Balancing Digitalism and Devotion for LDS Parents

LDS parents can balance technology and devotion by teaching discernment, modeling boundaries, and creating homes where attention serves love.

Most LDS parents do not need another lecture about how phones are bad. They already know.

They know because they have watched a child drift through family prayer with one eye on a screen. They know because they have felt their own hand twitch toward a notification in the middle of scripture study. They know because dinner gets interrupted, Sundays get thinned out, and even good homes start to feel noisy in the soul.

The harder question is not whether technology is a problem. The harder question is who is discipling your family’s attention.

That is where the real fight sits. Not only screen time, but attention quality. Not only access, but formation. Not only what devices are in the home, but what kind of people those devices are quietly training everyone to become.

How to manage screen time for LDS teenagers

A lot of parents start with restriction because restriction feels concrete. Block the app. Set the code. Cut the Wi-Fi. Take the phone. Sometimes those steps are necessary. But restriction alone is a weak long-term strategy because it can control behavior without building judgment.

Teenagers do eventually leave the room, leave the house, and leave your Wi-Fi.

“Behold, the Spirit of Christ is given to every man, that he may know good from evil.” (Moroni 7:16)

If that verse means anything in parenting, it means children need to learn discernment, not just compliance.

The better aim is mentorship. Parents should be teaching teenagers how technology works on them. Talk plainly about dopamine loops, algorithmic temptation, the attention economy, and why social apps make money when people lose track of time. If a child understands that a feed is trying to keep them reactive, scrolling, comparing, and slightly discontent, they are more equipped to resist it.

That conversation goes better when parents are not acting innocent. Teenagers can see the hypocrisy from space. If mom cannot sit through dinner without checking her phone and dad is half-married to sports clips, family tech rules will sound like theater.

This is why faith and mental health in the digital age is not a separate conversation from screen habits. Attention shapes emotion. Emotion shapes belief. A home full of distracted people will eventually become a spiritually thin home too.

Creating a digital fast for Christian families

The phrase “digital fast” sounds impressive, but it only works if it feels like relief and not punishment.

A lot of families announce a grand reset, pull the plug for twelve hours, then spend the whole day irritated because nothing better has been planned. That is not a digital fast. That is a hostage situation.

A better approach is to frame it as recovery. Not anti-technology. Pro-presence.

Try one simple weekly pattern instead of a dramatic family manifesto:

  • No phones at the dinner table
  • No personal devices in bedrooms overnight
  • A Sabbath block with reduced screens and slower time
  • Fifteen minutes before and after family prayer with devices put away
  • One evening a week where the family does something analog on purpose

That last point matters. If you remove digital stimulation, you need to replace it with something worth wanting. A walk. A dessert run. Cards. A real conversation. A drive. Music. Service. People do not put down glowing things for vague moral superiority. They put them down when something better is available.

This is one reason the Sabbath can become a real refuge for families. A quieter Sunday is not only about checking a commandment box. It can retrain the home toward peace, eye contact, slower thinking, and actual rest.

Teaching digital discernment to children in the LDS church

Children do not only need rules about what to avoid. They need language for what to notice.

Teach them to ask simple questions about what they consume:

  • How do I feel after this?
  • Does this make me more calm or more scrambled?
  • Does this pull me toward envy, lust, cynicism, or anger?
  • Does this help me love God and people better, or does it just keep me occupied?

That is spiritual work. It is also practical work.

A lot of modern online life is spiritual noise disguised as harmless content. It is not always openly evil. Sometimes it is just endless, trivial, overstimulating, and subtly corrosive. It leaves a person more restless, more self-conscious, and less able to be still before God.

LDS parents should say this without sounding weird: not everything that is legal, normal, or popular is good for the soul.

This is especially true when social media turns church life into a performance stage. Families start comparing callings, houses, vacations, missionary children, date nights, and spirituality itself. We covered part of that distortion in our article on loneliness in religious community. A polished online ward culture can make people feel more isolated, not less, because everybody looks blessed and nobody looks human.

Parents can interrupt that by honoring honesty more than polish. If children know your home values truth over appearance, they are less likely to confuse social media approval with actual worth.

Balancing social media and spiritual growth for LDS parents

Parents often talk about children and screens as if they themselves are outside the experiment. They are not.

A lot of spiritual weakness in homes is not caused by children bringing in the world. It is caused by adults importing distraction and calling it normal life. A home cannot expect reverence during prayer if the adults live in a constant state of low-grade interruption.

So yes, parents need their own audit.

Ask the ugly questions:

  • Do I reach for my phone when I feel bored, anxious, lonely, or convicted?
  • Do my children compete with my screen for my face?
  • Have I normalized half-attention so deeply that true presence feels strange?
  • Am I asking my child to do something I clearly do not do myself?

Those questions sting because they should.

This is also where family prayer gets exposed. If a teen is more interested in their phone than prayer, it may not only be because the teen is unserious. It may be because the house has quietly taught that the phone is the real center of attention and prayer is a ceremonial interruption.

That can change. But the adults usually have to move first.

We have already seen a related truth in faith transitions in families. Children read the emotional reality of a home faster than they believe its slogans. If devotion is always getting the leftovers, they notice.

How to handle phone addiction in a religious household

Call it what it is without turning every conversation into drama.

Not every heavy phone user is clinically addicted. Some are bored. Some are lonely. Some are socially anxious. Some are avoiding pain. Some are caught in habits that got very big before anyone really interrupted them. Labels can help, but only if they lead to wise action.

Start with pattern, not accusation. “I have noticed the phone is getting the best of all of us lately” will usually work better than “You are addicted and ruining this family.”

Then lower the shame and raise the structure. A home can have chargers in one shared place. Bedrooms can be device-free. Meals can be protected. Prayer can happen in a phones-down zone. Night can return to being night.

Do not expect immediate gratitude. Most real boundaries annoy people before they help them.

And if the issue has grown teeth, with secrecy, anger, sleep loss, lies, pornography, or real emotional deterioration, get more help. Past a certain point, this is not a family-willpower issue. It is a formation and support issue.

Which means, again, you do not have to solve it alone.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I start a digital fast with my family without it feeling like a punishment?

Lead with example and replace the screen time with something worth doing. If the fast only removes pleasure and adds boredom, people will resent it. If it creates relief, connection, and rest, they will start to understand the point.

What is the best way to handle a teen who is more interested in their phone than family prayer?

Do not pick a fight in the middle of the prayer. Have a calm conversation later, explain that presence matters, and create a small phones-away window around prayer so the moment can feel sacred again.

How can I tell if social media is negatively affecting my child’s faith?

Watch for comparison burnout, cynicism about church people, increased anxiety, secretive use, or a drop in self-worth after being online. The best way to know is still a direct, non-judgmental conversation.

Should LDS parents focus more on blocking apps or teaching discernment?

Both matter, but discernment lasts longer. Restrictions may buy time and safety. Discernment is what helps a child eventually choose well when nobody else is holding the controls.

Can technology ever support devotion instead of hurting it?

Yes, when it serves a clear purpose instead of becoming the atmosphere of the home. Gospel study tools, family calls, uplifting content, and shared learning can all help, but only when the device stays a tool and not the master.

If a family wants more devotion, it usually will not find it by wishing the phones away. It will find it by teaching everyone in the house, especially the adults, how to put attention back where love belongs.

The Quiet Crisis of Loneliness in Church

Many churchgoing families feel lonely even while surrounded by people. Real community takes more than handshakes and programs. It takes courage and truth.

You can sit in a full chapel, shake twelve hands, teach your class, smile at three families in the hallway, and still go home lonely enough to feel foolish for admitting it.

That is part of what makes loneliness in religious community so strange. From the outside, it looks like you already have what lonely people are supposed to need. A ward. A congregation. A calendar. A list of names. Assigned care. Group texts. Potlucks. Programs. Yet many faithful people still feel unknown in the middle of all of it.

This is the quiet crisis. Not total isolation. Not literal abandonment. Something more confusing: being near people all the time and still feeling unseen.

A lot of modern religious community is good at coordination and bad at closeness.

Feeling lonely in a religious community

If you feel lonely at church, it does not automatically mean there is something wrong with you. It may simply mean you are running low on the kind of connection surface friendliness cannot provide.

There is a difference between being greeted and being known. A difference between being included in the seating chart and being trusted with someone’s real life. Many religious people are swimming in contact and starving for intimacy.

“Bear ye one another’s burdens, and so fulfil the law of Christ.” (Galatians 6:2)

That verse assumes something awkward for modern church culture: you cannot bear burdens that no one is allowed to show you.

A lot of congregations unintentionally train people to stay polished. You come to church ready enough, smiling enough, faithful enough, and stable enough that no one has to deal with your real confusion, grief, marriage strain, depression, money fear, or drifting spiritual life. Then everybody wonders why relationships stay thin.

We have already seen related versions of this problem in the collision between faith, mental health, and digital pressure. When people feel they must perform stability, they stop asking for the very connection that might help them heal.

How to make real friends in my LDS ward

Probably not by waiting for the ward to become magically warmer on its own.

