Faith & Finance with Rob West
What if the greatest change you could make in your financial life didn’t start with budgeting, investing, or earning more—but with surrender? We don’t usually think of surrender as a financial word. Yet Scripture places it at the center of faithful stewardship. The life-changing truth that God owns everything reshapes how we live, give, and manage what we’ve been entrusted.

What if the greatest change you could make in your financial life didn’t start with budgeting, investing, or earning more—but with surrender?
We don’t usually think of surrender as a financial word. Yet Scripture places it at the center of faithful stewardship. The life-changing truth that God owns everything reshapes how we live, give, and manage what we’ve been entrusted.
When we talk about finances, we tend to ask familiar questions: How much do I have? How much do I need? Am I doing well?
They’re natural questions—but they’re not the first question Scripture asks.
From the beginning, the Bible establishes that God is the owner. Before humanity ever managed a garden or named a creature, God formed, filled, and ruled creation. Psalm 24:1 declares it plainly: “The earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof.”Simply put, God is the owner—and we are the stewards.
For many of us, that’s a familiar idea. But familiarity doesn’t always lead to surrender. We may affirm God’s ownership in theory while living as if everything depends on our effort. We say, “I worked for this,” or “I earned this.” Yet Scripture adds an essential truth: “It is He who gives you power to get wealth” (Deuteronomy 8:18). Even our ability to work is a gift from God.Jesus reinforces this perspective in the parable of the talents (Matthew 25:14–30). A master entrusts resources to three servants. Two invest faithfully. One buries what he’s been given out of fear.
When the master returns, he doesn’t praise them for increasing his net worth—he commends their faithfulness.
That distinction matters. The world measures success by outcomes. God measures success by trust and faithfulness. If God owns everything, then we are not owners—we are managers. Scripture uses the term oikonomos, meaning household manager: someone who manages resources they didn’t create, for purposes they didn’t define, under a master they serve. At first, that may sound restrictive. In reality, it’s freeing.
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Ownership carries pressure. Stewardship carries trust.
When we truly embrace stewardship, ordinary financial decisions take on spiritual meaning.
Faithfulness isn’t about the size of what we manage—it’s about surrender. And surrender always begins in the heart. When we embrace God’s ownership, two gifts follow:
Stewardship isn’t about God getting something from you. It’s about God doing something in you. It reorders the heart so money takes its proper place—not as a master, but as a tool.
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