Faith & Finance with Rob West
It’s only day two of the new year. How are those resolutions holding up? Every January, many of us recommit to eating better, exercising more, or finally getting our finances on track. And yet, most resolutions fade long before winter does. The issue usually isn’t a lack of desire—it’s a lack of accountability and perspective. That’s especially true when it comes to budgeting. Managing money well requires more than good intentions. It requires clarity about why we’re doing it and a system that supports us day by day. To explore that idea, we sat down with Chad Clark, Chief Technology Officer at FaithFi, to discuss what actually helps people follow through on their financial goals.

It’s only day two of the new year. How are those resolutions holding up?
Every January, many of us recommit to eating better, exercising more, or finally getting our finances on track. And yet, most resolutions fade long before winter does. The issue usually isn’t a lack of desire—it’s a lack of accountability and perspective.
That’s especially true when it comes to budgeting. Managing money well requires more than good intentions. It requires clarity about why we’re doing it and a system that supports us day by day.To explore that idea, we sat down with Chad Clark, Chief Technology Officer at FaithFi, to discuss what actually helps people follow through on their financial goals.Chad shared an observation from years of building budgeting tools: many people view a budget the same way they view a diet. They know it’s necessary, but it feels restrictive, temporary, and easy to abandon when life gets busy.
The problem usually isn’t the budget itself. It’s the missing “why.”You may know what you want to do—get out of debt, save more, or give generously—but without a compelling reason behind it, the motivation fades quickly. Sustainable habits require more than goals; they need purpose.For believers, Scripture gives us a clear foundation for our financial “why.” Psalm 24:1 reminds us, “The earth is the Lord’s, and everything in it.” God owns it all. We don’t.That truth reshapes budgeting entirely. If God is the owner, then our role is stewardship—managing what He has entrusted to us for His purposes.
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Chad used a helpful analogy. Imagine managing a coffee shop for someone else.
That realization lifts a heavy burden. We’re not meant to figure it all out on our own.
When we see God as an active owner, budgeting stops being a rigid rulebook and becomes a practical tool for faithful stewardship.
A budget isn’t the goal—it’s the means. It helps us manage the King’s resources wisely, align our spending with our values, and make intentional decisions rather than reactive ones.
Without this perspective, budgeting can feel overwhelming or pointless. With it, budgeting becomes an act of faithfulness.
People manage money differently. Some thrive with detailed categories. Others prefer broader guardrails. The important thing is consistency, not complexity.
Over time, that system becomes part of daily life—like your morning cup of coffee. When you’re not checking in with it, you can feel that something’s off.
Chad also shared how using a budgeting tool transformed his own marriage. Early on, money was their most significant source of conflict—even though he considered himself “the finance guy.”
Once they started using a shared system, the conversation changed. Instead of arguing, they could see the same information, talk openly, and make decisions together. Budgeting became a way to pursue unity, not tension.
For couples, shared visibility and accountability can be a powerful gift.
If budgeting feels exhausting—or if you’ve tried and failed before—Chad’s encouragement was simple: don’t give up.
Often, past frustration stems from using tools that were too rigid or didn’t align with how you’re wired. With the right system, guidance, and support, budgeting can become sustainable—and even freeing.
If one of your New Year’s resolutions is to get your finances back on track, remember this: lasting change starts with perspective, not pressure.
When you begin with God as the active owner and see budgeting as a tool for stewardship, everything changes. And with the right system in place, you don’t have to walk that road alone.
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