Money | Navigating the Fall https://navigatingthefall.com Learn How to Live Your Best Christian Life in a Broken World Thu, 19 Feb 2026 15:34:55 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 https://i0.wp.com/navigatingthefall.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/cropped-Compass.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Money | Navigating the Fall https://navigatingthefall.com 32 32 214743753 Money, Mission, & Freedom https://navigatingthefall.com/2026/02/19/money-mission-freedom/ https://navigatingthefall.com/2026/02/19/money-mission-freedom/#respond Thu, 19 Feb 2026 15:34:53 +0000 https://navigatingthefall.com/?p=393

What It Means to Serve One Master

“No one can serve two masters… You cannot serve both God and money.” Matthew 6:24

Most conversations about money focus on income, investing, debt, or lifestyle. Scripture focuses somewhere deeper. It focuses on allegiance. Jesus did not warn that money exists. He warned that money can become a master.

The issue is not currency. It is control.

Money Reveals What We Trust

Jesus teaches in Matthew 6:21 that where your treasure is, there your heart will be also. Money exposes what we believe will keep us safe, admired, or secure. It reveals fear, generosity, comparison, or trust.

In my own life, I have seen how money exposes systems and hearts. I once worked retail where charitable programs were offered to help those in need. At times, I watched assistance used in ways that felt surprising. I am not here to judge anyone’s choices. But it raised a question. When we receive help, what is our responsibility? And when we give, what are we hoping to accomplish?

Scripture consistently connects provision with stewardship. Luke 16:10 reminds us that whoever is faithful with little will also be faithful with much. The issue is not the amount. It is the posture.

The Greed Hole

Ecclesiastes 5:10 states that whoever loves money never has enough. There is always a next level. A larger house. A newer car. A better title. Greed is not always loud. Sometimes it is quiet anxiety. Sometimes it is the fear that if I give, I will not have enough. Sometimes it is the rationalization that responsibility can be avoided without consequence.

Galatians 6:7 teaches that a person reaps what they sow. Financial shortcuts, avoidance of responsibility, or patterns of self focus eventually produce instability. Scripture does not frame this as punishment. It frames it as principle. Systems reflect hearts. Patterns produce outcomes.

Status Signaling and Identity

A white Honda and an Acura both drive. A Toyota and a Lexus both transport. Functionally, they accomplish the same task. But culturally, one may signal status while the other signals simplicity. Our world often teaches that identity is communicated through acquisition.

The tension between achievement and rooted identity has been described culturally as the difference between progress and roots, between the visible symbol of success and the deeper grounding of meaning. Scripture addresses this tension long before modern economics. Psalm 24:1 reminds us that the earth is the Lord’s and everything in it. Ownership is an illusion. Stewardship is the calling.

When money becomes identity, comparison becomes constant. When money is a tool, peace becomes possible.

Christ’s Financial Freedom

Perhaps the most financially free person in Scripture owned almost nothing. Jesus had no estate, no political office, and no visible wealth. Yet He moved with authority because He had nothing to prove.

In Matthew 17:24 to 27, when questioned about paying the temple tax, Jesus tells Peter to catch a fish. Inside its mouth is the coin needed to pay the tax. The miracle is striking, but the posture is even more powerful. Jesus pays the tax not out of fear, and not because He is controlled by the system. He pays it to avoid unnecessary offense and remain focused on His mission.

Money served the mission. The mission did not serve money.

Jesus repeatedly refused to be defined by popularity. After feeding the five thousand, when the crowd wanted to make Him king, He withdrew. John 6:15 shows that He refused power that was rooted in public expectation. His clarity of purpose freed Him from the need to impress.

Freedom Through Mission Clarity

True freedom is not the absence of money. It is the absence of being mastered by it.

When identity is secure in Christ, comparison loses power. When purpose is clear, status becomes irrelevant. When stewardship replaces ownership, generosity becomes possible.

First Timothy 6:6 to 8 teaches that godliness with contentment is great gain. Contentment is not passivity. It is stability. It is the quiet strength of knowing who you are and why you are here.

The question is not how much we have. The question is who we serve.

If money directs our identity, emotions, and decisions, it has become a master. If money supports our calling and aligns with our values, it is a tool.

Jesus was free because He served one master. He was not performing for culture. He was not driven by comparison. He was anchored in mission.

And that kind of freedom is wealth no market can measure.

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Riches https://navigatingthefall.com/2025/06/21/riches/ https://navigatingthefall.com/2025/06/21/riches/#respond Sat, 21 Jun 2025 18:49:00 +0000 https://navigatingthefall.com/?p=375

The Rich Young Man: A Lesson on Trust, Not Possessions

The story of the rich young man in the Gospels has long stirred both discomfort and deep reflection. A man, young and wealthy, approaches Jesus with a question many believers still ask today: “What must I do to inherit eternal life?” (Mark 10:17). He was morally upright and had kept the commandments since youth. Yet Jesus saw past the man’s actions and into his attachments. When He said, “Go, sell all you have and give to the poor… then come, follow me,” the man went away sorrowful because he had great wealth (Mark 10:21–22).

At first glance, it’s tempting to wonder why having resources would be such an issue. Was Jesus condemning wealth itself? The message goes far deeper than the balance in a bank account. Jesus was addressing where the man had placed his trust. His sorrow exposed a heart tethered more to possessions than to God.

After the man leaves, Jesus turns to His disciples and says, “How hard it is for the rich to enter the kingdom of God! It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God” (Mark 10:23–25). This statement startled the disciples then and still challenges us today. It is not wealth that keeps a person from heaven. It is the mindset that often accompanies it. The illusion of control, the comfort of self-reliance, and the belief that our own efforts, status, or possessions can make us secure all become barriers to faith.

In a world that celebrates independence and personal achievement, we often forget our true condition. The earth, the resources we use, the minds we think with—God created them all. And yet, as created beings, we are inherently limited and incapable of perfection. Our greatest need is not more knowledge or possessions. It is forgiveness. That is why Jesus added, “With man this is impossible, but not with God; all things are possible with God” (Mark 10:27).

Without connection to Christ, the true Vine, we wither, no matter how full our hands may seem (John 15:5). Those who live in Him know that their value is not based on their possessions but in their identity as children of God. They recognize that salvation cannot be earned, stored, or secured through material means. It is given through grace alone.

The rich young man walked away not because he couldn’t follow, but because he wouldn’t let go. His trust in what he had blinded him to the eternal life Jesus was offering. That is the heart of the message. It is not what we own, but what owns our heart, that shapes our destiny. Heaven is not denied to those who have much. It is denied to those who rely on their own sufficiency instead of God’s mercy.

Jesus does not leave us in our limitations. He invites us to trust, to surrender, and to receive the freedom that only comes through Him. When we shift our trust from what is temporary to the One who is eternal, we begin to understand the true richness of life.

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