Sarah Probst, 20-year-old stepdaughter of blended family pastor Kirk McGregor, urges anyone hoping to serve nontraditional families to take cues from the families themselves when it comes to vocabulary.
“Sometimes it’s easy to get caught up in specific labels, like, this is my stepdad or my stepbrother or my half-brother. And that can be important, especially if it’s new. So, it’s about what the family themself is comfortable with. Take your cues from them.”
Traditional family (or nuclear family): Two parents and their biological children.
Nontraditional family: Any family that is not “nuclear,” meaning two parents and their biological children. Examples include a single-parent family, blended family created after divorce or blended family created after the death of one parent.
Blended family or stepfamily: When a family forms with at least one adult bringing at least one child into the marriage from a previous relationship.
Stepfamily couple: A couple who marries with at least one member having at least one child from a previous relationship.
Stepparents (i.e., stepmother or stepfather): A stepparent is the partner of a parent with a child from a previous relationship who is not the child’s biological parent.
Stepsiblings (i.e., stepbrother or stepsister): Stepsiblings are children born of two different families who have been joined by marriage of at least one of their respective parents.
Half-siblings: Half-siblings biologically share one parent, their mother or father.