Faith & Finance with Rob West
“Give us this day our daily bread.” These seven words from the Lord’s Prayer are so familiar that we can easily miss how radical they are. When Jesus taught His disciples to pray in Matthew 6:11, He invited them to trust God for provision—not all at once, but one day at a time. In a world obsessed with tomorrow, this simple request calls us back to dependence, humility, and trust in God’s care today.

These seven words from the Lord’s Prayer are so familiar that we can easily miss how radical they are. When Jesus taught His disciples to pray in Matthew 6:11, He invited them to trust God for provision—not all at once, but one day at a time.
In a world obsessed with tomorrow, this simple request calls us back to dependence, humility, and trust in God’s care today.
The idea of daily bread takes us back to Israel’s journey through the wilderness. In Exodus 16, God fed His people with manna each morning. It was enough for the day—no more, no less. When they tried to store extra, it spoiled.
The lesson wasn’t primarily about food; it was about trust. God was teaching His people that He—not their stockpiles or strategies—was their provider.
Today, we work, budget, plan, save, and invest—and Scripture commends those practices. Proverbs celebrates diligence, and Joseph’s preparation in Genesis 41 helped save entire nations. Trusting God isn’t passivity, and faith isn’t irresponsibility.
But here’s the tension: our planning must never replace our dependence. When Jesus taught us to ask for daily bread, He was establishing a rhythm—trusting God with today rather than burdening ourselves with controlling tomorrow.
For many people, this teaching hits close to home. We live in a time of economic anxiety. Budgets are tight, housing is expensive, and the future often feels uncertain.
And if we’re honest, money doesn’t just expose financial fears—it reveals deeper questions:

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Jesus isn’t calling us to ignore real needs. He’s inviting us to rest in real care. Birds still work—they gather, build, and hunt—but they don’t live in anxiety. They don’t wake each morning wondering whether God will provide. Provision is built into creation because God is faithful.
Trusting God for daily bread shapes the way we live. It invites three important responses: gratitude, contentment, and generosity.
When we ask God for what we need today, we’re reminded that what we have today is a gift. Gratitude pushes back against the relentless pressure for more—more comfort, more security, more status.
Contentment doesn’t mean settling for less—it means refusing to treat the future as the only place where peace exists.
When we trust God to provide for today, our grip loosens. Fear tightens our hands; trust frees them.
In 1 Kings 17, a widow shared her last flour and oil with Elijah, trusting God’s promise—and God sustained her household through the drought. The lesson isn’t that generosity guarantees prosperity. It’s that generosity reveals where our security truly lies.
Trusting God for daily bread often expresses itself in very ordinary financial decisions.
Yet even the wisest planning must remember this: financial stability is not ultimate security. No account balance is large enough to silence fear if our hope rests in money.
At the same time, there is no scarcity so deep that God cannot sustain His children.
For some, trusting God for daily bread is literal. You’re not sure how the bills will be paid. You’re praying for provision in a very real way. For others, the challenge is different. You’re in a season of abundance—and the danger isn’t lack, but forgetting the Giver.
So what does trusting God for daily bread look like? Ask God for what you need. Thank Him for what you have. Open your hands toward others.
He is faithful in the wilderness. Faithful in your budget. Faithful in seasons of uncertainty. And He is faithful today.
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