Faith & Finance with Rob West
“Everyone also to whom God has given wealth and possessions and the power to enjoy them…this is the gift of God.” — Ecclesiastes 5:19 What if true joy doesn’t come from gaining more—but from gratefully receiving what God has already provided? That’s the invitation we find in Ecclesiastes, and it’s the focus of a powerful conversation with John Cortines, Director of Partnerships and Growth at the McClellan Foundation and author of FaithFi’s study on the book of Ecclesiastes called, Wisdom Over Wealth: 12 Lessons from Ecclesiastes on Money. His insight centers on what he calls the cycle of grateful living—a biblical framework that reshapes how we view money, work, and contentment.

What if true joy doesn’t come from gaining more—but from gratefully receiving what God has already provided?
That’s the invitation we find in Ecclesiastes, and it’s the focus of a powerful conversation with John Cortines, Director of Partnerships and Growth at the McClellan Foundation and author of FaithFi’s study on the book of Ecclesiastes called, Wisdom Over Wealth: 12 Lessons from Ecclesiastes on Money. His insight centers on what he calls the cycle of grateful living—a biblical framework that reshapes how we view money, work, and contentment.Ecclesiastes 5:18–20 sits at the heart of Scripture’s teaching on money and meaning. These verses remind us of something we often overlook: Not only are wealth and possessions gifts from God, but so is the ability to enjoy them.
That means joy isn’t something we manufacture through achievement or accumulation. It’s something we receive. Whether we have little or much, Scripture calls us to find satisfaction in the life God has already given us—our work, our relationships, and even our daily routines.
Yet many of us miss this. We’re quick to recognize the dangers of money, but slow to embrace the goodness of God’s provision.
John Cortines summarizes this biblical vision with a simple acronym: E.A.T.

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Everything we have—our resources, our health, our relationships—is a gift. Even the capacity to enjoy these things is given by God.
Gratitude begins when we recognize that nothing we have is ultimately self-made. It all flows from His hand.
Ecclesiastes repeatedly reminds us that life is short. This isn’t meant to discourage us—but to awaken us.
When we accept the limits of our time and season, we begin to live with greater purpose. We stop postponing joy and start embracing the present as a gift.
Work is not something to escape—it’s something to embrace.
While our culture often dreams of financial independence as freedom from work, Scripture presents a different vision. We were created with purpose, and meaningful work is part of that design. Even in retirement, we’re called to engage in what is good, fruitful, and God-honoring.
If this cycle is so clear, why do so few people experience it? Cortines points out three common obstacles:
These patterns lead to anxiety, discontentment, and a constant pursuit of “more.”
Ironically, many people today live with more wealth and comfort than any generation in history—yet struggle deeply with dissatisfaction. As Cortines notes, even great wealth cannot produce lasting joy on its own.
One of the most subtle traps in our culture is the belief that joy lies somewhere in the future:
But Scripture calls us to something radically different. Joy is not found in a future we’re trying to build—it’s found in the present moment with Christ.
This echoes Jesus’ teaching in Luke 12, where He points to the birds and the flowers. They do not worry, yet God provides for them. Their lives are both sustained and limited—and so are ours.
This is both comforting and sobering:
So instead of striving endlessly, we’re invited to live faithfully and gratefully today.
Ecclesiastes 5:20 gives us a beautiful picture:
This kind of life is marked by:
It’s a life where gratitude crowds out worry—where the heart is so full of God’s goodness that it no longer fixates on what’s missing.
In a world that tells us to dream bigger and achieve more, Scripture gently reminds us that our lives are finite—but God is not.
And that’s where true freedom is found.
We don’t need to be everything or accomplish everything. Christ has already accomplished what matters most. Our role is simply to be faithful in the life we’ve been given.
The cycle of grateful living is simple—but deeply transformative:
When we live this way, we step out of the endless pursuit of “more” and into the quiet, steady joy of God’s presence.
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