Now That We're A Family
A podcast by Elisha and Katie Voetberg
Categories:
323 Episodes
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271: Prioritizing Your Children's Happiness // Autumn Kern
Published: 12/03/2024 -
270: My Husband Doesn't Like My Friends
Published: 7/03/2024 -
269: Life After Reality TV, Parenting In Public, and Family Language // Jeremy & Audrey Roloff
Published: 5/03/2024 -
268: Raising A Family To Do Hard Things From A Navy Seal's Perspective // Bill Rapier
Published: 29/02/2024 -
267: Not Attracted To My Wife After Weight Gain (What Can I Do?)
Published: 27/02/2024 -
266: From Worship Pastor To National Business Powerhouse // Ben & Corley Spell
Published: 22/02/2024 -
265: Books We've Read Our Children For Their Moral and Mental Development
Published: 20/02/2024 -
264: Chronically ill Spouses, Making A Home On The Road, Being A Pastor's Wife // Dale & Veronica Partridge
Published: 15/02/2024 -
263: The Problem With Coffee Shops, Gyms, Parks and Libraries
Published: 13/02/2024 -
262: Raising A Supersized Family In The City // Dr. Erik & Molly Lilja
Published: 8/02/2024 -
261: Should Christians . . .Spank? Watch The Halftime Show? Wear Makeup?
Published: 6/02/2024 -
260: Would We Be Happy If Our Child Was Gay?
Published: 1/02/2024 -
259: Changing Our Minds About Youth Sports
Published: 30/01/2024 -
258: How To Still Be Husband and Wife After Becoming “Mom and Dad.”
Published: 25/01/2024 -
257: Legalism, Open Door Policies, and The Last Days
Published: 23/01/2024 -
256: Miscarriage, Purity Culture, & Ministering Online with Jordan and Milena Ciciotti from As For Me and My House
Published: 18/01/2024 -
255: Social Skills All Children Should Learn
Published: 16/01/2024 -
254: How We Do Family Bible Time & Worship
Published: 11/01/2024 -
253: Digital Heroin: Screens Are Damaging Our Children's Brains | Dr. Nicholas Kardaras
Published: 9/01/2024 -
252: Debt, Jealous Spouses, Rough-Housing Boys, and Pushing Our Kids
Published: 4/01/2024
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.