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Christian Marriage Advice — Best Videos

📅 Mar 14, 20269 min read✍️ ChristianVidz Editorial

My wife and I nearly separated in our fifth year of marriage. I'm not sharing that for shock value — I'm sharing it because the couples who helped us were the ones honest enough to admit that marriage is hard. Not "romantic comedy" hard, where you have a misunderstanding that resolves in twenty minutes. Hard in the way that two imperfect people trying to become one unit is always going to be hard.

We made it through — not because we found a magic formula, but because we found the right voices. Pastors, counselors, and couples who told us the truth: marriage requires work, it requires grace, and it's worth fighting for. Many of those voices reached us through video — sermons, teachings, and interviews that we watched together on our couch, learning how to love each other better.

If your marriage needs encouragement, direction, or even rescue, these videos are a great place to start.

For Every Marriage — Core Teaching

Tim and Kathy Keller — "The Meaning of Marriage"

Tim Keller's book on marriage is one of the best ever written, and his recorded talks on the subject carry the same depth. He approaches marriage not as a path to personal happiness but as a vehicle for spiritual growth — two sinners learning to love like Jesus. Kathy's contributions add a groundedness and humor that balances Tim's theological precision. Search for their joint talks on YouTube; several full-length sessions are available.

Francis and Lisa Chan — "You and Me Forever"

The Chans take an approach that's countercultural even within the Christian world: they argue that the best marriages are ones where both partners are so focused on serving God's kingdom that their relationship becomes a byproduct of shared mission. Their video series is free on their website and challenges the self-focused model of marriage that dominates our culture. It's convicting and liberating in equal measure.

Gary Chapman — "The 5 Love Languages" Talks

Gary Chapman's framework — Words of Affirmation, Quality Time, Receiving Gifts, Acts of Service, and Physical Touch — has helped millions of couples understand why they keep missing each other. His video lectures explain the concept with gentle humor and decades of counseling wisdom. Once you and your spouse identify your love languages, the practical application is immediate and often transformative.

For Marriages in Crisis

Jimmy Evans — "Marriage Today"

Jimmy Evans speaks with the authority of someone whose own marriage nearly ended before God intervened. His video series covers communication, trust repair, sexual intimacy, and conflict resolution with biblical grounding and raw honesty. He doesn't spiritualize away real problems — he addresses them head-on. His YouTube channel has hundreds of short clips organized by topic, making it easy to find exactly what you need.

Dr. John Gottman Interview Videos

While not explicitly Christian, Dr. Gottman's research on marriage is referenced by nearly every Christian marriage counselor. His concept of the "Four Horsemen" — criticism, contempt, defensiveness, and stonewalling — is essential knowledge for any couple. Several of his interviews and lecture clips are available on YouTube, and they pair perfectly with biblical principles of love, humility, and grace.

For Communication and Conflict

Dave and Ashley Willis — "Naked Marriage" Series

Dave and Ashley Willis bring humor, vulnerability, and practical tools to the conversation about marriage. Their video series covers everything from fighting fair to rebuilding trust after betrayal. What makes them relatable is their willingness to share their own struggles — not as distant memories, but as ongoing realities that they navigate together with God's help.

Michael Todd — "Relationship Goals" Sermon Series

Pastor Michael Todd's "Relationship Goals" series at Transformation Church went massively viral, and the marriage-specific episodes are particularly impactful. Todd uses vivid illustrations (sometimes literally bringing props on stage) to make biblical relationship principles unforgettable. The production quality is high, and his communication style connects with younger couples especially.

For Spiritual Intimacy

Jackie and Stephana Hill Perry — Conversations on Faith and Marriage

Jackie Hill Perry and her husband Stephana have shared openly about their journey — including Jackie's testimony of coming to Christ and the unique dynamics of their marriage. Their conversations, available in various podcast and video interviews, are marked by theological depth and emotional honesty. For couples who want to grow spiritually together, hearing how another couple navigates faith, calling, and daily life is incredibly instructive.

Paul and Virginia Friesen — "The Marriage App" Videos

The Friesens have been married for decades and spent their lives helping other couples. Their approach combines biblical teaching with evidence-based relationship skills. Their video content is available through their ministry and covers topics like praying together (which is harder than you'd think), serving together, and keeping romance alive through life's transitions.

Practical Tips for Watching Together

  • Schedule it. Don't wait for "the right time" — it won't come. Pick a night, order takeout, and watch a video together. Treat it like a date, not homework.
  • Pause and discuss. The real work happens in conversation, not consumption. Stop the video when something resonates and talk about it.
  • Be humble. Resist the urge to watch and think, "See? This is what I've been trying to tell you." Instead, ask, "What does this mean for me? How do I need to change?"
  • Follow up. One video won't fix everything. Commit to a series. Better yet, join a marriage small group at your church where you watch and discuss together with other couples.
  • Pray together. Before and after watching, pray as a couple. Even if it's awkward. Especially if it's awkward. Praying together creates a vulnerability that opens doors nothing else can.

A Word to the Struggling

If your marriage is in a painful place right now, please hear this: seeking help is not a sign of weakness. It's a sign of wisdom. Watching a video together is a step in the right direction. Calling a Christian counselor is a step further. And committing to do the hard work of loving each other — not based on feelings, but based on a covenant before God — is the bravest thing two people can do.

God doesn't promise easy marriages. He promises to be present in the middle of them. And His presence changes everything. Keep showing up. Keep fighting for each other. The same God who performed His first miracle at a wedding still performs miracles in marriages today.

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