Money isn’t evil – it’s the love of it that leads down the wrong path.
Let’s set the record straight. Money is a tool, a means to an end, not the end itself. It’s a gift, given to us with the potential to do great good. When used wisely, it becomes a vessel for helping others, for creating opportunities, and for making the world better.
God has given me the ability to acquire this tool, not for my own gain, but to serve. With money, I can build, I can invest, and I can lift others up – because a house built on a foundation of selfishness will crumble. But a house built with purpose, with the intent to help, will stand firm.
If money were evil, why would God give us the ability to earn it? The problem isn’t the tool – it’s how we choose to use it. When the pursuit of wealth becomes an obsession, when it pulls us away from our true purpose, that’s when it leads to grief. But when the focus is on using money as a means to help others – to give, to build, to elevate – that’s when it becomes a powerful force for good.
I’ve learned from experience, through both success and failure, that money is only as valuable as the hands that hold it. And when those hands are guided by faith, by integrity, and by a desire to serve – that’s when the real work begins.
It’s not about chasing money. It’s about using the gifts God has already given you to acquire the tool of money – and then putting it to work for a greater purpose. That's where the true power lies.
So, let’s be clear: I’m not here to love money. I’m here to use it wisely, to help others, and to build something that stands the test of time.
Let’s turn those gifts into something bigger – together.