Peacemaking for Families (Focus on the Family) by Ken Sande


Peacemaking for Families (Focus on the Family)
Title : Peacemaking for Families (Focus on the Family)
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 1589970063
ISBN-10 : 9781589970069
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 240
Publication : First published January 1, 2002

Families fight―it’s part of the reality we face in a fallen world. What can we do about it?

In this guide, discover a wealth of advice and resources for reconciliation, all with a scriptural basis for being a peacemaker in your home.

Basic conflict-resolution skills found in Scripture can help you change your home from a battle zone to a love nest. Distinguishing between positive and negative conflict resolution, Peacemaking for Families introduces you to valuable biblical principles and easy-to-remember truths such as:

“Learning to be a peacemaker will help you guard your family from destructive conflict, deepen your love and intimacy with your spouse, and provide your children with a solid foundation for life. Most importantly, you can provide the world with a compelling witness to Jesus Christ’s reconciling power.” ― Ken Sande, author and founder of Peacemaker Ministries

There’s hope for reconciliation at home. Within both marriage and other family relationships, Peacemaking for Families will help you navigate all forms of conflict in family life.


Peacemaking for Families (Focus on the Family) Reviews


  • Brad Herman

    I thoroughly enjoyed the material in Peacemaking for Families. The book is full of all kinds of practical (biblical) advice for working through conflict. As the back cover reads: "Where two or three are gathered...there's a conflict waiting to happen." So very true! Even more so in the family and with those who we live in close proximity to. The insights in the book are very helpful for deescalating conflict and working through issues of unforgiveness. Every Christian should take the time to read this book, or one of Ken Sande's other books on the peacemaking concepts. He is a bit wordy and could be more concise, but overall this is a great book that will help a lot of folks wade through the issues of personal conflict.

  • Lila Diller

    Not very helpful at all. It uses primarily fictional examples of the most stereotypical conflicts. It repeats the same instructions over and over – confess your sins and forgive others' sins. That's it. And the vast amount of the book was in the context of marriage with only a repetition of the same instructions to children. This really shouldn't be marketed as conflict resolution for families. Instead, it's a fluffy essay on acknowledging your contribution to any conflict and why you should confess.

    Favorite quotes:
    “Escape and attack responses are almost always destructive to relationships. The escape responses to conflict are favored by those who are more interested in avoiding a conflict than in resolving it... peacefakers... [Attack responses] are employed by those more interested in winning a fight than preserving a relationship.” (p. 8-9)

    “...searching for creative solutions. This is the time for creative, prayerful thinking, otherwise known as brainstorming... No suggestion is wrong at this stage, nor is there only one answer to the problem. Steer clear of evaluating and effectiveness of any of the ideas—that comes later.” (p. 103)

    “It's never too late to start doing what is right.” (p. 124)

  • Katherine B.

    The biggest annoyance with this book is it's basically the same thing as The Peacemaker, which I had to read for school earlier this semester. Which means that it was a repeat of everything I've already had to read.

  • John

    Great, practical, Gospel-centered resource. Gets a bit repetitive if already familiar with the Peacemaker resources, but still very helpful.
    #VTreadingchallenge

  • Cole Brandon

    A guide to domestic conflict management, for churched families, from a biblical counseling perspective. Its basic contents can be found in many other Christian books, but the conciseness of PfF makes it a preferable go-to.

  • Keir

    An excellent book relating scriptural/gospel-based practical means to handle the inevitable conflicts we will encounter in relationships. Christians are made righteous in Christ solely by His work and attributes, but as still sin-tainted beings we will surely deal with conflict as we interact and live with other sinners. Ken Sande, the author, who has produced a number of “peacemaking” titles, addresses family conflict specifically in this work, carrying over the solid biblical principles that are the foundation of his other volumes.

    Sande graciously reveals the scriptural core cause of conflict, idolatry, and points to the only true answer, that found in the work of Christ expounded in the Gospel. These theological aspects are nowhere near exhaustive in this work, but the practical teaching that makes up the majority of this book is firmly enough premised on good exegesis of scripture to give us confidence in their wisdom.

    I used this in a small group study and every man extolled the wisdom and hope this book provided at some level.

  • Andres Vera

    Great book explaining the nature of conflict and the art and science of how to resolve it. Sande provides helpful and practical ways of how to deal with confession, confrontation, forgiveness, and negotiation all with the gospel in center and a biblical worldview. He gives numerous of examples of conflict between spouses, between young children and parents, between siblings, between couples and in-laws and provides the tools and hope for how to resolve conflict and grow as a peacemaker.

  • Marc Sims

    Ok. Had to read it for a family ministry class. Practical, loaded with lots of helpful examples, all pretty obvious stuff, but still helpful nonetheless.

  • Drake Hyman

    Peacemaking for Families is an applied form of Sande's prior work The Peacemaker. While I haven't read that book, I did read another applied work inspired by it called the Peacemaking Pastor by Alfred Poirier, a close associate of Sande at Peacemaking Ministries. Both of these borrow the same terminology and framework to build a rationale for Christian peacemaking in all areas of life, not least of which is the family.

    Sande briefly summarizes the key principles from The Peacemaker in chapter 1, but sets it all in the context of family conflicts. Each chapter sets a principle in real life context through the use of a scenario, be it a married couple, a parent and their child, or a family with adult children. Though these stories are fictitious, at times they feel all too real. The depictions of husbands issuing contrived, insincere apologies to their wives, who then struggle to truly forgive and instead issue snide remarks in retaliation, hit too close to home. I found myself reliving much of my marriage and mourning our selfish fight or flight responses.

