2022-02-22
Culture has reduced the modern family to a joke -- informing parents they are only capable of shuttling their children from expert to expert who experiment with untested agendas. Katie and Elisha lean on their experience growing up in large families of 10 and 11 kids, to encourage parents to take back control, stop listening to popular relationship advice, and embrace their God-given role as their children's primary authority.