Faith & Finance with Rob West
A new year often inspires fresh resolve. We plan more carefully, set ambitious goals, and commit to making this time different. But year after year, many resolutions quietly fade—not because people lack sincerity, but because most change efforts rely on willpower alone. That’s where a deeper, more biblical approach to change comes in. Today on Faith & Finance, I sat down with Taylor Standridge, Production Manager at FaithFi and lead writer of Our Ultimate Treasure and Look at the Sparrows, to explore why so many resolutions fail—and what Scripture reveals about change that truly lasts.

A new year often inspires fresh resolve. We plan more carefully, set ambitious goals, and commit to making this time different. But year after year, many resolutions quietly fade—not because people lack sincerity, but because most change efforts rely on willpower alone.
That’s where a deeper, more biblical approach to change comes in.
Today on Faith & Finance, I sat down with Taylor Standridge, Production Manager at FaithFi and lead writer of Our Ultimate Treasure and Look at the Sparrows, to explore why so many resolutions fail—and what Scripture reveals about change that truly lasts.Taylor explained that most resolutions fade because they’re built on effort rather than formation.
“Willpower is a limited resource,” Taylor said. “We assume that if we just try harder or become more disciplined, we’ll finally become the person we want to be. But once motivation wears off, or life gets stressful, old patterns take over.”
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According to Taylor, the problem isn’t that people set bad goals—it’s that they try to change actions without addressing identity. Without a deeper shift in what we value and who we believe we are, even the best intentions eventually lose momentum.
Taylor drew a helpful distinction between modifying behavior and experiencing true transformation.
To illustrate, Taylor pointed to health resolutions—one of the most common goals people set each year.
Identity-driven goals last because they’re rooted in purpose, not pressure.
Taylor said this approach is especially powerful when applied to financial goals.
Instead of focusing solely on eliminating debt, Taylor encouraged believers to frame their financial goals around stewardship.
According to Taylor, identity-based stewardship influences spending, saving, giving, and long-term financial faithfulness—not just one year’s resolution.
Taylor pointed out that this inward-first approach isn’t a modern idea—it’s woven throughout Scripture.
That’s why God promised to give His people a new heart and a new spirit. Taylor noted that Jesus echoed this truth when He taught that a tree is known by its fruit—what we produce flows from who we are.
Taylor emphasized that true transformation is not self-generated—it’s Spirit-empowered.
Under the new covenant, believers don’t rely on their own strength to change. Instead, the Holy Spirit reshapes desires and produces fruit like self-control, patience, and faithfulness.
As the new year begins, Taylor encouraged believers to start with prayerful reflection rather than immediate goal-setting.
Taylor also encouraged seeking wisdom from Scripture and trusted believers, noting that identity is not something we invent, but something God forms in us.
Once identity is clear, Taylor said goals become expressions—not endpoints.
Taylor emphasized the value of structure and measurable goals, noting that tools such as progress tracking and target-setting drive accountability. But he stressed that numbers should never become the foundation of change.
When resolutions flow from who God is shaping us to be, they don’t just last for a year—they shape us for a lifetime.
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