![]() It's the overwhelming majority of people, in any room I've ever been in, who raised their hands. You know, I have had occasion, in speaking, sometimes, to be in front of an audience and I’ve asked the question: "How many of you have been impacted, at some level, by divorce?-either your parents got a divorce, siblings have had a divorce, or you are married to someone whose parents or siblings have had a divorce."īob: I just asked them to raise their hand. And another movie came out this week-it’s a movie called A-C-O-D: Adult Children of Divorce. We talked, last week, about the movie that had just been released- Grace Unplugged. Our host, of course, is the President of FamilyLife ®, Dennis Rainey, and I'm Bob Lepine. Thanks for joining us on the Monday edition-Monday, October 7 th. We don't know what to say-so, we just say nothing, which is the worst thing of all.īob: And welcome to FamilyLife Today. We don't know what to do with kids who are from a divorced family. I think the clergy-the congregation-we adults often don't know what to do with kids on their own. Here's Elizabeth Marquardt.Įlizabeth: Divorce shapes young people through their lives-how they approach the major stories of the faith and how they approach the big questions of moral and spiritual development. But the truth is-in almost every case, when a mom and dad divorce-it's hard on the children. Bob: It's something that's difficult to talk about-something we don't want to acknowledge because we don't want to cause anybody any more pain than they've already experienced.
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