Why Fatherhood Still Matters - with Bill Federer
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Father’s Day is usually framed as a light holiday, but the real story is heavier and a lot more revealing. We sit down with historian Bill Federer to trace the origins of Father’s Day from a heartbreaking coal mine disaster that left hundreds of families without fathers, to the grassroots push that spread nationwide through churches and the YMCA. Along the way, we ask a simple question with huge consequences: what happens to a culture when fatherhood becomes optional, mocked, or absent?
We also get practical about why fatherlessness is not just a private family concern. We talk through the social and economic fallout that follows broken homes, from poverty and school failure to crime and the rising costs communities absorb when stability collapses. We connect that to the deeper hunger every kid has for identity and belonging, and why strong families help children resist peer pressure and manipulation when the world offers counterfeit “tribes” in the form of gangs, destructive subcultures, or ideologies that promise structure without grace.
To close, we look at how to rebuild: recovering respect for fathers, strengthening marriage and family, and choosing daily habits that form resilient sons and daughters. Bill shares standout historical voices and a powerful Father of the Year reflection from General Douglas MacArthur that reframes fatherhood as building, not destroying. If you care about faith and culture, biblical citizenship, American history, and the future of the family, this conversation is for you.
Subscribe for more conversations from a biblical, historical, and constitutional perspective, then share this with a dad who needs encouragement and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.
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