Homeschooling isn’t a silver bullet—it’s a God-given context. New survey data shows homeschool grads choose hard work over money (54% vs. 19%), marry more often (65% vs. 44%), welcome more children (2.5 vs. 1.7), and are nearly three times more likely to attend church and read Scripture. Kevin and Danny revisit the “socialization” question, highlight the family economy tradeoffs (often one income), and encourage moms and dads in the trenches: keep the aim on faith and character, not just fact...
All content for The Generations Radio Program is the property of The Generations Radio Program and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Homeschooling isn’t a silver bullet—it’s a God-given context. New survey data shows homeschool grads choose hard work over money (54% vs. 19%), marry more often (65% vs. 44%), welcome more children (2.5 vs. 1.7), and are nearly three times more likely to attend church and read Scripture. Kevin and Danny revisit the “socialization” question, highlight the family economy tradeoffs (often one income), and encourage moms and dads in the trenches: keep the aim on faith and character, not just fact...
How to Confront Sin in Your Home - Discipleship for Dads
The Generations Radio Program
36 minutes
2 weeks ago
How to Confront Sin in Your Home - Discipleship for Dads
Discipline without despair. The dads discuss how gratitude, clarity, and humility turn tough moments into growth—anchored in Matthew 18, Galatians 6, and Ephesians 6. Learn the 10:1 affirmation rhythm, how to invite your wife’s counsel, and how to define the prayer request at the end of every correction. Download the episode MP3 here: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2520780/episodes/18148450-how-to-confront-sin-in-your-home-discipleship-for-dads.mp3 A Hive of Busy Bees
The Generations Radio Program
Homeschooling isn’t a silver bullet—it’s a God-given context. New survey data shows homeschool grads choose hard work over money (54% vs. 19%), marry more often (65% vs. 44%), welcome more children (2.5 vs. 1.7), and are nearly three times more likely to attend church and read Scripture. Kevin and Danny revisit the “socialization” question, highlight the family economy tradeoffs (often one income), and encourage moms and dads in the trenches: keep the aim on faith and character, not just fact...