Now That We're A Family

A podcast by Elisha and Katie Voetberg

Categories:

360 Episodes

  1. 328: Regrets From Moving Off Grid

    Published: 9/26/2024
  2. 327: Disagreements With My Mother, Struggles With Contentment, Christian Influences

    Published: 9/24/2024
  3. 326: Tone Deaf Christianity and NPR Pastors

    Published: 9/19/2024
  4. 325: What We Learned From Bill Gothard and Michelle Obama

    Published: 9/17/2024
  5. 324: We're having a . . .

    Published: 9/12/2024
  6. 323: What The Church Gets Wrong About Singleness

    Published: 9/10/2024
  7. 322: Formulating a Family Library, Ballerina Farm Drama, Wife with Unbelieving Husband

    Published: 9/5/2024
  8. 321: Teaching Your Kids To Love Work With Joel Salatin

    Published: 9/3/2024
  9. 320: WE QUIT ❌ 10 Things We're No Longer Doing (and you shouldn't either)

    Published: 8/29/2024
  10. 319: Sabbath Rhythms and Family Legacy

    Published: 8/27/2024
  11. 318: Finally Understanding The Theology We Grew Up With

    Published: 8/22/2024
  12. 317: Overcoming Stage Fright, Off-Grid Tent Routines, When Is Too Young To Become a Christian

    Published: 8/20/2024
  13. 316: First Trimester Update // Pregnant with Baby #6

    Published: 8/15/2024
  14. 315: Homeschool Curriculum Picks // What We're Changing This Year

    Published: 8/13/2024
  15. 314: Rethinking Technology With Our Kids In Mind

    Published: 8/8/2024
  16. 313: Lying Christians, Dishonest Children, Deceitful Spouses

    Published: 8/6/2024
  17. 312: 10 Things We Can't Live Without

    Published: 8/1/2024
  18. 311: Raising Privileged Children and Enabling Young Adults

    Published: 7/30/2024
  19. 310: Adoption, Ministering As A Family, Immodest Swimwear // Q&A

    Published: 7/25/2024
  20. 309: Staying Unified Through Seasons Of Transition

    Published: 7/23/2024

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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.