❤️🇺🇸 Rachel Campos-Duffy Reveals the Faith-Filled Love Story Behind Her Family of Nine — and Why She Believes America Must Begin Healing at Home

Rachel Campos-Duffy has built a remarkable public life as a television presenter, author and political commentator — but behind the studio lights, she insists that her greatest achievement is the noisy, imperfect and deeply faithful home she shares with her husband, Sean Duffy, and their nine children.

The Fox & Friends Weekend host has opened up about the love, prayer and family traditions that shape their household as she promotes her new book, All American Patriotism.

Released as America approaches the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, the collection explores the meaning of national pride through personal stories from Rachel’s relatives and several prominent public voices.

Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy walks with his wife Rachel Campos-Duffy of Fox News alnog the grounds of the White House.

Yet for the devoted Catholic mother, patriotism does not begin in Washington, inside a television studio or beneath the grandeur of a national monument.

It begins around the family dinner table.

Rachel believes the home is a “domestic church” — a sacred place where children first learn about faith, responsibility, sacrifice and love.

Her message is strikingly simple: a nation cannot remain strong if its families are falling apart.

That belief has guided her marriage to Sean, now the United States Secretary of Transportation, as they have navigated political life, demanding careers and the joyful chaos of raising nine children.

Their story began decades before cabinet meetings and Fox News broadcasts, when both appeared in the world of reality television.

What followed was not merely a showbusiness romance, but a marriage increasingly centred on Catholic faith, family life and public service.

The Duffy family takes a picture with Vice President JD Vance on the day Sean Duffy assumed the office of Secretary of Transportation.

Sean contributes one of the most personal stories in Rachel’s new book, recalling what it was like growing up as the tenth of 11 children.

In one amusing but revealing memory, his mother took the enormous family on a journey to the Grand Canyon during an era before smartphones and instant online directions.

The children piled out of the vehicle and began hiking with no food, little preparation and almost no understanding of the exhausting journey ahead.

They were hungry, sweating and completely overwhelmed by the time they reached Phantom Ranch.

Yet they followed because they trusted their mother.

For Rachel, the story captures something far greater than an adventurous childhood holiday.

Sean and Rachel Camos-Duffy on their wedding day.

It represents the profound influence parents possess when children believe they are being led with love — even when the path ahead is difficult.

Rachel argues that mothers and fathers provide the first moral map their children will ever receive.

That responsibility has become even more important, she believes, as families struggle against the constant distraction of mobile phones, social media and a relentless digital news cycle.

She has warned that America is experiencing an identity crisis, with political division and religious hostility creating deep fractures across the country.

Her proposed answer is not another government campaign.

It is a return to faith, family and a shared belief in freedom.

Rachel Campos-Duffy and US Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy visit with President Trump in the Oval Office during a visit with their children.

Rachel maintains that America’s liberties do not originate with politicians or institutions but come from God, with government responsible for protecting rather than creating those rights.

She also argues that freedom cannot survive without personal discipline.

People may possess the legal right to make countless choices, she explains, but a stable society still depends upon individuals attempting to choose what is good.

The same principle shapes her approach to marriage and parenthood.

Rachel frequently encourages younger people not to treat love and family as distant ambitions that can be postponed indefinitely while careers and qualifications take priority.

Rachel Campos-Duffy's new book, American Patriotism, is now available online and in your local bookstore.

She has noticed what she describes as an encouraging change among young adults in New York and New Jersey, with more attending church not only to worship but also to meet people who share their values.

For Rachel, that desire reflects a growing rejection of the loneliness and instability that can accompany an entirely individualistic life.

She presents marriage not as an obstacle to freedom, but as a source of meaning.

Motherhood, meanwhile, has been the greatest adventure of her life.

Raising nine children has taught Rachel that every child arrives with a completely individual personality that no parent can fully design or control.

That experience, she says, is both humbling and mysterious.

Parents can guide, love and protect their children, but they must ultimately accept that those children belong to God and will become independent human beings.

Her words challenge the often gloomy cultural narrative that portrays children primarily as a burden, expense or threat to personal ambition.

Rachel does not claim that raising a large family is easy.

Her household is filled with competing schedules, public responsibilities and the ordinary disorder familiar to parents everywhere.Merry Christmas from the Duffys! “For to us a child is born ...

But she refuses to present family life as something that must be flawlessly arranged for photographs or social media.

Building a domestic church, she explains, can begin with small and consistent habits.

In the Duffy household, home-cooked meals shared around the same table remain a priority.

So does nightly prayer.

Rachel has created a calming family ritual using a small stone bowl filled with sand and thin beeswax candles.

As the candles are lit, the family gathers to pray, bringing the anxieties and distractions of the day to a quiet conclusion.

Rachel Campos-Duffy Talks Raising 8 Children

The scene is simple, but for Rachel it carries enormous emotional power.

It reminds every member of the household that beneath television appearances, political responsibilities and material success lies something more permanent.

Their home must remain a place where each child feels safe, loved and grounded.

Even rushed mornings contain a moment of faith.

A holy-water font sits beside the family’s door, allowing them to pause, bless themselves and say, “Jesus, I trust in you,” before racing into the outside world.

That brief prayer captures the philosophy at the centre of Rachel’s life.

She cannot control every challenge awaiting her children, her husband or her country.

She can only prepare them with love and place her trust in God.

Her new book celebrates flags, landscapes, traditions and the approaching anniversary of American independence.

But its most intimate message is found much closer to home.

Rachel believes patriotism is strengthened every time parents raise children with gratitude, discipline and compassion.

For the Duffys, America’s future will not be secured only in courtrooms, cabinet offices or television debates.

Photo: Rep. Sean Duffy and wife Rachael at the Republican National  Convention in Cleveland - CLE20160718588 - UPI.com

It will be shaped in kitchens, beside children’s beds and around tables where families still make time to eat, listen and pray together.

After nine children and more than two decades of marriage, Rachel’s American love story remains rooted in one conviction: when faith holds a family together, even the most demanding journey can be faced with hope. 🕊️