The Church gives structure. It does not automatically create friendship. A calling can place two people in the same room, but it cannot force trust. Ministering assignments can create opportunity, but they do not guarantee affection. Program life is useful. It is not the same thing as real belonging.

If you want deeper friendship, somebody usually has to risk going first.

That risk does not need to be dramatic. It can be small and human:

  • Ask one question past the weather and actually wait for the answer
  • Invite one family for dessert without turning it into an event
  • Text someone after church and say, “You seemed heavy today. Want to talk?”
  • Share a modest piece of your own real life instead of another polished summary
  • Keep showing up when the interaction is a little awkward at first

People often want deeper friendship more than they know how to initiate it. They have been trained by efficiency, busyness, and phones to keep things moving. A ward hallway is great at logistics. It is not great at vulnerability.

This is one reason healthy boundaries with phones and screens matter so much. Digital contact can make people feel socially active while their real friendships stay shallow. Messages fly all week. No one actually sits down together.

If you want real friends, you will probably need more porches, kitchens, walks, and simple unprogrammed time. Less production. More presence.

Overcoming the pressure to look perfect in the church

This pressure is one of the most damaging things in religious life because it disguises itself as righteousness.

The perfect-family performance looks harmless from a distance. Clean kids. upbeat testimonies. cheerful marriages. no visible mess. everyone saying the right phrases in the right tone. But when that performance becomes the expected norm, the people who are actually struggling begin to feel like spiritual contamination.

They stop telling the truth.

Then the whole congregation gets lonelier because everyone is surrounded by costumes.

We touched this nerve directly in our article on performative Christianity. The same dynamic applies here. If a ward rewards polish more than honesty, it will produce a lot of impressive loneliness.

Families can push back against this in ordinary ways. Admit hard weeks. Mention therapy without whispering. Tell the truth about exhaustion. Let your children hear you speak of faith as trust, not image maintenance. Stop acting like being “the strong family” is the same thing as being spiritually healthy.

Perfection is terrible at building community because it gives nobody a bridge.

Building deep connections in a modern Christian family

It is hard to ask children to build real friendships if they mostly see efficient coexistence at home.

Families are the first school of connection. If everyone in the house is busy, half-distracted, mildly guarded, and always moving to the next obligation, children learn that closeness is something you gesture toward, not something you practice.

That is why real community starts smaller than many people think. It starts at dinner without a phone nearby. It starts with parents who know how to listen without instantly correcting. It starts with siblings who are not all performing for one another. It starts with homes where people can say, “I had a bad day,” and not be treated like they broke the spirit of the evening.

In our article about the Sabbath, the deeper point was that holy rest creates room for souls to breathe. The same thing is true for relationships. Real connection needs time that is not fully monetized, optimized, or scheduled to death.

If your family wants more community, build more third spaces. Not every gathering needs an agenda, lesson, or spiritual outcome. Sometimes people need soup, cards, backyard chairs, or a dumb board game and enough time for the real conversation to arrive on its own.

The Body of Christ is not meant to function like a customer service desk. It is meant to feel like a living body. If one member aches, everyone should be capable of noticing before the ache becomes invisible.

Dealing with social isolation in a large congregation

Large wards and congregations can be especially hard because they create the illusion that someone else must already be taking care of the lonely people.

That illusion is deadly.

The more organized a community becomes, the easier it is to assume that assignment has replaced affection. A name on a ministering list can become a substitute for actual knowing. A greeting in the hallway can become proof, in our own minds, that we “reached out.” We start counting contact instead of cultivating trust.

If your ward is large, the answer is not resenting the size and giving up. The answer is shrinking your circle on purpose. Pick a few people. Learn their stories. Invite them in. Let them inconvenience you a little. Let yourself inconvenience them too.

Loneliness rarely gets solved by broader networks alone. It gets solved by smaller pockets of repeated care.

Frequently Asked Questions

I go to church every week but still feel lonely. Is something wrong with me?

No. Regular attendance gives contact, not automatic closeness. Feeling lonely may simply mean you need more honest, vulnerable connection than your current church experience is providing.

How do I start a deeper conversation with someone who only talks about the weather or the program?

Offer a little honesty first. A small real comment like “This week was rough” or “I’ve been carrying a lot lately” can open a door that polite small talk keeps closed.

How can we help our children find genuine friends in a world of digital connections?

Give them repeated in-person time with real people and low-pressure shared experiences. Walks, games, meals, service, and ordinary unhurried hanging out usually build more friendship than one more group chat.

Why do church communities sometimes feel more lonely than they look?

Because programs can imitate connection without producing it. A community can be very active, very polite, and still weak at honesty, vulnerability, and real mutual care.

What can I do if my ward feels friendly but not deep?

Go smaller and more intentional. Instead of waiting for the whole ward culture to change, start with one family, one conversation, or one recurring habit of connection and build from there.

Church should feel like more than being efficiently surrounded. If people cannot tell the truth there and still be loved, the loneliness will keep growing quietly under all the handshakes.

Navigating Faith and Mental Health in the Digital Age

Faith and mental health treatment do not have to fight each other. LDS families can pursue therapy, medication, and spiritual support together.

A lot of believing families are tired in a way older generations did not quite prepare them for.

Not just busy. Not just stressed. Tired in the mind. Tired in the nerves. Tired from carrying a phone that never shuts up, a feed that never stops comparing, and a quiet fear that maybe everyone else is handling life and faith better than you are.

This is where a lot of Latter-day Saint families live now. They believe in prayer, scripture, priesthood blessings, repentance, covenants, and the power of God. They also know what panic attacks feel like, what depression looks like in a teenager’s bedroom, what doomscrolling does to a marriage, and how humiliating it can feel to admit that the answer might include a therapist, medication, or both.

The good news is that faith and mental health treatment do not have to fight each other. That fight was a bad idea to begin with.

How to balance therapy and faith in LDS families

Start with this: therapy is not a vote against God.

A lot of people still carry the old suspicion that if your testimony were stronger, your mental health would somehow sort itself out. Pray more. Fast more. Read more scripture. Stop overthinking. Trust the Lord. Some of that advice comes from love. Some of it comes from fear. Most of it becomes cruel when it is used as a substitute for real care.

“Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” (Matthew 11:28)

Notice what Jesus offers there: rest, not shame.

Families should think about mental health the same way they think about any other human struggle involving body and mind. If your child breaks an arm, you pray and go to the doctor. If your spouse gets pneumonia, you ask for a blessing and fill the prescription. A struggling mind deserves the same sanity.

The healthiest LDS approach is not faith first versus therapy first. It is integrated care. Prayer can steady a soul. Good therapy can help untangle distorted thinking, trauma, family patterns, and nervous-system overload. Medication can help when biology is part of the problem, which it often is.

God is not threatened by a licensed counselor. He made a world where healing often comes through people with training.

This is one reason the mental health crisis among Latter-day Saint youth has to be faced honestly. If families keep treating real suffering like a spiritual attitude problem, kids will either hide or break.

Dealing with social media anxiety for Christian parents

Social media is not just entertainment. It is environment.

That matters because environments shape people long before people feel shaped. Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, and the rest do not merely show content. They train desire, attention, insecurity, envy, and self-presentation. They reward display. They punish slowness. They quietly tell families that everyone else is prettier, calmer, holier, fitter, richer, more productive, and somehow better rested than they are.

For religious families, the pressure gets stranger. Now you are not only expected to look attractive and successful. You are expected to look spiritually tidy too. Happy family photos. uplifting captions. temple date nights. scripture study snapshots. teenagers who never doubt. marriages that apparently run on soft lighting and conference quotes.

It is exhausting, and most of it is fake.

Parents need to say that out loud. Social media is a highlight reel with a testimony voice-over. It is not real life.

If a family wants relief, some plain habits help:

  • Keep phones out of bedrooms at night
  • Cut back on image-heavy platforms when anxiety rises
  • Talk openly about curation, filters, and online performance
  • Refuse to make your family’s private life into content
  • Take short digital fasts before burnout becomes collapse

In our article on screen time, the deeper point was that most families do not have a technology problem so much as a drift problem. Mental health often follows that same pattern. People do not implode all at once. They erode in tiny distracted increments.

Is it okay to take antidepressants as a member of the LDS Church?

Yes.

That answer should not be controversial, but some families still whisper about it like it is a spiritual embarrassment. It is not. Taking antidepressants does not mean you failed to pray correctly. It does not mean you are less faithful. It does not mean your testimony is counterfeit. It means you and your doctor are trying to help your brain function better.

Medication is not magic. It is also not moral weakness.

Some people need it for a season. Some need it long term. Some try it and find a different path works better. Those are medical and personal questions, not ranking systems for righteousness.

The same goes for marriage and family systems. If one spouse believes mental health treatment is worldly or suspect, the first job is not winning a theological cage match. The first job is lowering the fear. Show them that treatment is not replacing faith. It is helping the person they love become more stable, more reachable, and less crushed.

There is a reason we do not accuse people with diabetes of spiritual laziness for using insulin. Brains are part of bodies. Bodies sometimes need help.

