Family Life Noon Report – 05/19/23
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 32:35 — 74.6MB)
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Android | Email | RSS
News features from a Biblical perspective.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 32:35 — 74.6MB)
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Android | Email | RSS
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 13:56 — 19.1MB)
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Android | Email | RSS
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 6:19 — 8.7MB)
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Android | Email | RSS
Dr. Paul Kengor returns to Family Life to offer insights on public discourse, especially with a faith and values perspective. On this edition of our “Faith Under Fire” Feature, Kengor says Christians need to be boldly involved in the culture around them. Those who sit by silently, afraid to speak up, are worried about human judgment and getting a bad reputation on social media. He contrasts those who decide to “stay under the radar” to avoid controversy with martyrs throughout church history to did not water down truth, just to stay popular or avoid showdowns.
At the same time, he points to Scriptural guidance — and common sense practicality — that anyone with a vantage point need to offer charitable respect to others whose positions have taken them in a different direction.
Paul Kengor is on the faculty at Grove City College in western Pennsylvania, directs the Institute for Faith and Freedom there, and is senior editor of The American Spectator.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 31:36 — 72.3MB)
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Android | Email | RSS
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 14:49 — 20.4MB)
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Android | Email | RSS
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 12:47 — 17.6MB)
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Android | Email | RSS
Over 70 percent of Americans say they would like to grow spiritually, according to the Barna research group. That includes Boomers, Gen X, Millennials, and Gen Z.
“When over seven in ten people say they want to grow spiritually, they are not necessarily saying, ‘Hey, I want to meet Jesus,’ ‘Hey I want to become a Christian,’” says Savannah Kimberlin, an Associate Vice President for Church Engagement at Barna.
The people who are open spiritually, she says, are looking for purpose or inner peace and are willing to consider a spiritual answer. Reaching them with the answer in Jesus will look different from how Christians spread the news of Jesus in previous decades.
“They care very deeply about knowing and seeing and being taught that Christianity is not only true, but that it is also good,” she says. Christians are the most attractive to spiritually hungry people when their beliefs show through in the way they live even more than in the words they say.
“If we want to step into these kinds of relationships where we are being salt and light, and where we are facilitating spiritual conversations, we have to make sure that our actions speak louder than our words,” Kimberlin says.
The Barna Group has been researching faith in America for over three decades. Learn more about Barna here, and Barna’s Rising Spiritual Openness in America research here.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 31:22 — 71.8MB)
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Android | Email | RSS
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 15:48 — 21.7MB)
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Android | Email | RSS
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 32:07 — 73.5MB)
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Android | Email | RSS
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 10:32 — 14.5MB)
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Android | Email | RSS
Mother’s Day was Sunday.
We talked with family counselor — and mom of four preteens — Jenny Coffey about what most moms might really like for Mother’s Day. Her answer for the weekend was “rest” and balance.
Those are still gifts which can bless mothers the other 364 days of the year.
Coffey gives us advice for families, including stories from what is working for her own household. She also has encouragement for moms themselves — how to avoid the internal and external pressures and stereotypes can improperly focus women on unattainable accomplishments and unrealistic status.
Also in this extended version of the feature we aired at noon, she shares additional insights for women who are parenting alone (either as single moms or without good support from others), as well as ways congregations can adapt their families to be better supportive of mothers (and fathers). Coffey sees this as an important evangelistic tool too, because older church leaders may not realize how parenting styles and family patterns have changed for today’s young adult generations.