Di$cipleship: Faith & Finance
Faith shapes what we believe.
Money shapes how we live.
Most people are taught one-and left alone with the other.
Di$cipleship: Faith & Finance confronts one of the most overlooked realities of modern life: financial stress is not merely an economic problem-it is a discipleship problem.
Written by a military officer, MBA, and lifelong student of leadership, this book explores how money quietly shapes character, relationships, decision-making, and spiritual integrity. It challenges the false divide between faith and finances and argues that stewardship is not optional for those who carry responsibility-within families, churches, or organizations.
This book is not:
A prosperity-gospel manifesto
A get-rich-quick system
Financial advice wrapped in religious language
Instead, Di$cipleship offers a clear-eyed examination of how debt, consumption, financial illiteracy, and cultural pressure shape behavior-and how intentional stewardship restores clarity, freedom, and leadership capacity.
Blending personal experience, leadership lessons, and practical frameworks, the book addresses:
Why financial disorder erodes trust and discipline
How money stress degrades performance, ethics, and relationships
The difference between consumption and stewardship
Why avoidance is more damaging than ignorance
How clarity creates freedom-spiritually and practically
At its core, Di$cipleship is about responsibility.
Responsibility to self.Because finances are not neutral. They train us-daily-in habits, priorities, and values.
If leadership requires stewardship, then faith without financial clarity is incomplete.
This book is for readers who want alignment between belief and behavior-and who understand that real discipleship is revealed not only in words, but in choices.
Note for group and ministry readers: Di$cipleship: Faith & Finance serves as the core reading text when used in facilitated group or ministry settings. Companion Manual and leader guides may be used alongside it, but this book stands fully on its own for individual readers.