Helping LDS teens with depression and faith crises

Teenagers do not separate their spiritual life and mental life as neatly as adults sometimes imagine. They feel both at once, and when one starts to buckle, the other often shakes with it.

A teen who is anxious, depressed, ashamed, or digitally overwhelmed may also feel abandoned by God. A teen in a faith crisis may also be clinically depressed. Parents who insist on separating those experiences too sharply can miss what is actually happening.

That is why home needs to become a place where all of this can be spoken plainly. Questions about God. Questions about the Church. Questions about identity. Questions about whether prayer is “working.” Questions about wanting to disappear for a while because life feels too loud.

Do not panic at the first hard sentence. Listen longer.

And do not hand your child a false choice between faithfulness and honesty. If your teen thinks being truthful about depression, doubt, self-harm thoughts, panic, sexuality, or medication will make you spiritually suspicious of them, they will go underground. Once they do, parents are left trying to manage shadows.

This is part of why faith transitions in families so often come with grief and surprise. Many young people were struggling long before they said anything. They just did not think truth would be safe in a religious home.

Parents need better questions:

  • What has been feeling heavy lately?
  • What happens in your mind when you are alone?
  • What online spaces make you feel worse?
  • When do you feel closest to God, and when do you feel far away?
  • What kind of help sounds possible right now?

Those questions invite a person. They do not trap one.

Integrating mental health and spiritual wellness in marriage

Marriage gets hit too.

A lot of couples are carrying silent mental strain while trying to keep up a respectable religious life. One spouse is anxious and overfunctions. The other numbs out with work, sports, or a phone. One wants therapy. The other thinks it sounds like betrayal or overreaction. Meanwhile both are exhausted, both are lonely, and both are still expected to show up as spiritually grounded adults.

That setup breaks people down.

Integrated mental and spiritual wellness in marriage means telling the truth sooner. It means not using prayer as a way to avoid harder conversations. It means not calling your spouse faithless because they are depleted. It means noticing when you are using religion to manage appearances instead of pursuing healing.

This is where older patterns matter. In our article on political division, the warning was that ideology can become a substitute religion. The same thing can happen with image. The couple starts worshipping calm appearances instead of working toward actual peace.

Better marriage questions sound like this: What is draining us? What helps you feel safer? What needs professional help? What spiritual practices actually calm our home instead of just decorating it?

Those questions may not feel dramatic. They are often the beginning of repair.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does seeking therapy mean I have a weak testimony?

No. Therapy is a form of stewardship, not spiritual surrender. A strong testimony and good clinical help can exist in the same life quite comfortably.

How do I help my child when they feel overwhelmed by digital comparison?

Reduce exposure, talk honestly about how fake most online life is, and create a home where appearance matters less than truth. A short digital fast can help, but families also need a deeper change in what they praise and notice.

What should I do if my spouse doesn’t believe in mental health treatment?

Start with calm evidence and real stories, not accusation. Show that treatment is not competing with faith and that seeking help is meant to strengthen a person and a family, not replace God.

Is it okay to take antidepressants as a member of the LDS Church?

Yes. Medication is a medical tool, not a spiritual embarrassment. Use it with wise professional guidance and without shame.

How can families hold onto faith while addressing mental health seriously?

By refusing the false choice between the two. Keep the practices that bring peace and meaning, and also seek therapy, medical care, and practical changes when needed. God is not honored by untreated suffering just because it looks religious.

Faith should make it easier to tell the truth about pain, not harder. If a family can learn that one lesson, a lot of healing gets more possible.

When Your Adult Child Stops Going to Church

When an adult child stops going to church, LDS parents need more than answers. They need steadiness, love, and hope that does not turn into pressure.

There are sentences that split a parent’s life into before and after, and one of them is this: “I don’t think I’m going to church anymore.”

Sometimes it comes in a hard conversation. Sometimes it arrives as a slow realization after months of missed meetings, changed habits, and careful silence. Either way, most Latter-day Saint parents feel the same first rush: fear, grief, guilt, confusion, and the desperate urge to fix this immediately.

That urge is understandable. It is also where a lot of families make the situation worse.

When your adult child stops going to church, the first job is not getting them back in the pew next Sunday. The first job is not losing your child while you are trying to save their testimony.

What to do when your child leaves the LDS Church

First, calm down enough to love them well.

I do not mean stop caring. I mean stop panicking in their direction. A frightened parent can turn one painful conversation into an interrogation in about thirty seconds. “What happened?” becomes cross-examination. “Help me understand” becomes a closing argument. “I love you” gets buried under tears, warnings, and the family version of emergency sirens.

Your child is very likely bracing for exactly that response. Do not confirm their fears.

Say something simple and true. “I love you.” “Thank you for telling me.” “I want to understand what this has been like for you.” Those sentences keep a door open.

“For the Son of man is come to seek and to save that which was lost.” (Luke 19:10)

Christ did not chase hurting people away with panic. He moved toward them. Parents should take the hint.

This does not mean pretending the loss does not hurt. It means refusing to make your first response all about your pain. You can grieve. You probably will. But your adult child should not have to carry your entire emotional collapse while trying to tell the truth about their own life.

How to help a child who lost faith Mormon parents still love deeply

By remembering that love is not leverage.

A lot of religious parents do not mean to become manipulative. They just get scared. Then every interaction starts carrying a hidden assignment. Every dinner invitation has a spiritual agenda. Every kind text is a setup for a conference quote. Every grandchild conversation turns into a campaign to recover the covenant path by stealth.

Your child will feel that. Quickly.

If you want to help, stop making the relationship feel supervised. Be interested in their actual life. Ask about work, friends, health, stress, marriage, parenting, and what has been good or hard lately. Show up in ways that are not secretly conditional.

This is where families often need the same lesson we already covered in our article on political division in LDS families: if you care more about winning than understanding, trust starts dying fast.

You can still have convictions. You can still hope for return. But if your child starts feeling like a project instead of a person, your influence drops and your anxiety rises. Bad trade.

It also helps to remember that leaving the Church is not always the same as leaving God. Some adult children are rejecting institution, not every spiritual instinct they have ever known. Some are sorting through history. Some are reacting to pain. Some are exhausted. Some are angry. Some are relieved. Most are not as simple as the stereotypes offered in ward gossip.

How to maintain relationship with child who left church

Do normal love on purpose.

That sounds obvious until a family forgets how. Once faith becomes tense, every gathering can start feeling spiritually loaded. Parents do not know whether to pray at dinner. Adult children do not know whether they are still welcome. Grandparents do not know what to say around grandchildren. Everyone becomes weird.

Choose not to get weird.

Keep inviting them. Keep showing up. Keep celebrating birthdays, helping with moves, bringing soup when someone is sick, and asking ordinary human questions. Let family life still be family life.

A few practical rules help:

  • Do not interrogate them about church attendance
  • Do not send talks, articles, or apologetics every time you feel anxious
  • Do not compare them to siblings who stayed active
  • Do not use grandchildren as a back channel for pressure
  • Do not discuss their faith transition with ward members like it is a community project

Protecting your child’s dignity matters. So does protecting your access to the relationship.

If they want to talk, listen carefully. You do not need to agree with every conclusion to acknowledge real pain, real confusion, or real disappointment. The Church’s history is complicated. Church members can be cruel. Spiritual silence can feel unbearable. Parents who admit that reality are not betraying the gospel. They are telling the truth.

This relates to what we wrote in our article on why young adults are leaving the LDS Church. Many are not walking away because nobody ever bore testimony to them. They are walking away because the questions felt unsafe, the culture felt brittle, or the relationship cost of honesty felt too high.

Dealing with inactive children LDS parents still hope for

Hope is good. Pressure is not the same thing as hope.

Many parents swing between two bad extremes. One is frantic intervention. The other is emotionally checking out to protect themselves from disappointment. Neither works well. Better is patient hope with grounded realism.

Yes, many people do return. Some return after years. Some return after marriage, children, loss, failure, or just time. Others do not. Faith paths are messy, and the idea that one clean conversation will settle everything is fantasy.

The parable of the prodigal son remains useful here, mostly because the father did not chase the son into a far country with monthly lectures. He stayed relationally open. He watched. He waited. When the son returned, he did not punish him with a retrospective speech.

That story does not mean parents should become passive or indifferent. It does mean they should stop acting like anxiety is a sacrament.

Parents also need somewhere to put their grief. That may mean therapy. It may mean one trusted friend. It may mean a support group. It may mean prayer that is less tidy than usual. What it should not mean is dumping all your sorrow onto the child who is already carrying enough.

This matters for mental health too. In our piece on the mental health crisis among LDS youth, the core point was that pressure and shame do real damage. That does not magically stop at age eighteen. Adult children still feel family pressure with tremendous force.

My adult child stopped going to church. What about my grandchildren?

This is where many faithful parents start feeling desperate.

You love your grandchildren. You want them to know the gospel. You do not want your family story to thin out spiritually with each generation. All of that is real. It still does not give you the right to undermine your adult child in their own home.

Respect parental stewardship. That does not mean you hide your faith or act embarrassed by your beliefs. It means you do not turn every visit into a covert lesson plan.

