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What are your 7 money numbers?


God calls Christians to be good stewards of the resources he has provided. Managing personal finances is not just about achieving financial success but also about honoring God through our decisions. The Bible speaks to the importance of wise financial management and stewardship in many places.

Not everybody enjoys personal finance, which is why I boiled it down to just seven numbers. These seven numbers can help you gauge your financial health, stability, and future. 


1) Annual Income

Your annual income is the total amount of money you earn in a year. This includes wages, business profits, freelance income, rental income, and any other sources of revenue. As Christians, it’s important to acknowledge that our income comes from God and that we should honor Him in how we use it.

Practical Example:

  • Job Salary: $50,000

  • Freelance Income: $10,000

  • Rental Income: $12,000

Total Annual Income: $50,000 + $10,000 + $12,000 = $72,000

Scripture Reference:
"But remember the Lord your God, for it is he who gives you the ability to produce wealth." — Deuteronomy 8:18

God is the ultimate source of all provision. Recognizing this truth helps us stay humble and grateful, ensuring that we acknowledge Him as the giver of every good thing.


2) Annual Expenses

Annual expenses are the total amount of money you spend in a year. This includes everything from your mortgage or rent, utilities, groceries, insurance, tithes and offerings, taxes, and any other necessary costs. As Christians, it’s important to manage these expenses carefully, honoring God with how we allocate our resources.

Practical Example:

  • Mortgage Payment: $18,000

  • Utilities (electricity, water, internet): $3,000

  • Groceries: $5,000

  • Insurance (health, car, home): $4,000

  • Tithes and Offerings (10% of income): $7,200

  • Taxes: $10,000

Total Annual Expenses: $18,000 + $3,000 + $5,000 + $4,000 + $7,200 + $10,000 = $47,200

How to Find Your Annual Expenses:

To estimate your annual expenses, a simple method is to download the three most recent months of your bank statements. Once you have the three months of data, calculate the average monthly spending for each category (mortgage, utilities, groceries, etc.). Multiply each monthly total by 12 to get an annual estimate.

Scripture Reference:

"The plans of the diligent lead to profit as surely as haste leads to poverty." — Proverbs 21:5

Good planning is part of being a wise steward, and keeping track of your expenses is a key component in ensuring that you live within your means.


3) The Net Difference Between Annual Income and Annual Expenses

The net difference represents the gap between your income and expenses. If you have a surplus (income exceeds expenses), you have more money to save, invest, or give. If you have a deficit (expenses exceed income), you may need to make adjustments. To calculate your net difference, fill out the personal finance worksheet here. 

Practical Example:

  • Annual Income: $72,000

  • Annual Expenses: $47,200

Net Difference (Surplus): $72,000 - $47,200 = $24,800

Scripture Reference:

"Precious treasure and oil are in a wise man's dwelling,
    but a foolish man devours it."
— Proverbs 21:20

When you have a surplus, it is an opportunity to be generous and invest wisely. A deficit may be a call to re-evaluate your spending and adjust your priorities to ensure financial health and faithfulness.


4) What You Own (Assets)

Assets are anything of value that you own. These could include your home, savings, investments, or any other possessions that have financial value. Christians are called to be wise stewards of their assets, using them to honor God and serve others.

Practical Example:

  • Home: $200,000

  • Retirement Accounts (401(k), IRA): $50,000

  • Cash Savings: $10,000

  • Investment Portfolio (stocks, bonds): $15,000

Total Assets: $200,000 + $50,000 + $10,000 + $15,000 = $275,000

Scripture Reference:

"The earth is the Lord's, and everything in it, the world, and all who live in it." — Psalm 24:1

Everything we own ultimately belongs to God, and we are entrusted with it to manage wisely. Acknowledging this helps us use our assets in a way that honors Him.


5) What You Owe (Liabilities)

Liabilities are your debts—anything you owe to others. These could include mortgages, student loans, credit card debt, or car loans. As Christians, we are encouraged to live debt-free and avoid being enslaved to debt (Proverbs 22:7). However, we recognize that sometimes debt is necessary, and managing it well is a part of good stewardship.

