Faith & Finance with Rob West
“For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven.” - Ecclesiastes 3:1 Life moves in seasons—and with each season often comes new challenges, new opportunities, and sometimes new financial finish lines. On today’s episode of Faith and Finance, we were joined by Cody Hobelmann, a Certified Financial Planner® (CFP), Certified Kingdom Advisor® (CKA), and co-founder of Finish Line Pledge, to discuss why adjusting your financial finish line is not only okay—it can be wise and faithful.

Life moves in seasons—and with each season often comes new challenges, new opportunities, and sometimes new financial finish lines.
On today’s episode of Faith and Finance, we were joined by Cody Hobelmann, a Certified Financial Planner® (CFP), Certified Kingdom Advisor® (CKA), and co-founder of Finish Line Pledge, to discuss why adjusting your financial finish line is not only okay—it can be wise and faithful.It helps separate what we intend to use for our own needs from what we can make available for Kingdom purposes. Rather than endlessly increasing lifestyle spending or accumulating wealth without direction, a finish line provides clarity and purpose.
For many people, the idea of setting a finish line can feel intimidating. It may sound final or restrictive. But Cody emphasized that a finish line is not about perfection—it is about growth. Your first finish line does not have to be your last.

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Just as a financial plan should be reviewed regularly, your finish line should be revisited as life changes. There are many reasons to adjust it:
These shifts may change the cost of maintaining the same lifestyle, making it wise to reassess your financial boundaries.
At first glance, caps and limits can sound restrictive. But Cody shared that in practice, setting a finish line often creates freedom. Instead of constantly wondering if you need more, you begin to experience:
That reflects a biblical pattern. God’s boundaries are not meant to diminish joy but to protect and deepen it. Financial limits can function the same way.
This is the amount needed to support your current and future lifestyle. It helps determine the appropriate and sustainable level of spending.
This is the amount of wealth you believe is wise to accumulate over your lifetime.
Cody connected this idea to Luke 12 and the parable of the rich fool, who stored up more than he needed while missing the deeper purpose of his resources. The issue was not wealth itself, but accumulation without a Kingdom perspective.
Cody highlighted three key areas to prayerfully consider:
These categories can help shape a thoughtful and prayerful plan.
That question can expose fear, habit, or misplaced trust—and open the door to greater generosity and purpose.
Not sure where to begin? Try setting a finish line for the next 90 days.
You do not need a lifelong blueprint today. You only need the next faithful step. Experiment, learn, pray, and refine along the way.
Your finish line is not a rigid rule—it is a discipleship tool. It reminds you that everything belongs to God, and you are a steward of what He has entrusted to you.
In every season, the goal is not simply to have more. The goal is to know what is enough, live with contentment, and be ready to participate in God’s Kingdom purposes with joy.
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