You can still do a lot of good:

  • Let grandchildren see your faith as warm, steady, and unforced
  • Pray naturally when appropriate
  • Talk about God the way you talk about someone you actually know
  • Be the kind of grandparent whose love makes the gospel believable
  • Refuse the temptation to compete with their parents for spiritual influence

People remember the emotional climate around faith long after they forget specific arguments. If grandchildren experience your discipleship as peaceful, generous, and free of manipulation, that witness will matter more than a stack of forced conversations.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I do when my adult child tells me they’re leaving the Church?

Respond with calm love, not panic. Thank them for telling you, make it clear your love is not conditional, and avoid turning the first conversation into a debate or a guilt session.

Is it my fault that my child left the Church?

No. Parents matter, but they are not the sole authors of an adult child’s faith path. Agency is real, personality is real, experience is real, and your worth as a parent is not measured by perfect religious outcomes.

How can I maintain a relationship with my child who no longer believes?

Keep loving them in ordinary ways that do not feel strategic. Stay interested in their life, protect their dignity, and resist the urge to make every interaction about church status.

Should I still hope my child will return to the Church?

Yes, but let hope stay patient. Many people do return, often after years and in ways nobody could have predicted. Hope works best when it is paired with love, not pressure.

What about my grandchildren and their religious upbringing?

Respect your adult child’s authority while still letting your own faith be visible and peaceful. Grandchildren do not need a secret campaign. They need a trustworthy example.

Your child’s faith transition may have changed the future you imagined, but it has not canceled your calling to love them well. Start there, and stay there.

The Sabbath in a 24/7 World for LDS Families

Modern LDS families can recover the Sabbath by treating it as a refuge, not a burden, and building Sundays with more intention.

A lot of families do not break the Sabbath on purpose. They just lose it by inches.

A little homework here. A sports tournament there. A grocery run because somebody forgot something. A quick scroll that turns into an hour. Before long, Sunday feels like every other day except with sacrament meeting dropped into the middle of it like an appointment nobody had time to prepare for.

That is the real problem for modern LDS families. The Sabbath is not usually rejected with a speech. It is crowded out by noise, convenience, pressure, and habit. Then parents wonder why Sunday does not feel restful, holy, or particularly different from Thursday.

If the Sabbath is going to mean anything in a 24/7 world, families have to recover it on purpose.

How to keep the Sabbath day holy with kids

Start by deciding that the Sabbath is not mainly about surviving restrictions. It is about making room.

That changes the whole tone. Children can tell when Sunday is being presented as a list of no’s held together by parental exhaustion. They can also tell when parents actually believe the day is a gift.

“If thou turn away thy foot from the sabbath, from doing thy pleasure on my holy day; and call the sabbath a delight… then shalt thou delight thyself in the Lord.” (Isaiah 58:13-14)

That word matters: delight. Not merely endurance. Not low-grade boredom with church clothes on. Delight.

For parents, this means the first job is not policing every minute. The first job is building a day that feels set apart in a good way. That usually includes worship, yes, but also peace, slower time, warmer family connection, and less frantic energy.

Children do not need a perfect Sunday. They need a different Sunday.

One practical move helps more than people admit: prepare on Saturday. Clothes ready. Food thought through. Bags packed. Homework done if at all possible. Saturday chaos has a way of spilling into Sunday and then everybody acts shocked when the Sabbath feels ragged.

What can you do on Sunday LDS families actually enjoy?

More than many kids suspect, and probably more than many tired parents remember.

The Sabbath is not supposed to be a dead zone where everybody stares at the wall until Monday arrives. It should have shape, warmth, and enough goodness that children eventually connect the day with peace instead of punishment.

Some simple ideas for Sabbath day activities families can actually live with:

  • Longer family meals with better conversation
  • Scripture reading that allows real questions, not just fast answers
  • Listening to music that calms the house down
  • Nature walks that leave room for gratitude and noticing
  • Visiting grandparents, lonely neighbors, or someone who needs encouragement
  • Journaling, family stories, or looking at old photos
  • Reading good books instead of defaulting to screens

The point is not stuffing Sunday with extra church tasks until it becomes spiritually themed overwork. The point is recovering the sort of time that helps people remember who they are and whose they are.

This is one reason clear screen boundaries matter so much. A Sabbath with unlimited scrolling is usually not a Sabbath. It is just regular distraction wearing a softer sweater.

How to make the Sabbath a delight instead of a burden

By refusing to turn it into theater.

A lot of resentment around Sunday comes from homes where the Sabbath feels like image management. Everybody is expected to act holy, sound cheerful, and pretend the rules are effortless. That never works for long. It creates the same kind of performance problem we talked about in our piece on performative Christianity. Outward compliance grows. Inward delight does not.

Families need honesty here. Some Sundays will be hard. Some children will be restless. Some parents will be wrung out. Some jobs really do require Sunday work. Some situations are messy and cannot be solved with one polished family motto.

But the answer to that reality is not giving up on the Sabbath. It is practicing it with more humility and more intelligence.

A few things help:

  • Explain the why behind the standards
  • Avoid endless tiny rules that make the day feel brittle
  • Choose what most helps your family feel close to God
  • Do not compare your Sabbath to another family’s performance of theirs
  • Let the day include joy, not just restraint

President Nelson called the Sabbath a refuge from the storms of life. Refuge is a useful word. A refuge is not another pressure chamber. It is a place where souls can breathe.

This also means some families need to repent of turning Sunday into catch-up day for school, email, side work, and unfinished errands. If your week keeps eating the Sabbath, then the week is too large.

Should Mormons play sports on Sunday?

This is where many families want a universal policy and usually get a conscience question instead.

The Church teaches that the Sabbath should be kept holy. It does not provide a master spreadsheet for every youth league, tournament bracket, or pickup game. That leaves families with the harder work of deciding what they actually believe the day is for.

Some families decline Sunday sports across the board. Others make narrow exceptions. Some are stuck in leagues where the pressure is intense and the social cost for saying no is real. Good families land in different places. But drift is still a bad strategy.

If a child is in Sunday sports, parents should at least ask:

  • What is this teaching our family about worship and priorities?
  • Is this occasional or has it quietly become normal?
  • Are we making the choice from conviction or from fear of missing out?
  • What habits are we building over time?

Those are better questions than, “Will people judge us?”

The same goes for homework. A lot of school systems now assume Sunday availability. Families may need to plan harder, speak with teachers, and teach children that preparation matters. The pattern of six days of labor and one day of holy rest still means something, even if Google Classroom forgot.

Ideas for Sabbath day activities families can return to again and again

Most families do better with rhythms than with one heroic Sunday every six months.

You do not need a new Pinterest-worthy plan each week. You need a few repeatable practices that signal, “This day is different, and that is a gift.”

Try building a loose Sunday pattern:

  • Saturday evening prep so morning starts calmer
  • Church with fewer rushed tensions
  • A simple meal everyone expects and enjoys
  • A quiet afternoon practice like reading, music, or a walk
  • One outward act of service or connection
  • A short evening devotional or family conversation

That rhythm will not make every Sabbath magical. It can make it recognizably holy.

And for families who must work on Sundays, either sometimes or often, the principle still matters. The Lord understands circumstances better than online commentators do. The goal is not public purity theater. The goal is to seek worship, renewal, and covenant remembrance as faithfully as your situation allows.

In a culture that worships convenience, productivity, and entertainment, Sabbath keeping is one quiet way of saying that human beings are more than workers, consumers, and content machines. We belong to God first.

Frequently Asked Questions

What activities are appropriate for the Sabbath?

The Sabbath is for worship, rest, service, family connection, and spiritual renewal. Good activities are the ones that help a family draw closer to God and one another rather than drift into ordinary busyness and consumption.

How can I help my children enjoy the Sabbath instead of seeing it as boring?

Build traditions they can recognize and enjoy, like special meals, slower family time, music, walks, stories, and meaningful service. Children usually respond better to a joyful pattern than to a long list of things they are forbidden to do.

Should my child participate in sports that schedule games on Sunday?

That is a family decision that should be made on purpose, not by default. Ask what the choice is teaching about worship, priorities, and long-term habits, then decide in a way that matches your family’s convictions.

What if my job requires me to work on Sunday?

Some people really do have limited options, and the Lord understands real-life constraints. If Sunday work is necessary, look for other ways to preserve worship, renewal, and a sense that the Sabbath still belongs to God.

How can we handle homework and school projects due on Sunday?

Preparation is the main answer. Help children plan ahead, use Friday and Saturday better, and communicate with teachers when needed. The Sabbath usually becomes stressful when the week has not been managed with it in mind.

If your family’s Sabbath feels thin, frantic, or forgettable, the answer is probably not more rules. It is more intention, better preparation, and a clearer belief that God gave this day for your good.

Navigating Political Division in LDS Families

LDS families can survive political disagreement if they put the gospel above party loyalty and learn to talk without contempt.

A lot of LDS families can survive bad weather, job changes, mission calls, moves, illnesses, and the usual assortment of household chaos. Then one political conversation at Sunday dinner turns the room into a low-budget civil war.