Practical Example:

  • Mortgage: $150,000

  • Car Loan: $10,000

  • Credit Card Debt: $5,000

Total Liabilities: $150,000 + $10,000 + $5,000 = $165,000

Scripture Reference:

"The rich rule over the poor, and the borrower is slave to the lender." — Proverbs 22:7

Debt can limit your ability to be generous and steward well. While not inherently sinful, managing debt responsibly and working to eliminate it should be a priority.


6) Net Worth

Net worth is the difference between what you own (assets) and what you owe (liabilities). It gives you a snapshot of your overall financial health and progress toward financial freedom. Christians should view their net worth as a tool for stewardship, not as an idol to be worshiped. To calculate your net worth, use this online calculator.

Practical Example:

  • Total Assets: $275,000

  • Total Liabilities: $165,000

Net Worth: $275,000 - $165,000 = $110,000

Scripture Reference:

"A good man leaves an inheritance for his children's children, but a sinner's wealth is stored up for the righteous." — Proverbs 13:22

Your net worth reflects your financial foundation. It can be used to support your family, serve others, and build a legacy for future generations.


7) The Maximized Stewardship Number

The maximized stewardship number represents the amount of savings and investments you need to accumulate in order to no longer rely on a paycheck. Some refer to this number as their "retirement number." The question, "How much do I need to retire?" is an important question to ask. However, the Bible no where talks about retirement as the destiny for working Christians. So, instead of retirement, the Maximized Stewardship Number reflects your ability to maximize your finances throughout your life, ensuring that you are equipped to support your family, give generously, and serve others when it comes to the latter part of life. This number is easily found by multiplying the most recent year of expenses by 25. 

Practical Example:

  • Annual Expenses: $47,200

  • Maximized Stewardship Number (25x rule): $47,200 x 25 = $1,180,000

Key Financial Rules of Thumb:

  • The 4% Rule: The 4% rule suggests that you can safely withdraw 4% of your savings each year, ensuring that your funds last indefinitely. This rule is based on the assumption that your money will be invested in a diversified portfolio, and the growth will help sustain your withdrawals over time.

    Example: If you have $1,180,000 saved, withdrawing 4% each year would give you an annual income of $47,200, which matches your annual expenses.

  • The 25x Rule: This rule suggests that you need 25 times your annual expenses saved in order to withdraw 4% of it each year without running out of money. It’s a guideline to help you think about how much wealth you need to be able to maximize your stewardship of time, money, and resources.

    Example: With $1,180,000 saved, you can withdraw 4% per year to support both your needs and your generosity.

Scripture Reference:

"Well done, good and faithful servant! You have been faithful with a few things; I will put you in charge of many things." — Matthew 25:21

Maximizing your stewardship ensures that you can be faithful in all things, supporting your family, living generously, and advancing God’s Kingdom.


Conclusion: Faithful Stewardship for God's Glory

By understanding these seven numbers, you can better align your finances with biblical principles of stewardship, generosity, and wise planning. Regularly reviewing your income, expenses, assets, liabilities, net worth, and maximized stewardship number will help you make informed decisions, honor God with your wealth, and prepare for a future where you can serve Him without financial worry.

26 Resources on Christian Worldview

YOU HAVE A WORLDVIEW

Every person has a worldview. Not every person has a Christian worldview. A Christian worldview provides the most coherent and meaningful understanding of reality. It addresses questions like: who made me? Why am I here? And where am I going? A Christian worldview gives clarity on other issues like truth, human dignity, and moral values. But a Christian worldview does not only provide an intellectual basis for the meaning of life -- it transforms lives through grace and truth, and leads people to flourish. A Christian worldview starts with God, the creator, who redeems through His Son, Jesus Christ, who in turn, sends His Holy Spirit to indwell all who call upon Christ for forgiveness of sins and eternal life. All are welcome to repent and turn to Christ -- in exchange, God reshapes a person to think, feel, desire, and act in accordance with His plan and purposes, leading to long-lasting satisfaction, joy, and communion with God. 

To help Christians gain a stronger worldview, here is a list of some of the best resources grouped by ages: 

BOOKS

For Children (Ages 4-12)

For Teens (Ages 13-18)

For Adults

DOCUMENTARIES

Ten Reasons Why Parents Should Read the First Five Books (Pentateuch) of the Bible to their Children

Every Christian parent should read the entire Bible to their children. But reading the first five books of the Bible, known as the Pentateuch (penta- meaning five, and teuch meaning book), is especially important for young children. Here are ten reasons why:

1) God commanded parents to read the Pentateuch to their children.