    Yet I was also encouraged as I read through his discussion of confession and negotiation. My wife and I have actually been needing to sit down and negotiate how I can better be a spiritual leader in our home now that we have our first child. I want to be intentional, considerate and consistent. Our family will spiritually starve if I don't lead us to the spiritual dinner table. I know my wife and I need to sit down and discuss the principles and practices we want to define our home, but this can only happen through negotiation. Here Sande's PAUSE principle is helpful. To negotiate effectively, one must Prepare, Affirm Relationships, Understand the Interests of both parties, Search for creative solution (prayerful brainstorming) and, lastly, Evaluate options objectively and reasonably. This approach to conflict focuses on us rather than just me or you. It's about protecting the interests and wellbeing of both parties involved.

    Chapter 10 was also helpful in dealing with conflict in relationships between adult children and their parents. Families are complex, often dysfunctional social units with a long history of hurt and pain. To traverse these situations in pursuit of peace, Sande argues that all families members must abide by the 4 G's: Glorify God (place Him and His will first), Get the log out of your own eye (admit your own fault and sin), Go and show your brother his fault (loving confrontation), and Go and be reconciled. The Gospel has the power not only to heal the sin of individuals, but also to pierce through the thick layers of familial sin and relational decay. For such families, Sande advocates that one member prayerfully lead the family through this process. Of course, it requires that all be willing, which may take time.

    I also appreciated the chapters on parenting (8-9). Teaching children to be peacemakers seems like a daunting task. Children are naturally inclined to fight, deceive, manipulate, betray and condemn if it means preserving their own self interest. They are often insincere in apologizing, if they do so at all. I know this to be true from my own life in how I treated my younger brother. Such children, he argues, must be confronted by their parents, yet with love and wisdom. "Overlooking minor offenses, choosing an appropriate time and place to talk, listening to and seeking to understand their perspective, paraphrasing and clarifying, carefully choosing our words to build up and not tear down--all are key elements in an effective confrontation" of a child. (139) Sande argues that children who are trained in the ways of peace by their parents at a young age will be much more capable of being bastions of peace as adults in a world at war with itself. This is the calling of every Christian parent in training their children to be disciples of Christ, the Prince of Peace.

    Sande ends with a charge to seek refuge and peace before problems arise. "The prudent see danger and take refuge; but the simple keep going and suffer for it" (Proverbs 27:12). Families must set up protection before there is are conflicts, as well as recognize them as opportunities to practice the biblical principles from this book.

    I am grateful for this book and its wisdom and prudence. It's a little date in terms of language and technology, and some of the resources mentioned in the back are difficult to find online. Nevertheless, I would recommend it to pastors as well as parents who, after all, are the shepherds of their little flocks. (3/5)

  • Kali Cavner

    I found Boundaries by Cloud & Townsend to be more helpful. While I agree with most of the points made in this book- ie overlooking minor offenses, owning your part in conflict, etc, I also don’t think it’s this simple or black and white.

    Sometimes conflict happens and sometimes it just is what it is. Sometimes you have to set a healthy boundary and it causes conflict. That doesn’t mean you have a hidden sin in your heart or that you need to initiate reconciliation by apologizing for your “selfish attitude.”

    For this reason I recommend Boundaries over this book (or in addition to this book) as a way of maintaining peaceful relationships.

  • Sarah Robbins

    I started reading this with a group of friends and discussing over Zoom, but the discussion fell off (my fault entirely) when we moved in November. Regardless, this book is chock full of great advice on peacemaking in the home, which almost always needs to start in my own heart.

  • Calley

    Great, Christ-centered things to think about in personal/marital/familial conflict

  • Chad

    Practical resource for resolving conflict and making peace or for counseling those in need of peaceful solutions.

  • Gregory

    Very helpful.

  • Fernando

    Ótima ponderações e reflexões para o cotidiano, a comunicação e a pacificação das relações em Cristo.

  • Tess Jones-Orta

    Helpful but a little heavy handed for me. I took away some good ideas to put into practice though.

  • Kristi

    Overall a good blanket reference in counseling for conflicts. Specific issues aren't necessarily covered here but general ideas.

  • Emma

    One of the most important books on conflict. Implementing at your discretion. A re-read for when we add to our family.

  • Kilby Lee

    I was honestly a bit underwhelmed with this book. I found this book to be extremely repetitive and basic. The examples and illustrations used at the throughout each chapter seemed to be the exact same each and every time— they became quite worn out.

    Don’t mistake me: everything said was good and true and first and foremost, theologically rooted in biblical counsel and scripture. For that I am truly thankful. And because of that I think this book would be great for a new Believer and/or anyone who has not been exposed to God-honoring counseling and scripture-focused teaching.

  • Mark A Powell

    Conflict is inevitable, even among those you are closest to and love most dearly. This book is designed to help family members manage that conflict in a way that produces a sustainable peace. Sande touches on all areas of family—including marriage and children—and peppers the book with his own personal experiences. While repetitive at times, and perhaps a bit bloated, the concepts and principles are valuable tools in the day-to-day realities of family life.

  • Steve Hemmeke

    Sande applies the Peacemaker material to marriage, parenting and sibling rivalry.

    Pros: lots of good ideas on how to communicate lovingly in conflict. Incisive diagnosis of heart issues and a clear process for dealing with them.

    Cons: a bit wordy - lots of extra fluff to get the ideas across.

  • Jennifer

    I really enjoyed this book. Very practical steps in handling conflict with your spouse, children and other family members. I would definitely recommend this book. I got it from the library but will purchase it to read again.

  • Luke

    Why don't we study conflict resolution more? there is so much around us - where two or three are gathered, there will be conflict! This book is so welcoming and comforting, with good suggestions for managing conflict even in families.