That is not because politics suddenly matters more than faith or family. It is because politics has started acting like a substitute religion for a lot of people. It gives identity, enemies, rituals, sacred language, and a steady supply of outrage. Once that happens, disagreement stops feeling like disagreement and starts feeling like betrayal.

Latter-day Saints are not immune. We talk a lot about eternal families, but plenty of families can barely survive group texts during election season. If we want better than that, we need more than a truce. We need a better order of loyalty.

How to deal with political differences in Mormon family life

Start by saying the quiet part out loud: no political party is the restored gospel.

That should be obvious. It often is not. Many members grew up absorbing the idea that faithful Latter-day Saints were supposed to land in one political camp by default. That assumption was cultural, not doctrinal, and it is aging badly.

The Church’s institutional neutrality is not accidental background noise. It is a needed correction. The Church does not endorse parties or candidates, and members who imply otherwise are usually baptizing their own preferences.

“For verily, verily I say unto you, he that hath the spirit of contention is not of me, but is of the devil, who is the father of contention.” (3 Nephi 11:29)

That verse is awkward for partisans on every side, which is one reason it is so useful.

Families dealing with political tension need to ask a hard question: do we want to understand one another, or do we want to win a courtroom case at Thanksgiving? A lot of homes are running cross-examinations and calling it conversation.

A better approach looks less dramatic and more adult:

  • Stop assuming different politics always mean different morals
  • Ask what concern or fear sits underneath a person’s position
  • Refuse lazy caricatures of the other side
  • Do not make every family gathering a referendum on the nation
  • Remember that preserving trust may matter more than landing one more point

That is not cowardice. It is stewardship.

Can Mormons be Democrats and Republicans?

Yes. Obviously yes.

Faithful Latter-day Saints can be Democrats, Republicans, independents, or politically homeless and still be trying to live the gospel seriously. The Church teaches principles. Parties package coalitions. Those are not the same thing.

This can feel threatening to members who want the Church to speak more directly through partisan lines. But the minute you decide your party is the natural home of the covenant path, you are already in trouble. Every party asks for tradeoffs. Every party protects some goods and damages some others. Every party tempts voters to excuse obvious wrongs because the team jersey matters more than the person wearing it.

That is one reason younger members often feel so politically restless. They may be more progressive on immigration, poverty, race, or climate, while still holding traditional views on life, family, or religious belief. Older members sometimes read that as drift. Sometimes it is just a refusal to let party identity do all the thinking.

We have already seen something similar in the broader conversation about young adults leaving the Church. A younger generation is less willing to accept inherited scripts, whether the topic is Church history, culture, or politics. Parents may not always like that shift. They still need to understand it.

What does the LDS Church say about political neutrality?

It says more than some members seem willing to hear.

The Church does not endorse parties, candidates, or platforms. It may speak clearly on moral issues, but it usually does so at the level of principle, not partisan marching orders. Members are encouraged to be informed and engaged, but not to confuse their own political conclusions with official doctrine.

That matters because Latter-day Saints are often tempted to treat moral concern and political certainty as the same thing. They are not. You can care deeply about religious liberty, abortion, immigration, poverty, race, education, or public decency and still disagree about policy means.

Politics is full of prudential judgment. Prudential judgment is not the same thing as revealed doctrine.

Families need that distinction if they want to survive the current climate. It creates room for disagreement without turning every policy dispute into a spiritual loyalty test.

This is also where intellectual humility matters. Very few people are as informed as their confidence level suggests. Social media has not helped. It has trained millions of people to confuse strong feelings with mastery. In our article on screen time and family formation, the concern was drift, distraction, and algorithmic shaping. Politics online works the same way. If families do not choose their media diets carefully, outrage will catechize them for free.

How to talk politics without fighting LDS families into exhaustion

Some conversations do need to happen. Not every disagreement should be buried under fake niceness. But a lot of families need rules of engagement before they need one more debate.

Try a few basic ones:

  • No mind-reading. Say what you think the person means only after they say it themselves.
  • No assigning secret motives. “You just want…” is usually garbage.
  • No social-media style dunking at the dinner table.
  • No treating one cable host, podcast, or influencer as a substitute for serious thought.
  • No continuing the conversation once contempt enters the room.

That last one is big. Once contempt shows up, clarity usually leaves.

Families should also decide that some moments are too important to sacrifice to politics. Weddings, funerals, mission farewells, baby blessings, and holy days should not become side stages for ideological combat. Your grand theory of the republic can survive one meal without an opening statement.

If you are raising children in a politically mixed home, this matters even more. They need to see adults disagree without becoming cruel. They need to learn that conviction and self-control can live in the same person. They need to watch parents choose love over audience capture.

This is one reason article topics like real Christian hope versus flimsy optimism matter more than they first appear to. Hope keeps families from acting like every election is the final judgment. That does not make politics unimportant. It just puts politics back in its place.

Raising kids with different political views Mormon parents did not expect

Many parents think the hardest part will be teaching their children what to believe. Often the harder part is learning how to love them once they believe something else.

If you want children who can think, they may eventually think in ways that unsettle you. That is not always rebellion. Sometimes it is adulthood doing what adulthood does.

The better parenting goal is not ideological cloning. It is moral and spiritual formation sturdy enough to outlast slogans.

Teach children how to weigh arguments. Teach them how to spot manipulation. Teach them that every party rewards tribal loyalty and selective blindness. Teach them to care about people more than abstractions and to remember that policy questions involve real neighbors, real families, real tradeoffs, and real consequences.

Most of all, teach them that no vote settles the lordship of Jesus Christ.

If your family can hold onto that, you have a chance. Not a chance at total agreement. A chance at something better: trust, respect, honesty, and enough spiritual maturity to keep politics from devouring the relationships God actually gave you.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can faithful Latter-day Saints belong to different political parties?

Yes. The Church does not require loyalty to a party, and faithful members can arrive at different political conclusions while still taking the gospel seriously. Principles are shared. Policy judgments often are not.

How should I handle political disagreements with family members?

Put the relationship ahead of the argument. Listen long enough to understand the real concern, avoid contempt, and step out of the conversation when it turns into scorekeeping instead of understanding.

What does the Church’s political neutrality mean?

It means the Church does not endorse parties, candidates, or platforms. It may speak on moral issues, but members should not treat their own political preferences as if they came stamped with official Church approval.

How do I raise children when my spouse and I have different political views?

Model respectful disagreement and focus on shared gospel principles like honesty, compassion, agency, and responsibility. Children do not need identical talking points from both parents. They need to see that serious disagreement does not require relational destruction.

Why do younger Mormons often seem more politically progressive?

Younger members are growing up in a different media environment, with different peer networks and different social concerns. Some are more progressive on certain issues, more conservative on others, and many are suspicious of party loyalty in general. That does not automatically mean they are abandoning faith.

If politics keeps making your family smaller, harsher, and less charitable, then politics is already taking up space that belongs to the gospel.

The Mental Health Crisis Among Latter-day Saint Youth

LDS youth are facing serious anxiety and depression, and faithful families need honesty, compassion, and real help, not shame.

A lot of faithful parents have had some version of this thought and felt ashamed for even thinking it: “My child has so much going for them. Why are they hurting like this?”

That question usually comes from love, confusion, and fear all tangled together. It also comes from a bad assumption, one many religious families still carry around without realizing it. We assume that good homes, church involvement, strong values, and busy schedules should form a kind of shield around our kids. Then anxiety shows up anyway. Or depression. Or self-harm. Or panic attacks. Or the slow frightening loss of a child who is still right there in front of us.

The mental health crisis among Latter-day Saint youth is real. LDS teenagers and young adults are not protected from it by testimony, seminary, or nice family photos. In some cases, the pressures in Mormon culture can make the struggle harder to name and harder to treat.

Families need less denial, less shame, and a lot more honesty.

Why are Mormon youth struggling with anxiety?

For the same broad reasons other young people are struggling, and for a few extra ones too.

Social media has poured gasoline on adolescent insecurity. Constant comparison, sleep disruption, online cruelty, and the pressure to perform a polished life are wrecking kids who were already trying to grow up in a hard time. Jonathan Haidt and others have made a strong case that smartphone life changed childhood fast, and not for the better.

Then add the LDS layer. Many youth feel pressure to be spiritually serious, morally clean, socially pleasant, academically strong, service-oriented, and emotionally stable all at once. They are told to prepare for missions, temple worthiness, leadership, school, marriage, and a bright future with God. Some hear all that as invitation. Others hear it as, “Do not mess this up.”

That difference matters.

When faith gets translated into performance, anxiety grows. We have already talked about this in our article on performative Christianity. A culture that rewards polish can quietly punish honesty. Youth learn to smile in public, bear a decent testimony, and hide what would make adults nervous.

“Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” (Matthew 11:28)

A lot of LDS youth do not feel rested. They feel watched, graded, and tired.

How to talk to kids about mental health Mormon families often misunderstand

Start by dropping the idea that every emotional struggle is primarily a spiritual problem.

Sometimes spiritual life affects mental health, of course. Guilt can hurt people. Isolation can hurt people. Sin can hurt people. But depression is not automatically a sign of weak faith. Anxiety is not automatically rebellion. Trauma is not healed by a better scripture chase alone. Church leaders themselves have been clearer on this than many members have.

