Faith & Finance with Rob West
Is it possible to help your adult children in a way that actually keeps them from growing? It’s a difficult question, but an important one. Many parents want to support their children well, especially when their children face setbacks, financial stress, or uncertain times. Yet the way we offer help can shape not only their circumstances, but also their character. The goal isn’t simply to make life easier. It’s to help in ways that strengthen them rather than sideline them.

Is it possible to help your adult children in a way that actually keeps them from growing?
It’s a difficult question, but an important one. Many parents want to support their children well, especially when their children face setbacks, financial stress, or uncertain times. Yet the way we offer help can shape not only their circumstances, but also their character.
The goal isn’t simply to make life easier. It’s to help in ways that strengthen them rather than sideline them.
That instinct often comes from a good place. But even good instincts need wisdom.
Consider a baby bird hatching from its shell. It may seem compassionate to help it break free, but if you intervene too soon, the bird may not survive. The struggle of pushing through the shell is essential. It develops the strength and coordination needed for life outside the egg.
The struggle isn’t the problem. It’s part of the preparation. In the same way, when we remove every difficulty from our children’s lives, we may step in at the very moment when growth is meant to happen.
Most parental help begins with simple acts of care:

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None of these is inherently wrong. In many cases, they are loving and appropriate responses.
Are you helping them move forward—or delaying lessons they need to learn? Are you offering support—or carrying responsibilities that now belong to them?
That tension is real, and one of the hardest parts of parenting adult children is knowing when to step back.
Healthy support should encourage progress, not prolong immaturity. This is an act of stewardship—not only of your resources, but of their formation.
The goal is not to eliminate every hardship. Often, maturity takes root in the soil of challenge. Consider tying support to clear next steps, such as:
Support like this doesn’t replace responsibility. It reinforces it.
An adult child living at home is not automatically a sign of failure.
Throughout history, including biblical times, multigenerational living was common and remains normal in many cultures today.
Those are the indicators that matter most.
Scripture offers a helpful framework for discerning when to step in and when to step back.
So which is it? The answer is both.
When parents consistently carry what belongs to their adult children, they may relieve pressure in the moment—but unintentionally prevent the growth that responsibility can produce.
Before offering significant financial help, it’s wise to pause and talk with your spouse.
Pray together. Discuss what you can realistically give, what you cannot sustain, and what patterns you want to avoid. Unity matters.
So does financial stability. Just as flight attendants remind passengers to secure their own oxygen mask first, you need to protect your own financial foundation if you hope to help others well.
Helping your children should not come at the expense of wise stewardship or unnecessary strain in your marriage.
Supporting adult children isn’t about getting every decision perfectly right. It’s about faithfully stewarding your role in this season—with wisdom, grace, and trust.
God is at work in their lives even more than you are.
Sometimes the most loving thing you can do is help. Sometimes it is to wait. Sometimes it is to say no. And often, the greatest gift you can offer is not rescue—but the opportunity to grow through responsibility, perseverance, and dependence on the Lord.
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