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Stop Running Your Home on Willpower: 3 Signs Your Household Was Built to Be Managed, Not to Form Saints
Published 5 hours ago
Description
Most Catholic dads are working hard in their home. The problem? They’re not working on it. There’s a difference between a household that runs because you’re there holding it together — and one that’s been designed to form your wife and children for heaven even when you’re not in the room.
In this episode, Dave and Adam get into John Cuddeback’s framework for the domestic church, pull from their book Living Beyond Sunday, and share the 3 telltale signs your home is running on willpower instead of design. Plus: what to do about it, how morning chaos is actually a design problem, and why the living room might be the most important room in your house.
In This Episode
- Why Holy Week is the lens through which this entire conversation happens
- The Deacon’s homily: “You are a thought of God made flesh” — and what that means at your most broken moments
- Adam’s son Luke wins concert tickets — then realizes it’s Good Friday. What happened next.
- Adam announces M6 Marketing and The Grounded Builder Substack
- The body-soul composite of the home: daily life vs. moral and spiritual formation
- Working IN your family vs. working ON your family (the entrepreneur analogy every dad needs)
- 3 signs your home runs on willpower, not design:
- The same corrections keep happening to the same kids — it’s not a motivation problem, it’s a design problem
- Morning chaos — nothing was built right the night before to make it smooth
- Your presence is the only thing holding it together — when you’re gone, the wheels fall off
- 3 diagnostic questions to ask when something keeps breaking in your home
- The Great Silence: Dave’s family morning prayer rule (and why it’s formed him more than his kids)
- Why bells beat yelling — and the sacramental case for ringing a blessed bell in your home
- Giving kids real work with real consequences: why sweeping the floor doesn’t cut it
- The dinner table as non-negotiable — and why screens are the enemy of family formation
- The one room in your house not ordered toward a biological need — and why it matters most
- Why designing the household is a man’s domain and responsibility — ordered entirely in love
Timestamps
- 00:00 — The manliness warning. Yes, they played it twice.
- 01:30 — Blessed Holy Week + Deacon’s homily: “You are a thought of God”
- 07:00 — Luke wins concert tickets. It’s Good Friday. What he said.
- 09:30 — Mary’s procedure + prayer request
- 11:00 — Adam announces M6 Marketing + The Grounded Builder Substack
- 15:30 — White Lightning: the 1989 Chevy, the gas station, and the woman whose dad owned it
- 22:00 — The topic: designing your home as the domestic church
- 25:00 — Cuddeback’s 4 things a home must do + the body-soul composite of household life
- 30:00 — Working IN the family vs. ON the family (business owner analogy)
- 34:00 — The 3 signs your home runs on willpower, not design
- 40:00 — The 3 diagnostic questions when something keeps breaking
- 45:00 — Rules for the day, the Great Silence, and preparing kids to hear God’s voice
- 53:00 — The case for blessed bells (and why yelling kills the spirit of what you’re doing)
- 58:00 — Giving kids real work with real consequences
- 1:02:00 — The dinner table: the most attacked and most essential daily ritual
- 1:07:00 — The living room: the only room not ordered toward a biological need
- 1:12:00 — Why this is a man’s job — and what authority granted in love looks like
Resources Mentioned
- The American Catholic Land Movement — edited by Jason Craig and Jared Stout (TAN Books)
- Living Beyond Sunday: Making Your Home a Holy Place — by Dave Niles and Adam Minihan
- John Cuddeback, Ph.D. — philosopher, professor, and homesteader. Find him at LifeCraft.org
- The