If a child had asthma, parents would not rebuke them for insufficient righteousness. If a child had a broken arm, nobody would say the real answer was trying harder. Yet mental health still gets treated in some homes as if it is half medical and half moral failure.

That is bad doctrine and bad care.

Families need a different tone. Try these moves instead:

  • Ask what your child is feeling before you start teaching
  • Listen without turning every answer into a correction
  • Name anxiety, depression, trauma, and panic as real conditions
  • Tell children directly that needing help is not embarrassing
  • Let home become the safest place to say, “I am not okay”

If that sounds simple, good. Simple is underrated. A lot of kids do not need a speech first. They need an adult who can stay calm long enough to hear them.

This connects to what we wrote in our article on why young adults are leaving the LDS Church. Many do not leave only because of doctrine or history. Some leave because church culture never felt emotionally safe enough for truth.

Is depression a lack of faith LDS perspective

No. It is not.

That sentence should not still need saying, but it does.

Depression is not a moral defect. Anxiety disorders are not proof of spiritual weakness. Medication is not a betrayal of trust in God. Therapy is not a concession to secularism. These are the sort of things faithful families should know by now, and yet a lot of youth still absorb the message that if they were praying better, repenting better, or believing better, they would be fine.

Some are not fine. Some are trying very hard. Some are praying through tears. Some feel guilty for being sad while surrounded by so much religious language about joy.

Parents and leaders need to stop loading extra shame onto an already suffering mind. Faith can support healing. Priesthood blessings can comfort. Scripture can steady the soul. But these should not be used as replacements for good clinical care when that care is needed.

Elder Renlund has spoken clearly about mental illness as a medical issue, not a character flaw. More parents need to act like they believe him.

There is another danger here too. Some homes become so focused on worthiness language that children start hearing all struggle as disapproval from God. That is poison for a tender conscience. The covenant path should not feel like an achievement ladder where every hard day means you slipped three rungs.

How to help a depressed teenager LDS parents love but cannot fix alone

First, accept that love is not always enough by itself.

Love is necessary. It is not always sufficient. A family can be warm, faithful, and fully committed and still need professional help. That is not failure. That is reality.

If your teen shows sustained sadness, withdrawal, sleep changes, appetite changes, academic collapse, self-harm, hopeless talk, or references to death, take it seriously. Do not wait for certainty. Early help beats late panic.

A practical response often looks like this:

  • Schedule an appointment with a pediatrician or primary care doctor
  • Seek a licensed therapist who will respect your family’s values
  • Reduce unnecessary pressures where possible
  • Protect sleep with real device limits at night
  • Increase face-to-face support and lower family tension where you can
  • Take any mention of self-harm or suicide with full seriousness

Parents should also examine the environment around the child. Are expectations crushing? Is every week overloaded? Is there room to fail, rest, change plans, or disappoint somebody without it turning into a spiritual drama?

This is one reason wise screen boundaries matter more than some parents admit. Sleep loss, comparison culture, and endless digital noise are brutal on anxious brains. Technology is not the whole problem, but it can absolutely make a fragile situation worse.

And yes, sometimes mission pressure is part of the issue. Parents should ask very honestly whether their child wants to serve, can serve, and is mentally healthy enough for that kind of demand. A mission is not a cure for anxiety. It is not a rehab plan for depression. It is not a way to force spiritual maturity into a frightened nervous system.

When should I seek professional help for my child’s mental health?

Earlier than your fear wants you to.

Families often delay because they do not want to overreact. Fair enough. No one wants to turn ordinary teenage turbulence into a diagnosis. But waiting for absolute certainty is one of the most common mistakes parents make.

Seek help when symptoms last more than a couple of weeks, start disrupting school or friendships, change eating or sleep patterns, involve self-harm, or leave you with the steady sense that your child is slipping away from normal life. Trust your instincts. Parents are often the first to know something is off, even before they can explain it clearly.

Professional help and faith can work together. Good therapy does not require abandoning belief. Good medical care does not compete with prayer. God is not threatened by competent doctors.

That same truth applies in other hard family issues too, including the complicated question of counseling, conscience, and vulnerable youth. Families need wisdom, not slogans. Mental health is no different.

And if you are a parent reading this while carrying private guilt, hear this clearly: your child’s struggle is not automatic proof that you failed them. You may have things to learn, apologize for, or change. Most parents do. But shame is not a treatment plan.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the warning signs that my teenager is struggling with mental health?

Watch for lasting changes in mood, sleep, appetite, energy, friendships, school performance, or interest in normal activities. Self-harm, hopeless talk, withdrawal, and talk of death should always be taken seriously.

Is depression or anxiety a sign of weak faith or sin?

No. Mental health conditions are not proof of spiritual failure. Faith can support healing, but depression and anxiety are real conditions that often need real treatment.

How can I support my child’s mental health without compromising our religious values?

Use both. Keep the parts of faith that bring peace, meaning, and belonging, and also get professional help when needed. A good therapist and a faithful home do not have to be in conflict.

Why do LDS youth seem to struggle with perfectionism?

Because some youth hear Church expectations through a filter of fear. Good teachings about discipleship can become toxic when they are heard as constant grading, conditional love, or pressure to be impressive all the time.

When should I seek professional help for my child’s mental health?

When symptoms persist, interfere with daily life, or include self-harm, hopelessness, or suicidal thoughts. Earlier help usually leads to better outcomes than waiting for a full crisis.

Latter-day Saint youth do not need families that explain away their pain. They need families strong enough to face it, wise enough to treat it, and loving enough to stay near while healing takes time.

Why Young Adults Are Leaving the LDS Church

Young adults are leaving religion for more than one reason. LDS families need honesty, steadiness, and stronger relationships, not panic.

For a lot of parents, the hardest church conversation now goes something like this: “I don’t think I believe this anymore.”

No one is ready for that sentence, even when they have been half-expecting it for years. It lands like grief because it is grief. Not the grief of a funeral, but the grief of a future you thought you understood suddenly going off-script.

The decline in religious participation among young adults is not imaginary, and it is not just happening in somebody else’s denomination. Latter-day Saint families are feeling it too. Some young adults are drifting quietly. Some are leaving with a list of reasons. Some still believe in God but no longer trust organized religion. Some are not angry at all. They are just done.

If families want to respond wisely, they need to stop reaching for cheap explanations. This is bigger than laziness, bad friends, weak testimony, or one rough Sunday School lesson. Something deeper is going on.

Why are young people leaving the LDS Church?

Usually for more than one reason.

That is one of the first facts parents need to accept. Young adults rarely leave because of a single podcast episode or one awkward bishop interview. More often, several things pile up at once: hard church history, social issues, spiritual disappointment, political alienation, burnout, loneliness, or the feeling that nobody had room for an honest question.

For some, the breaking point is intellectual. They learn about polygamy, race, translation questions, or old institutional failures and feel blindsided. The deeper wound is not always the history itself. It is the sense that they were handed a cleaner version and then told the fuller version was somehow their fault for noticing.

For others, the breaking point is relational. LGBTQ+ questions hit home. Church culture feels narrow. A ward feels socially cold. They do not fit the mold, and after a while they get tired of pretending they do.

For others, the problem is spiritual exhaustion. The checklist version of religion stopped feeling alive, and nobody around them seemed able to say that out loud.

We have written before about performative Christianity and what it does to people. Young adults can smell performance faster than older generations often realize. If faith looks like image management instead of conversion, many of them will walk.

“For the Lord seeth not as man seeth; for man looketh on the outward appearance, but the Lord looketh on the heart.” (1 Samuel 16:7)

That verse cuts straight through a lot of modern church anxiety. God is not fooled by polish, and neither are many young adults.

Reasons Mormon youth become inactive

Inactivity usually starts before someone stops attending.

It starts when church begins to feel emotionally unsafe, intellectually thin, socially hollow, or spiritually distant. A young person can still be sitting in the pew while already pulling back inside.

Research keeps pointing in roughly the same direction. Young adults are more likely to stay when they have real relationships, room for honest questions, and a faith that can survive complexity. They are more likely to leave when concerns are mocked, pressure replaces persuasion, or belonging depends on performing the right version of Mormon life.

Large structural issues matter. But so do ordinary home patterns. If a family teaches that doubt is dangerous, appearances matter more than honesty, and questions should be suppressed until they go away, then inactivity should not come as a shocking plot twist later.

That is one reason this topic connects with the larger question of family intentionality. Families already know that drift shapes children. It shapes faith too. If the home never becomes a place for real spiritual wrestling, the internet will gladly host the conversation instead.

There is also a plain social fact here. Younger generations have more access to information, more exposure to competing moral visions, and less instinctive loyalty to institutions. Parents may not like that reality, but pretending it is temporary will not help.

How to talk to kids about church doubts

Calm down first.

That may sound rude, but it is practical. A panicked parent cannot hear clearly, and a frightened child or young adult can tell within seconds whether a conversation is safe. If the first response to doubt is alarm, tears, lectures, or instant apologetics, the message comes through loud and clear: your honesty is a threat to this family.

