Cameron, an Evangelical Christian, has been married for 24 years and has six children with wife Chelsea Noble

'When couples start arguing and fighting in front of the kids, dad cuts mom and mom cuts dad and the kids bleed,' said Cameron

He also urged men not to fight with their wives because it makes it difficult for their children to ever have healthy relationships

'Wives are to honor and respect and follow their husband's lead, not to tell their husband how he ought to be a better husband,' said Cameron

He said in a recent interview that the role of the wife in a relationship is to be submissive to her husband

Kirk Cameron says that the key to a successful marriage is a submissive wife.

The former child star turned Evangelical Christian is currently on a nationwide marriage tour where he is giving his advice to couples, and said that a man and a woman each have a specific role in every relationship.

'Wives are to honor and respect and follow their husband's lead, not to tell their husband how he ought to be a better husband,' Cameron, 45, said in an interview with the Christian Post.

'When each person gets their part right, regardless of how their spouse is treating them, there is hope for real change in their marriage.'

Scroll down for video

Speaking his mind: Kirk Cameron is currently on a nationwide marriage tour giving advice to couples and said in a recent interview that the role of the wife in a relationship is to be submissive to her husband (above with wife Chelsea Noble last May, left, and on their 1991 wedding day at right when he was 20)

Kirk is currently touring speaking on marriage. Love Worth Fighting For is billed as a 'marriage event' and features teaching by Cameron and is 'designed to strengthen and encourage your marriage'

Cameron said during his interview; 'A lot of people don't know that marriage comes with instructions. And, we find them right there in God's word.'

He went on to offer advice to husbands as well, mainly that they should not argue with their wives when they have disagreements because it hurts both parties.

Cameron also said these arguments make it difficult for their children to go on and have healthy relationships.

'Thinking that you are going to win an argument, you end up losing. It's a no-win situation,' said Cameron.

'In order for you to win, your husband or wife has to lose. When they lose, you have not built up your marriage. You have really cut them down.

'When couples start arguing and fighting in front of the kids, dad cuts mom and mom cuts dad and the kids bleed. They see that and it damages them. When the kids get to marriage, they will follow patterns that they see.'

He later added; 'There is only one person on the whole planet who you can change and it's not your spouse.'

Kirk is currently on a speaking tour, which take place mostly at Baptist churches.

Called Love Worth Fighting For, it's billed as a 'marriage event' and features teaching by Cameron, as well as music, and it's 'designed to strengthen and encourage your marriage'.

Tickets range in price from $20 to $50 for 'VIP' access.

Back in the day: The former Growing Pains star found religion when he was a teenager and still on the hit show (above in 1987 with Drew Barrymore and Emmanuel Lewis, left, and with his cast at right)

One individual who seems to agree with Cameron on this is his sister, mother of three View host Candace Cameron Bure, who said she is submissive in her relationship during an interview with Yahoo Parenting last year.

'I used the word "submissive" because it's from the Bible but people who don't understand that see that as offensive,' said Bure.

'My husband is not a dictator. We work together but I don't want to dig my heels in and I have no aspirations to be the ruler of my family.'

Kirk and his wife Chelsea Noble have been married for nearly 25 years and have six children.

The couple met on the set of Growing Pains, and because of Cameron's strong religious views he had Noble stand in for any woman he had to kiss after they began dating, refusing to have physical contact with anyone other than his girlfriend and later wife.

Proud sibling: One individual who seems to agree with Cameron is his sister, View host Candace Cameron Bure (above on Friday)

Family dynamic: Bure said she was her husband's equal in all way, but she preferred to take a submissive role in their relationship as described in the Bible (l to r: Candace, Lev, Val, Maks and Natasha Bure)

Party time: Cameron celebrates his birthday with some cake and Subway sandwiches back in the day

He previously gave his opinion on gender roles when promoting his film Surviving Christmas back in 2014, saying what women should do over the holiday season for the man in their life.

'Calling all moms, wives and keepers of your home - I made this video for you, to remind you of how irreplaceable you are to your family this Christmas,' said Cameron in his message, which he posted to social media.

'If you are a mom, if you are a wife, if you're the keeper of your home, I want you to know that your joy is so important this Christmas.'

He continued; 'Let your children, your family, see your joy in the way that you decorate your home this Christmas, in the food that you cook, the songs you sing, the stories you tell, and the traditions that you keep.

'Invite your whole neighborhood into your Christmas, and invite the world into our story of our king and his kingdom.'

Cameron also urged men to try and surprise their wives by doing the dishes one night.

Cameron has over 2 million followers on Facebook and 60,000 on Twitter.

He's also a good friend of the Duggars, appeared on their then-TLC show 18 Kids and Counting and even went to their daughter Jessa's wedding in the fall of 2014.

Kirk was a guest at the wedding of the very Christian, now disgraced Duggar family's third daughter Jessa, right, in the fall of 2014