What Teenagers Need From Parents: Expect Failure and Success
When we don’t allow our children to fail or see their brokenness (or ours), we cheat them out of seeing the depth, breadth, and magnitude of the cross.
When we don’t allow our children to fail or see their brokenness (or ours), we cheat them out of seeing the depth, breadth, and magnitude of the cross.
Is it enough for my children to remember that I loved them?
Whatever decisions parents and teens make regarding social media use, it is important that such decisions are made intentionally and for the glory of God.
When the Scripture exhorts us to care for the body of Christ, it does not make an exception for parents because their calendars are filled with baseball games.
Welcome to this month’s Rooted Parent Top 10 – a list of parenting articles from across the web for the Rooted community.
Praying for our children can be a messy business, complicated by our own sinful, emotional hearts.
Lopes summarizes what the Bible teaches men about serving their families: the “how-tos” of spiritual leadership and the heart behind it.
We want our teenagers to know that even though their dark valleys look and feel like “death,” we have a Savior who knows those feelings.
During the pandemic, increased sleep and increased connection led to greater resilience, even in the face of greater stress.