Does God want you to be wealthy? Or is being wealthy sinful? The writings of one of the richest men ever, Solomon, provide answers.
“Retirement” has different meanings for Baby Boomers. But, for most of us, retirement will not be of the rocking chair variety, at least not initially.
As a leader, you need to be numerically literate. You need to provide financial leadership. Even if you aren’t a numbers person.
When we make financial decisions that exalt God above our attachment to money, we declare God to be greater than Mammon, and for a world where Mammon reigns supreme, there are perhaps few other prophetic acts that burn brighter in the darkness.
Instead of focusing on the need to pay the light bill and the water bill, I began to highlight the lives our dollars were impacting.
While we don’t have sufficient data to declare a definitive trend, we see reasons to urge church leaders to exercise caution before planning major budget increases in the months ahead. Here are five of those reasons.
A book review of "Rooting for Rivals: How Collaboration and Generosity Increase the Impact of Leaders, Charities, and Churches," by Peter Greer and Chris Horst (with Jill Heisey).
This reframed my thinking around Christian “charity.”
What is the duty of a Christian investor?
Years ago I asked some successful Christian executives their opinion on the Scriptural validity of borrowing money to grow a business.
Today I want to give you five ways to develop your team and five things you can do this week to get started.
Are biblically responsible investors simply uneducated and enjoined in a massive, multi-billion-dollar investment scheme of futility?
How could this reclaimed definition of stewardship transform the way you lead in business?
Many churches report that giving during the pandemic has been exceptional. In fact, in most churches giving has actually increased while in-person attendance has declined significantly from a year ago.
As the biblically responsible investing (BRI) movement continues to take Wall Street by storm, the question of performance routinely surfaces.
"Does the Bible say I have to screen my investments?" is ultimately the wrong question. The right question is, "Am I loving God and loving my neighbor with my investment decisions?"
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