Do better than that.

Ask what they mean. Ask what they have been reading, feeling, or carrying. Ask when this started. Ask what hurts. Ask what no longer makes sense. Then actually listen long enough to hear the whole answer.

This does not mean parents need to agree with every criticism or instantly abandon conviction. It means the relationship matters more than winning the opening exchange.

A few family habits help here:

  • Let difficult questions be spoken without punishment
  • Admit that Church history and doctrine include real complexity
  • Model your own faith as lived trust, not forced certainty
  • Teach children how to evaluate sources instead of just fearing them
  • Keep Christ more central than institutional image

That last point matters a lot. If a young adult feels they are being asked to defend every historical loose end before they are allowed to keep loving Jesus, many will decide the whole project is impossible.

Families should also remember that faith development is not always linear. A sincere question is not the same thing as rebellion. A season of distance is not the same thing as final ruin. In our article on Christian hope, the point was that real hope survives hard truth. Parents need that kind of hope here too, not the flimsy version that only works when children follow the script.

What to do when your child stops going to church

Love them in a way that does not feel strategic.

Many parents say they are trying to keep the relationship strong, but their child can still feel like a project under observation. Every dinner invitation comes with a hidden agenda. Every kind text feels like the setup for another testimony. That kind of love feels supervised.

Do not make your child guess whether they still belong in the family if they no longer belong at church the way you hoped.

What helps more?

  • Say clearly that your love is not on the ballot
  • Stop using guilt as a missionary method
  • Do not compare them to siblings who stayed
  • Make room for grief without making them manage your emotions
  • Keep inviting them into family life that is warm and ordinary

Parents are allowed to ache. Of course they are. For Latter-day Saints especially, faith is tied to temple hopes, eternal family hopes, and a whole way of seeing the future. When an adult child steps away, it can feel like the collapse of a sacred picture.

But parents need places to carry that grief that are not their child’s shoulders. Trusted friends, wise clergy, support groups, and good therapists exist for a reason.

One more thing: do not assume leaving means all desire for God is gone. Some young adults are leaving church culture, not rejecting every spiritual instinct. Some are trying to recover honesty. Some are trying to breathe. Some may come back later. Some may not. Love is still the right response either way.

How to help a child who lost faith Mormon families once assumed would stay

Start by dropping the fantasy that perfect parenting could have prevented every possible faith crisis.

Parents matter a lot. They are not sovereign. Agency is real. Personality is real. experience is real. Timing is real. Other people influence your children, and so does the wider world. The burden many LDS parents carry here can become crushing because they assume every adult child’s faith outcome is a final grade on their parenting.

That is too heavy, and it is not true.

What parents can do is build a better climate. They can make the home honest. They can talk about hard things before the internet does. They can refuse shame. They can make church about Christ more than culture. They can show children that discipleship is not the same thing as performing a flawless Mormon life.

That may not keep every young adult in the Church. It will still matter.

And if your son or daughter has already stepped away, remember this: no one is beyond God’s reach, and no family relationship is improved by panic. Elder Holland’s words still apply to strugglers, wanderers, and worried parents alike. Keep trying. Keep loving. Keep the door open.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why are so many young adults leaving the LDS Church?

Usually for several reasons at once. Common factors include hard questions about Church history, LGBTQ+ and social concerns, spiritual disappointment, judgmental church culture, and the feeling that honest doubts were not safe to express.

How should I respond when my adult child tells me they no longer believe?

Respond with love, steadiness, and curiosity. Ask what they are experiencing before trying to correct anything. Your relationship needs to feel safe before any deeper conversation will matter.

What can parents do to help youth develop stronger faith?

Normalize honest questions, talk about difficult topics before a crisis, and build a home where Christ matters more than appearance. Strong faith usually grows in places where truth and love can exist together.

Is it possible for someone who leaves the Church to return later?

Yes. Some do return, sometimes after years away. Others do not. Faith paths are rarely neat, which is one reason families should stay relationally open and spiritually hopeful.

How do I deal with my own grief as a parent?

Acknowledge it without shame. Find wise support from people who can help you carry it without turning your child into the manager of your pain. Grief is real, but it should not become the only voice in the relationship.

Families cannot force faith to stay. They can still make home the kind of place where truth can be spoken, love can remain, and the door to God is never slammed shut.

How LDS Families Can Manage Screen Time With Intention

LDS families can manage screen time without panic by setting clear limits, delaying smartphones, and protecting family connection and spiritual life.

Most families do not have a screen-time problem. They have a drift problem.

Nobody sat down and decided, as a matter of family vision, that dinner should compete with notifications, that bedrooms should glow past midnight, or that half the house should be physically present and mentally elsewhere. It just happened, one convenient choice at a time.

That is why technology feels so slippery. It rarely storms the front door. It settles in politely, helps with homework, keeps grandparents reachable, streams a movie on Friday night, and then quietly starts shaping attention, mood, sleep, conversation, and spiritual life.

LDS families do not need panic here. They do need intention. If we are not choosing how technology fits into our homes, technology is choosing for us.

How to manage screen time in LDS families

The goal is not raising children who fear technology or parents who act like every screen is satanic. The goal is raising agents, not objects. Elder Bednar has taught that disciples should act rather than be acted upon, and that principle applies to phones as much as anything else.

Managing screen time starts by asking better questions than, “How many hours is too many?” Hours matter, sure. But they are not the whole story. Parents should also ask:

  • What is this screen use doing to our family relationships?
  • What is it doing to sleep?
  • What is it doing to mood, attention, and prayer?
  • Is this helping us connect, learn, create, and serve, or just numbing us?

A teen who spends an hour video-calling a grandparent, editing a school project, or using Gospel Library is not doing the same thing as a teen who loses five hours to algorithm sludge. Lumping all screen use together is lazy and usually unhelpful.

“Use technology to learn, work, communicate, and uplift others. Avoid using it to waste time, escape reality, or view inappropriate content.”

That line from For the Strength of Youth is plain for a reason. It gives families a real standard. Technology should serve a purpose worth defending.

This also means parents have to stop pretending their own habits are exempt. Children can spot hypocrisy at ridiculous distances. If Mom says no phones at dinner while checking texts under the table, the lesson has already been lost.

When should Mormon kids get a smartphone?

Later than the culture wants, and with more thought than most families give it.

There is no official Church age for smartphones, which is probably a blessing. Families are different. Maturity is different. Needs are different. But a lot of parents are handing over very powerful devices mostly because they are tired of the pressure. That is not a principle. That is surrender with a data plan.

Many families are finding that delay helps. A basic phone, a watch phone, or a tightly managed device can meet communication needs without dropping a child headfirst into the whole internet. Not every child needs a tiny casino, social stage, and porn portal in a pocket by middle school.

That sounds blunt because the stakes are real.

If your child gets a smartphone, think in layers:

  • Why are we giving this now?
  • What problem is it solving?
  • What restrictions will be in place from day one?
  • Where will the phone sleep at night? (Hint: not in the bedroom.)
  • What expectations come with it if trust is broken?

Parents should make these decisions before the device arrives, not after trouble starts. Rules invented in a panic usually come too late and land badly.

This is one place where community helps. If you can find other like-minded LDS parents willing to delay smartphones or limit social media, the pressure drops fast. Children struggle less when they are not the only ones hearing “not yet.”

Balancing technology and family gospel living

Family scripture study cannot compete with TikTok on raw stimulation. It was never going to. The answer is not making the gospel more like TikTok. The answer is deciding that depth matters more than stimulation.

A lot of parents feel defeated because digital entertainment is slicker than family prayer, quieter than repentance, and easier than real conversation. Of course it is. Sugar is easier than dinner too.

Balancing technology and gospel living means creating protected spaces where digital noise does not get the final word. Start with the obvious ones:

  • Phones off the table during meals
  • No personal devices in bedrooms overnight
  • Scripture study and prayer without multitasking
  • Home evening treated like actual family time, not background content time
  • A Sabbath that feels lighter, quieter, and less online

That last one matters. The Sabbath can become a digital refuge if families let it. Not necessarily zero technology. That is not always practical. But definitely less scrolling, less random consumption, and more space for worship, people, rest, and thought.

In our Easter article about real hope, the deeper point was that shallow substitutes cannot hold what the soul actually needs. Technology has the same problem. It offers stimulation, escape, and endless novelty. It does not offer peace.

Families should say that out loud. Children already know screens are fun. They may not yet know that fun and peace are not the same thing.

How to protect kids from pornography LDS perspective

Parents need to be earlier, calmer, and less weird about this than many of us were raised to be.

Pornography is not a distant problem for reckless families. It is a near problem for normal families with internet access. Waiting until after exposure is a terrible plan, and shame-heavy silence is even worse.

From an LDS perspective, the conversation begins with the sacredness of the body, the sacredness of sexuality, and the truth that God’s commands are protective, not arbitrary. Children should hear that long before they hear the word pornography from a friend, a popup, or a search bar.

