When Your Child Struggles: Trust God!
Every parent knows that ache in the heart when their child struggles. Whether it’s a learning challenge, a broken friendship, a lost opportunity, or a season of discouragement, we instinctively want to step in, fix the problem, and remove the pain. Yet, so often, it’s in those very moments that God is doing His greatest work and not just in our child’s heart, but in ours too.
We want their paths to be smooth, but God wants their faith to be strong.
💧 Struggle Is Not Failure — It’s Formation
God never wastes a struggle. He uses it to shape character, to develop endurance, and to reveal His sufficiency. The book of James reminds us:
“My brethren, count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations;
Knowing this, that the trying of your faith worketh patience.
But let patience have her perfect work, that ye may be perfect and entire, wanting nothing.”
— James 1:2–4 (KJV)
Struggle is the soil where perseverance grows. When our children wrestle through hard lessons, delayed answers, or unfair moments, they’re learning that life isn’t easy — but that God is faithful.
Think of a butterfly in its cocoon. Scientists have found that if you help it out too soon, it will never fly. The struggle to push its way out strengthens its wings. Without the struggle, the butterfly remains weak. The same is true for our children. Every trial is teaching them how to use the spiritual “muscles” God has given them. Even the birds are “pushed” out of the nest to face adversity in order to FLY!
🪻 Middle School: The Growing Years
For many families, middle school can feel like the hardest stretch. Tears, friendship drama, insecurity, changing emotions, and shifting identities, hard classes and more all collide in one tender, confusing season. Parents often want to rush in and rescue their child from the awkwardness and pain. It is always someone else’s fault! But this season is not a sign that something is wrong; it’s evidence that something is growing.
These middle school years are the soil where empathy, resilience, and faith are formed. The child who struggles to fit in is learning what real belonging means. The student who cries over a friendship loss is learning compassion for others who hurt. The one who feels different is learning that their worth doesn’t depend on the world’s acceptance, but on God’s unchanging love.
This is sacred ground for parenting — not rescuing, but walking beside.
Don’t rush to fix every problem. Instead, pray with them, listen to them, and remind them that God is using every tear and trial to shape the adult they will become.
“Being confident of this very thing, that he which hath begun a good work in you will perform it until the day of Jesus Christ.”
— Philippians 1:6 (KJV)
The goal isn’t to keep them from the storm but to help them find Jesus in it. One day, you’ll look back and realize this season wasn’t about keeping them safe — it was about watching them grow stronger.
🌾 Bible Stories of Strength Born in Struggle
The pages of Scripture are filled with young lives shaped by hardship:
- Joseph was sold by his brothers, falsely accused, and forgotten in prison , but God was training him to lead a nation and save his family. (Genesis 37–50)
- David faced lions, bears, and a giant long before he ever wore a crown, but God used those lonely pastures and dangerous battles to prepare his heart for the throne. (1 Samuel 17)
- Daniel was taken from his home and placed in a pagan culture, but God strengthened him, and he resolved to remain faithful. He built courage that would later help him stand firm in a lions’ den. (Daniel 1–6)
- Even Jesus, as a child, “increased in wisdom and stature, and in favour with God and man.” (Luke 2:52) His growth came through obedience, patience, and waiting for His appointed time.
None of these stories would have unfolded without struggle. The very hardships that seemed painful were the instruments of God’s preparation.
When We Want to Rescue
Our parental instinct to protect is good as it’s born from love. Sometimes, however, our protecting can turn into preventing. Our rescue is keeping our children from the lessons only God can teach through challenge.
When we rescue too quickly, we may rob them of resilience. When we pray instead of panic, we invite God into their growing process. The truth is, God loves our children more than we do, and He knows exactly how to use both joy and hardship to shape their hearts for His purposes.
“And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose.”
— Romans 8:28 (KJV)
The word “all” includes their struggles, their disappointments, and even their mistakes. Don’t rescue, but do let God work in their hearts and teach them grit and resilience. Teach them to do HARD THINGS even when it’s HARD!
Trusting the Gardener
Our children are like tender plants in God’s garden. He knows when to prune, when to water, and when to let the sun scorch just a bit to deepen their roots. Our role isn’t to control their growth but to nurture faith, pray continually, and trust the Gardener.
“He shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water, that bringeth forth his fruit in his season.”
— Psalm 1:3 (KJV)
Their fruit will come in its season. Not ours. Not theirs. But God’s.
💕 Encouragement for the Waiting Parent
If your child is struggling right now… academically, emotionally, or spiritually; take heart. This is not the end of their story. You may not see the full purpose yet, but God is planting something deep. One day, you’ll look back and see that this season grew perseverance, empathy, and maturity that could never have come through ease. Pray with them and encourage them!
Keep praying. Keep trusting. Keep cheering them on quietly, with eyes fixed on the One who writes their story better than we ever could.
Because one day, your child won’t just overcome a struggle, they’ll thank God for the struggle and what it taught them.
Prayer
Heavenly Father,
Thank You for loving our children even more than we do. When they struggle, help us to trust You more deeply and to remember that their challenges are opportunities for growth. Teach them perseverance, strengthen their faith, and use every difficulty to draw them closer to You.
Help us rest in Your promises, knowing You are faithful to complete the good work You’ve begun in their lives.
In Jesus’ name, Amen.


