“In Jesus, You Are Home-Free” with Adam Griffin
In this conversation with author Adam Griffin, Cameron and Anna explore the relief the gospel brings to exhausted, overwhelmed, weary parents.
The Rooted Parent Podcast, hosted by Cameron Cole and Anna Meade Harris, aims to equip and encourage parents as they disciple their children to lifelong faith in Jesus Christ. Rooted Parent is a part of the Rooted Family of Podcasts.
In this conversation with author Adam Griffin, Cameron and Anna explore the relief the gospel brings to exhausted, overwhelmed, weary parents.
In our newest season, Lifegiving Parenthood, Cameron and Anna will unpack the I AM statements of Jesus in John’s Gospel. They seek to answer the question: can raising kids be life-giving?
In this episode of Asian American Parenting, Danny is joined by longtime youth pastor Justin Wong. Justin has served students and families for the past 25 years within the Asian American church community and most recently completed his second doctorate degree researching Gen Z students and the Asian American Church.
We invited them to talk about the (potential) overwhelm of being a mother. Both of these moms juggle full-time jobs while running their households, caring for elderly parents, serving at church, and attempting to maintain friendships and good health.
In this very special episode of the Rooted Parent podcast, Cameron and Anna welcome Kelly Kapic. His work on human limits was part of the inspiration for this Can’t Do It All season. In this episode, you will learn how God-given limits are not only not sin, they are blessings,
Author Justin Whitmel Earley joins Cameron and Anna for this special episode of the Rooted Parent Podcast. When life taught Earley that he truly could not do it all, he developed a “rule of life” to guide the choices…
Parents often live with the fear that they won’t be able to give their children everything they need- much less the things they want.
David Zahl’s new book The Big Relief offers a mess of help for parents who are in urgent need of grace in this worn-out world.
Parents in the 21st century are particularly burdened by the sense that they don’t have time to do all that needs to be done. Ask any parent-friend of yours how they are and they’re likely to say: “busy.”