Skip to content

Broadcasts

Find A Topic, Author, Guest or Category

The Latest Broadcasts

Broadcasts

Outdated: Find Love That Lasts When Dating Has Changed

When most Christian singles date, they often follow the road of secular culture. They put emotions ahead of biblical principles. On today’s edition of Family Talk, JP Pokluda, senior pastor of Harris Creek Baptist Church, points to 1 Timothy 4:12, which says, “Set an example for the believers in speech, in conduct, in love, in faith, and in purity.” The author of Outdated: Find Love That Lasts When Dating Has Changed says you should date someone long enough to examine those same five attributes. Does the person you are interested in act and speak in a God-honoring way? Is he or she committed to purity before marriage?

Listen In
Broadcasts

Recovery and Care for Eating Disorders

Did you know that twenty-eight million Americans battle an eating disorder in their lifetime? On today’s edition of Family Talk, Dr. Tim Clinton interviews Christian clinical psychologist, Dr. Margaret Nagib, to discuss this devastating epidemic. Dr. Nagib identifies the widespread impact of diseases such as bulimia and anorexia, and how those struggling can find healing and restoration.

Listen In
Broadcasts

From Guilt to Grace: Avoiding the Danger Zone

All around us, we see a culture that is turning its back on God, but that choice has dire consequences. When people become entrenched in their sin, God will eventually give them over to their corrupt desires. Hear more about this astounding warning from the book of Romans today on Family Talk.

Listen In
Broadcasts

From Survive to Thrive – Part 2

Pastor Samuel Rodriguez came down with a case of COVID-19, but he believes that his emphasis on taking care of his body and living a healthy lifestyle created a firewall that kept him asymptomatic. He says that Christians likewise need to make the effort to fortify their marriages and keep family relationships healthy. He talks with co-host Dr. Tim Clinton about how to thrive in your walk with God, especially in these trying times.

Listen In
Broadcasts

Finding God in the Hard Places

In 1999, Carol Kent was living a happy life with her husband, Gene, until they received a phone call at 12:35 a.m. that changed everything. Their son, Jason, a promising Naval Academy graduate, was arrested and charged with first-degree murder. After he received a life sentence without parole, Carol discovered what it meant to live between a rock and a grace place. On today’s edition of Family Talk, Carol shares that, like the Apostle Paul who asked for the thorn in his flesh to be removed, God’s grace is sufficient for her too.

Listen In
Broadcasts

Hearts of the Fathers: Modeling Leadership That Lasts – Part 2

Fathers have a crucial role as the head of their households: to love and cherish their wives, and guide and prepare their children for life. On today’s edition of Family Talk, Dr. James Dobson continues his interview with Dr. Charles Crismier on the subject of his book, Hearts of the Fathers: Leaving a Legacy that Lasts. Dr. Crismier emphasizes that fathers cannot delegate their spiritual obligation to the pastor, youth minister, or Sunday School teacher. The responsibility to disciple his children falls squarely on his shoulders, as their dad. Proverbs 22:6 says, “Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it.”

Listen In
Broadcasts

Hearts of the Fathers: Modeling Leadership That Lasts – Part 1

In Malachi 4:6, God says that He’ll turn the hearts of the fathers to their children, and the hearts of the children to their fathers. But how will He do that? On today’s edition of Family Talk, Dr. Charles Crismier, the author of Hearts of the Fathers: Leaving a Legacy that Lasts, insists that there’s only one way that will happen. If the hearts of Christian fathers are turned back to their Heavenly Father, only then will these newly equipped dads be able to model that kind of love to their kids.

Listen In
Broadcasts

Concerned Women For Life

With the ongoing gender indoctrination in the public school classrooms, the allowing of biological males in women’s sports, and the deadly abortion pill now available in pharmacies and through the U.S mail, there is an all-out war on women. On today’s edition of Family Talk, Penny Young Nance, CEO and president of Concerned Women for America, urges Christian women to stand up for Truth in the public square and “vote with their purses.” In a culture that has gone mad, now is the time to speak the Lord’s absolute truth in love.

Listen In
Broadcasts

Taking the Next Steps: Marching in a Post-Roe America 

Some pro-lifers have mistakenly concluded that since Roe v. Wade was overturned by the Supreme Court last year, there would no longer be a March for Life in Washington, D.C. On today’s edition of Family Talk, Jeanne Mancini, president of the March for Life Education and Defense Fund, explains that while Roe has been reversed, the battle has just begun for the sanctity of life. Not only do the March for Life organizers want to make abortion unthinkable, but they hope to build a stronger safety net for women facing unexpected pregnancies. This includes maternity homes, pro-life pregnancy resource centers and compassion for those who are in crisis. Since some “blue states” have championed partial-birth abortions, there is obviously so much work left to be done.

Listen In
Broadcasts

Support After Abortion

What happens after a woman has an abortion? What resources are available after that grievous choice? These are the questions that Lisa Rowe, founder and CEO of the Support After Abortion ministry, is trying to answer. On today’s edition of Family Talk, Lisa, a licensed social worker, who works directly with women experiencing this tremendous loss and pain, shares that women consider abortion to be the best option after enduring other preliminary traumas. She says that post-abortive women grapple with regret, anger, grief, and anxiety. Through the network of counselors available at Support After Abortion, women learn the difference between guilt which says, “I did bad,” and shame which says, “I am bad.”

Listen In