Toward the end of Moses' life, while on plains of Moab about to enter into the Promised Land, Moses instructs Israel to hear:


Deuteornomy 6:4–9: 4 Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God, the LORD is one. 5 You shall love the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might. 6 And these words that I command you today shall be on your heart. 7 You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise. 8 You shall bind them as a sign on your hand, and they shall be as frontlets between your eyes. 9 You shall write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates.


Up to this point in the Bible, God has revealed himself as the LORD, the personal God. The impact of verse 4 above is accented by the fact that Moses has written four books before, revealing and describing who God is and how he works in the world. When he finally states that the LORD our God, the LORD is one, the reader who has carefully read Moses feels the weighty significance of such a statement. The statement from here on out in the Scriptures functions as a fulcrum to pivot from what has been said about the LORD God, to what will be said in the future books of the Old and New Testaments.


This simple formula is meant to capture in the heart and mind of each Israelite man, woman, and child, the utter beauty of the LORD God and propel them forward with hope in the LORD God. It is the duty of each parent to introduce their child to this LORD God from the first five books of the Bible; to introduce them to the wonderful acts of the LORD God; and to introduce them to the mysteriously transcendent and condescending God of Moses. These words about the LORD God are simple to remember but carry the weight of the first five books of the Bible.

2) The Pentateuch teaches children that the world (and the Bible) is not about them ... it's all about God! 

3) The Pentateuch teaches children about pretty much...EVERYTHING! 

  • It teaches them that God created everything. 

Genesis 1:1: In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth. 

  • It teaches them that God created humanity in his image. 

Genesis 1:27:

27 So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him;

male and female he created them.

  • It teaches them about the origin of evil and sin. 
  • It teaches them how to obey God and treat their neighbor (Exodus 20:1–17; Deuteronomy 5:6–21).
  • It teaches them about the importance of loving God and neighbor (Leviticus 19:34).
  • It teaches them about the dangers of complaining (Numbers 11:1–3).

4) The Pentateuch establishes for children God's design for human sexuality. 

  • The Bible begins by clarifying that human sexuality is good and part of God's design. 
  • As far as the sexes go, God designed there to be two sexes: male and female. 
  • The Pentateuch offers descriptive accounts of human sexuality and what is normative and what is not. It is not always obvious from descriptive accounts what is normative... but there are several instances that describe what is wicked. For instance, homosexual acts are not normative within God's design for human sexuality. Genesis 19 provides three witnesses: Lot (who calls it wicked), the angels (who strike the men with blindness), and God himself (who brings judgment on the city). 
  • The Pentateuch provides prescriptive passages to teach what the LORD would have viewed as appropriate human sexuality. For instance, marriage was designed to include only one man and one woman (Genesis 2:24). 

5) The Pentateuch reveals for children God's design for marriage. 

  • Marriage was invented by God. 
  • Genesis 2:24 is clear that God designed marriage to be between one man and one woman. 
  • Marriage is God's means for procreation. 
  • Marriage also takes place within a "one-flesh" covenant before God. 
  • Monogamous marriage is the ideal over and against polygamy, which often caused long-term problems. 
  • Marriage should be held in high regard; God does not tolerate infidelity. 
  • There are several laws that protect marriage (Deut 22, 24), which shows its importance to God. 

6) The Pentateuch shows children how God uses complex human interactions in his purposes.

  • Adam and Eve shared a normal relationship in the garden (Genesis 2) that quickly disintegrated in Genesis 3 as a result of disobedience.
  • Cain murders his brother, Abel, resulting in punishment (Genesis 4). 
  • Though Noah is chosen by God to rescue a remnant of humanity, his drunkenness leads to his sons' punishment. 
  • Nakedness outside of marriage is not normal (Genesis 9).
  • Humans conspiring against God does not end well (Genesis 11). 
  • Husbands who lie to their wives are not wise (Genesis 12, 20). 
  • Homosexual interactions are punishable by God (Genesis 18–19). 
  • Incestuous relationships between children and their parents have generational ramifications (Genesis 19).
  • Sibling jealousy is a powerful force that leads to destruction (Genesis 37–50). 
  • Failure to acknowledge one's familial responsibility can lead to deception and messy family dynamics (Genesis 38). 
  • It's a fools errand for world leaders to contend with God (Exodus 5). 
  • Mistreating slaves and sojourners can bring about God's punishment (Exodus 12). 

