Faith & Finance with Rob West
How much is enough—and why does it always seem just beyond our grasp? Many people assume the answer is a number: a savings goal, a retirement target, or an income level that will finally bring peace. But Scripture offers a different perspective. What if “enough” isn’t something you reach, but something you define? That question matters more than we may realize, because how we answer it shapes our contentment, our decisions, and our generosity.

How much is enough—and why does it always seem just beyond our grasp?
Many people assume the answer is a number: a savings goal, a retirement target, or an income level that will finally bring peace. But Scripture offers a different perspective. What if “enough” isn’t something you reach, but something you define?
That question matters more than we may realize, because how we answer it shapes our contentment, our decisions, and our generosity.
When we turn to God’s Word, we discover that the question of enough doesn’t begin with math. It begins with the heart.
As we often say, money issues are heart issues. They’re tied to our fears, our desire for control, and ultimately where we place our trust.
That’s why Hebrews 13:5 says:
“Keep your life free from the love of money and be content with what you have, for he has said, ‘I will never leave you nor forsake you.’” Notice the connection: contentment is not rooted in what we have, but in who we have.True peace isn’t found in reaching a financial milestone. It’s found in the presence and faithfulness of God.
If enough is not about accumulation, then what is it about? First, it is about trust.
Physician Keelan Hobelman and his wife recognized this early as his income began to rise. They knew that without intentionality, their lifestyle could quickly expand alongside their earnings. So they chose to create boundaries before the increase arrived.
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Their goal was simple: to avoid letting higher income automatically lead to higher spending.
That kind of decision reflects wisdom. It acknowledges that more income does not automatically create more peace. Sometimes it simply creates more appetite.
Second, enough is about stewardship. If God owns it all, then we are not owners—we are managers.
That shift changes everything.
Now, enough is no longer about protecting a lifestyle. It becomes about aligning our lives with God’s purposes. Our money becomes a resource to steward rather than a treasure to hoard.
Third, enough is about contentment. Paul writes in 1 Timothy 6:6–7:
That is a powerful reminder. We entered this world with nothing. We will leave it with nothing. So, enough cannot ultimately be defined by what we accumulate in between. It must be defined by something deeper and more lasting.
Contentment is not complacency. It is the settled confidence that God is enough; therefore, we can live with open hands.
If you never define enough, your lifestyle will slowly expand to consume everything you earn. But when you define it, you create margin:
One practical way to do this is by setting a financial finish line—a level of spending you choose not to exceed, even if your income grows.
This is not about limiting joy. It is about protecting it.
Once that line is established, everything beyond it can be directed with greater purpose and intentionality.
Though their giving dollars initially decreased, they found that God continued to provide in unexpected ways. What looked like a step backward by the world’s standards became a step forward in trust, faith, and freedom.
That is the deeper shift.
That is not restriction. That is freedom.
This practical resource is designed to help you prayerfully work through this question—not just in theory, but in everyday life. Combining the technical expertise of trusted financial advisors with the biblical insight of theologians, it will help you align your finances with God’s purposes so your money becomes a tool for impact, not just accumulation.
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