5 Simple Ways Parents Can Help Teens Grow in Faith

 1. Invite Short, Low-Pressure Moments with God

2. Help Scripture Feel Relevant, Not Overwhelming

3. Create Space for Honest Conversation—Without Fixing

4. Encourage Faith Through Everyday Service

 5. Model Spiritual Rhythms Instead of Enforcing Rules

A Final Word of Encouragement

5 Ways to Help Gen Z Embrace Patriotism

For many of us, love of country came naturally. It was absorbed in the atmosphere—parades, shared stories, family traditions repeated year after year. Patriotism felt less like something taught and more like something inherited. For younger generations, it isn’t automatic. Surveys show only about four in ten Gen Z adults feel strongly proud to be American. The feeling isn’t gone—it’s

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6 People Who Changed the World — and the Mothers Who Shaped Them

History prefers dramatic entrances. We notice people at the moment they become important—at the inauguration, the battlefield decision, the invention, the sermon heard around the world. Their names arrive attached to achievement, as if leadership appeared fully formed in adulthood. But real influence often grows quietly.  It lives in smaller rooms: farmhouses, crowded kitchens, dim bedrooms where conversations stretch long

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Small Ways to Say “I Love You” That Teens Actually Notice

My two sons are in their early twenties now, and looking back, I can see more clearly what mattered most during their teen years—and it wasn’t what I expected. As my boys grew older, I had to learn something new about love. There was a season when loving them felt simple and obvious. They sat in my lap while I

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6 Ways to Help Your Teen Build Healthy Relationships (Without Hovering)

February has a way of bringing relationships into sharper focus. Between Valentine’s Day, social media posts, and everyday conversations at school, love, friendship, and connection are everywhere your teen turns. And if you’re a parent, that can stir up a quiet mix of hope, concern, and unanswered questions. You want your teen to be treated with kindness. You want them

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Your Teen is Not Behind: What They Need to Hear This Year

“You don’t have to have it all figured out.” When teens hear those words, they often pause. Sometimes they push back. Other times they ask a question adults don’t always expect: “Then why does it feel like I’m supposed to?” Many teens today carry a quiet, constant pressure to know who they are, where they’re going, and what their future

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