Although the examples above are part and parcel of God's redemptive story, they nevertheless introduce children to complex issues that parents will need to take time to address. God uses each of these examples to craft a redemptive story that is messy, complex, and extraordinary. Besides this important connection between complex characters and stories, my point is that the Pentateuch provides the environment for parents to address these topics in a controlled way. Marital betrayal, murder, drunkenness, nakedness, conspiracies, marital deception, slavery, homosexuality, prostitution, sibling rivalry, famine, and destruction are all the seemingly evil things that God means for the good of his people. 

7) The Pentateuch introduces children to the role animals play in God's story.

  • God creates animals (Genesis 1–2).
  • God places animals under the care of humanity (Genesis 2). 
  • God preserves animals (Genesis 6–8). 
  • God uses animals to display his power (Exodus 6–10). 
  • God expects animals to be sacrificed to atone for sin (Leviticus 1–7). 
  • God distinguishes between clean and unclean animals (Leviticus 11). 
  • God expects humans to consume animals (Exodus 16; Leviticus 5; Numbers 11; Deuteronomy 12:14).
  • God expected Israelites to follow specific animal laws (Exodus 21:28–32; Deuteronomy 5:14; 22:1–4, 6–7, 10; 25:4).

8) The Pentateuch offers children cautionary tales of dishonoring God and mistreating fellow humans.

  • Adam and Eve's disobedience (Genesis 3).
  • Cain's murder of Abel (Genesis 4).
  • The Flood (Genesis 6–9). 
  • The Tower of Babel (Genesis 11). 
  • Lot's Wife and Sodom (Genesis 18–19). 
  • Pharaoh's Recalcitrance and heavy hand against Israel (Exodus 5–12). 
  • Israel's Golden Calf episode (Exodus 32).
  • The failure of Aaron's sons (Leviticus 10). 
  • Blasphemy against the Lord (Leviticus 24). 
  • Korah's Rebellion (Numbers 16). 
  • Moses's striking of the rock (Numbers 20). 
  • The complaints at Kadesh-Barnea (Numbers 21). 
  • Israel's disobedience at Baal-Peor (Numbers 25). 

9) The Pentateuch introduces children to the character of God, his communicable and incommunicable attributes, and what he expects of his people.  

  • God loves his people (Deuteronomy 7).
  • God punishes sin (Genesis 6). 
  • God is holy (Leviticus 11).
  • God is eternal (Deuteronomy 32).
  • God is all-powerful (Exodus 6–13).

10) The Pentateuch helps children understand that the Bible is a cohesive story that, in the New Testament, culminates in Jesus Christ. 

  • The Gospel of Matthew starts with an introduction to the genealogy of Jesus. 
  • Genesis 12 and 38 function as the backdrop to Jesus's genealogy. 
  • Jesus comes from the tribe of Judah, which God chose as the tribe that would produce the Savior of Israel, and the entire world (Genesis 49). 
  • In the Gospel of Luke, Luke also gives a compelling case to see the Pentateuch with an eye toward the Messiah. 

After the resurrection, Jesus meets some disciples traveling to a village named Emmaus. On their route, a covert Jesus asks about what took place in Jerusalem. The travelers respond that they had hoped Jesus of Nazareth would redeem Israel. But...he was killed. Apparently though, some women appeared claiming that Jesus was resurrected. But the travelers could not verify their claims, simply stating that Jesus was not in the tomb (Luke 24:19–24). Then Jesus says, "O foolish ones, and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have spoken! 26 Was it not necessary that the Christ should suffer these things and enter into his glory?” 27 And beginning with Moses and all the Prophets, he interpreted to them in all the Scriptures the things concerning himself." 

While we would not say that all the Scriptures are only about Jesus, Luke is quick to observe that all the Scriptures contain "the things" that pertain to Jesus Christ. In other words, while the Pentateuch contains much else besides Jesus, they nevertheless reveal extraordinary realities about the person and work of Jesus Christ.  Each parent has the wonderful privilege of teaching their children how to interpret the Pentateuch with an eye toward Jesus Christ. 


What rights do American Christians have in Public School?

Joe Carter writes on the rights of American Christians in Public Schools. 

https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/rights-christian-public-school/