Practical protection matters too:

  • Use filters and device controls, but do not trust them as magic
  • Keep devices in public areas when possible
  • Talk openly about what to do if a child sees something upsetting
  • Promise help before a crisis happens
  • Keep the tone steady, not panicked and not shaming

If a child is exposed, the first response should not be fury. It should be calm. “Thank you for telling me” is a sentence that can save a lot of secrecy.

The Church has good resources here, and parents should use them. Bishops can help too, but parents should not outsource the whole conversation. This is family discipleship work.

We have already seen what happens when Christian cultures confuse appearances with real formation. In our piece on performative Christianity, the warning was about polished faith hiding real problems. Screen habits can do the same thing. A family can look fine at church and still be getting quietly hollowed out online.

Sabbath day activities without screens

Families often say they want a more peaceful Sabbath, then spend half the day half-awake with a phone in hand. That is not rest. That is low-grade digital fog.

Sabbath day activities without screens do not have to be complicated or aggressively wholesome. You do not need to run a pioneer reenactment in the living room. You just need alternatives that make the day feel different.

  • Take a walk and talk instead of scrolling in separate rooms
  • Visit grandparents or call someone lonely
  • Read scriptures, church history, or a good biography together
  • Write in journals
  • Take Sunday naps without a second screen running nearby
  • Cook, sing, play a simple game, or plan service

The point is not filling every minute. The point is recovering presence. Screens train the family toward interruption. Sabbath can train the family back toward attention.

And yes, parents have to participate. A child can tell the difference between a sacred family standard and a rule invented to make adults feel virtuous for ten minutes.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does the Church say about screen time and technology use?

The Church encourages members to use technology as a tool for learning, communication, work, and uplifting others. Church leaders have also warned against letting technology waste time, invite inappropriate content, or crowd out spiritual priorities and real relationships.

At what age should LDS kids get a smartphone?

There is no official Church age. Many families are choosing to wait longer, often using simpler phones first. The better question is whether the child is ready, why the device is needed, and what guardrails will be in place.

How can families create tech-free time without constant fighting?

Parents should start with their own habits, then make the plan with the family instead of just dropping rules from the sky. Clear device-free zones, good alternatives, and consistency usually work better than angry crackdowns.

How do I talk to my kids about pornography from an LDS perspective?

Start early and keep the tone calm. Teach that bodies and sexuality are sacred, explain that harmful images exist online, and make sure children know they can come to you without panic or shame if they see something troubling.

What are some positive ways to use technology as a family?

Use it together for Gospel Library, conference talks, video calls with relatives, learning projects, and creating something instead of just consuming. Technology works best in a family when it stays a tool and does not become the atmosphere.

A healthy family technology plan does not start with fear. It starts with a simple question: who is shaping this home, the people who live in it or the devices they keep charging?

Christian Hope Is Not the Same as Optimism

Christian hope is not the same as optimism. Easter gives families something stronger than positive thinking: confidence in the risen Christ.

Easter has a way of getting reduced to nice feelings.

Spring colors. Family photos. Chocolate. A little talk about new beginnings. A reminder that everything will work out somehow. It all sounds pleasant enough, but a lot of it has almost nothing to do with the resurrection of Jesus Christ.

This is why the provocation matters: maybe some Christians need to lose their hope this Easter. Not real hope. The flimsy stuff. The kind that depends on a better mood, better news, a better election, a better diagnosis, or a better week.

That kind of hope breaks all the time. Good. It deserves to.

What is the difference between Christian hope and optimism?

Optimism is a guess about circumstances. Christian hope is confidence in a Person.

Optimism says things will probably improve. Christian hope says Christ has risen, death has been beaten, and God will keep every promise He has made. Those are not the same thing, and Christians get into trouble when they pretend they are.

A lot of modern religious talk is really just positive thinking dressed up in church clothes. Be upbeat. Stay encouraged. Look on the bright side. There is a place for cheerful courage, sure. But if your hope only works when life feels manageable, it is not resurrection hope. It is emotional weather.

“Why seek ye the living among the dead? He is not here, but is risen.” (Luke 24:5-6)

The empty tomb does not tell us that life will always feel sunny. It tells us that the worst thing is never the last thing.

That is sturdier than optimism. It can survive funerals, layoffs, betrayals, prayers that seem unanswered, and long seasons where God feels quiet.

Why does Easter matter for Christian families?

Because families do not need one more holiday built on sentiment. They need something strong enough to carry real life.

Children will face disappointment. Teenagers will feel fear, shame, confusion, and loneliness. Parents will hit seasons where they are tired enough to mistake numbness for peace. Grandparents will age. People we love will die. A faith built on vague positivity will not hold through that.

Easter gives families a different center. The resurrection means Jesus did not merely teach good ideas and then die bravely. He walked out of the grave. That changes what Christians mean when they use the word hope.

It also changes how we talk at home. We do not have to tell children fairy tales about life always getting easier. We can tell them something better: Christ is alive, God is faithful, and sorrow does not get the final word.

This is part of why walking through the full Easter story matters so much. If families skip straight to bright Sunday language without sitting with Good Friday and the silence of Saturday, they often end up with a softer gospel than the one the New Testament actually gives them.

How to have hope when life is difficult and painful

First, stop confusing hope with pretending.

Some Christians have learned to speak as if faith means never sounding sad. They grin through grief, rush past fear, and answer every hard moment with a slogan. That is not maturity. It is performance with a church accent.

Real hope can look grief-stricken and still be real. It can sit beside a hospital bed. It can stand at a graveside. It can admit, “I do not like this, and I do not understand all of it, but I know who Jesus is.”

Paul did not teach Christians to avoid sorrow. He taught them not to sorrow as those who have no hope. That little phrase matters. Christians still mourn. We just mourn toward resurrection.

Families need to hear that plainly. If a child is scared, do not rush to, “Everything will be fine.” You do not know that. But you can say, “Whatever happens, God will not abandon us.” That is a Christian sentence.

This same instinct shows up in other parts of faithful family life too. In our article on performative Christianity, the warning was against polished religion that hides reality. Easter should cure some of that. A crucified and risen Christ gives us permission to tell the truth.

How to teach children about resurrection hope

Parents do not need to turn this into a lecture. They do need to stop settling for shallow Easter talk.

If children only hear that Easter means spring, kindness, and fresh starts, they are being underfed. Those things are fine as side dishes. They are terrible as the meal.

Teach children the actual Christian claim. Jesus died. Jesus was buried. Jesus rose again. Because He lives, death is not permanent for those who belong to Him. Because He lives, suffering is not meaningless. Because He lives, repentance is not pointless. Because He lives, the future is not hanging by the thread of our latest mood.

A few simple practices can help:

  • Read the resurrection accounts out loud during Easter week
  • Let children ask hard questions about death and fear
  • Correct soft clichés when they replace actual doctrine
  • Use family prayers to name pain honestly before God
  • Talk about the resurrection as history, not just inspiration

Parents should also be careful with language. If every hard moment gets answered with, “It will all work out,” children eventually notice that life does not always cooperate. Better to say, “God is faithful even here.” That statement can survive contact with reality.

And if your family needs a reminder that faith is not built on image management, our piece on church culture and belonging makes a related point. The gospel is stronger than the social performance Christians sometimes confuse with discipleship.

What does the resurrection mean for everyday life?

It means ordinary days are not sealed off from eternity.

The resurrection is not only for funerals and Easter Sunday. It changes how Christians work, forgive, repent, parent, endure, and wait. If Jesus Christ truly rose from the dead, then despair is never the only rational response. Grief may be rational. Anger may be rational. Weariness may be rational. Despair does not get to rule the house.

That does not make Christians naïve. If anything, resurrection hope makes them harder to fool. They know politics will not save the world. They know self-help will not conquer death. They know human progress is real but limited. Even impressive achievements, like the wonder stirred up by the Artemis II mission, cannot answer the deepest human problem. Only Christ can do that.

That is why Easter hope is so disruptive. It refuses to let us settle for smaller salvations. It pulls us away from cheap reassurance and toward a kingdom that broke into history through an empty tomb.

Lose the weak hope. It was never enough for what your family is carrying anyway.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does it mean to have resurrection hope?

Resurrection hope means confidence that God raised Jesus from the dead and will keep His promises to us as well. It is not wishful thinking. It rests on what God has already done in Christ.

How is Christian hope different from optimism?

Optimism depends on circumstances improving. Christian hope depends on the risen Jesus Christ. One rises and falls with the news cycle. The other can survive suffering, grief, and disappointment.

How can parents teach children about real hope?

Tell the truth about pain and tell the truth about the resurrection. Read the Gospel accounts, welcome hard questions, and teach children that God’s faithfulness is sturdier than their changing feelings.

Why does Easter matter beyond the cultural celebration?

Easter matters because Jesus really rose from the dead. That means death is defeated, the future is not closed, and Christian faith rests on something far stronger than tradition or mood.

What does hope look like when life is hard?

It looks like grief without surrendering to despair. It looks like prayer said through tears. It looks like trusting that Christ has conquered death even when life feels terribly heavy.

This Easter, do not settle for the sort of hope that only works when life is going smoothly. Your family was offered something much stronger than that.