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January 8, 2015 By Ryan Nelson   |   7 Comments

Foster Healthy Online Communication in Your Family

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A friend recently learned that a 10 year old girl that she’d been working with was “dating” a 17 year old boy who she’d met in a seemingly innocent online game. The girl’s grandma was shocked and embarrassed—she had assumed the game couldn’t expose her granddaughter to strangers.

Whether we like it or not, kids communicate online all the time. For many kids,  it’s even a preferred method of communication.

For kids, online communication is no more foreign than talking. They’re immersed in technology from the moment they’re born.

Some parents provide baby steps into the freedom of online communication and texting with phones that can only interact with their own, or closely-monitored online activity.

When you teach your kids to avoid strangers, you don’t just open the door and let them go. You remind them frequently. You teach them what to do, who they can trust. When they’re mature enough, you stop going with them everywhere they go.

The internet is no different.

Explore online communication together

Last May, Mark Prim shared why he lets his kids use Faithlife Groups. It was the first app he installed on their electronic devices, and they’ve been using it for years.

Mark says, “Faithlife Groups doesn’t have all the foul language and advertisements. It also doesn’t have the ‘freedom’ that social media outlets have—the parameters of use are much more controllable. I set up and maintain my kids’ accounts. . . . and we are a closed group, so no one else can join unless my wife and I approve them.”

Your family can create reading plans, use Community Notes, and make prayer lists to share what you’re learning and how you can pray for each other—all within the privacy of your own group, which you can prevent others from accessing. (You can make your group so private that other people can’t even see it.)

Add your extended family (or another family from your church) to stay in touch within a controlled, closed environment. The newsletter feature makes it easy to create crisp newsletters you can share to the group or send to peoples’ emails, so it’s easy to provide regular family updates.

Try using a Faithlife Group to supplement your family time. You can share encouragement, remind each other to pray, and explore the Word together. Create goals for your kids to share a note about something they learned or a passage that stood out to them, or encourage them to add to your family prayer list. Start a discussion to get them thinking about biblical concepts, life, or anything you want.

Start a Faithlife Group for your loved ones today, and foster healthy online communication within the privacy of your family.

Filed Under: Community of Faith Tagged With: Faithlife Groups, family

Comments

  1. Ed Kraal says

    January 8, 2015 at 6:15 pm

    Thanks for sharing about faithlife, I'm going to dig in deeper to understand how it work.

    Reply
    • Ryan Nelson says

      January 8, 2015 at 11:28 am

      You’re welcome, Ed! Let me know if you have any questions.

      Reply
  2. Dewayne Madison says

    January 8, 2015 at 7:49 pm

    This is well worth exploring in todays world. May God Bless You

    Reply
  3. Ka Wolfgramm says

    January 9, 2015 at 6:49 am

    I am interested in how this works because I want to see my kids maturing in a good community of believers and feel safe.

    Reply
  4. Ryan Nelson says

    January 9, 2015 at 5:07 pm

    What would you like to know? You can create your account on Faithlife.com now, and if you want to try it out before starting a group for your family, this is a great group to join: https://faithlife.com/faithlife-starters/activity. I'd be happy to answer any questions you have.

    Reply
  5. Giovanni Otero says

    January 19, 2015 at 5:57 pm

    Very very very much needed in today's world.

    Reply
  6. Mark Cannon says

    January 20, 2015 at 8:56 am

    I Like using Faithlife, and Faithlife Groups, but there is A LOT more to healthy online communication than using Faithlife groups. This article, well meaning as it is, seems more like an advertisement for Faithlife, and less an effort to impart useful information and valuable perspective to the reader.

    Let’s do better next time. :-)

    Reply

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