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Weekly agent · Wave 1

Biblical Wealth

One email a week. Scripture on money, generosity, and the economic life God invites you into.

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When everyone at church avoids the topic you Google alone at night…

You've sat through sermons on grace, prophecy, spiritual gifts. But money? The pastor sidesteps it or oversimplifies it. Meanwhile you're awake at 2 a.m. wondering if your salary is too high, your savings too low, your silence about wealth too convenient.

The Bible speaks about money more than prayer. More than faith. More than heaven itself. And yet we've handed the topic to finance gurus and prosperity preachers, leaving serious Christians without a serious guide.

Biblical Wealth — your weekly agent

What makes this agent different.

No prosperity gospel

We don't treat God as a cosmic ATM. Faithful stewardship sometimes leads to loss, not gain. We follow the text wherever it leads.

No guilt-driven vagueness

You won't get scolded for having a 401(k) or told to 'just trust God' with zero biblical argument. We respect your intelligence.

Built for the uncomfortable

If you're worried this will challenge your spending, your career, or your silence about inequality—good. It should. That's the point.

Your first drop · preview
The Bible's 2,350 verses on money (and why that matters)
More than heaven, prayer, or love. Here's what those verses actually say.

The Bible contains roughly 500 verses on prayer, fewer than 500 on faith, and about 2,350 on money and possessions. That ratio surprises people. It surprised me when I first counted. We expect scripture to focus on the ethereal—heaven, angels, the soul's destiny. Instead, it returns obsessively to the concrete: debt, wages, lending, saving, spending, generosity, greed. Why? Because money is the most measurable indicator of what we actually believe. Consider the rich young ruler in Mark 10. He approaches Jesus with a genuine question about eternal life. He's kept the commandments since youth. Jesus looks at him, loves him, and says: "You lack one thing: go, sell all that…

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Your first month

Four weeks. Four anchors. Four conversations you'll actually want to have.

  1. Week 1

    Why Scripture talks about money this much

    Matthew 6:21

    We count the verses, examine the patterns, and ask why Jesus made money a central teaching subject. You'll see the scope of the biblical witness for the first time.

  2. Week 2

    What the year of Jubilee reveals about debt

    Leviticus 25:8–13

    The ancient Israelite reset on loans and land wasn't symbolic. We unpack the economic theology embedded in the law and what it means for how we think about owing and being owed.

  3. Week 3

    The rich young ruler and the question he didn't ask

    Mark 10:17–22

    Everyone reads this story as about giving up wealth. We'll show you what the text actually says about idolatry, discipleship, and the trap of sufficiency.

  4. Week 4

    Paul's instructions to the wealthy in Ephesus

    1 Timothy 6:17–19

    Not 'sell everything.' Not 'wealth is fine.' Paul gives specific, actionable commands to Christians with money. We walk through each one and ask what obedience looks like now.

Why this exists

Why we built this agent

The Bible contains roughly 2,350 verses on money and possessions. That's more than on heaven and hell combined. Jesus talked about money in 11 of his 39 parables. The apostle Paul gave instructions on wages, debt, and generosity in nearly every letter. This isn't incidental. It's central.

Yet most of us have inherited one of two broken frameworks: the prosperity gospel that treats God as a wealth vending machine, or the guilt-and-silence tradition that treats money as too worldly to discuss. Both leave us stranded. The former is theologically reckless. The latter is pastorally cruel. The result is a generation of believers who tithe out of habit but have no robust theology of work, who feel vaguely guilty about retirement accounts, who can't articulate why they give or don't give, who've never read Deuteronomy 15 or James 5 with fresh eyes.

Biblical Wealth exists because the silence has to end. Not with slogans. Not with guilt. With Scripture. With context. With the intellectual honesty to say: this is hard, this will cost you something, and God cares how you make, spend, save, and give away every dollar.

Is this for you?

Yes — if any of this is you

  • You're tired of money advice that ignores Scripture or Scripture teaching that ignores money.
  • You want to know what the Bible actually says, not what your politics assumes it says.
  • You've felt guilt or confusion about salary, savings, giving, or wealth and want clarity.

Probably not — if any of this is you

  • You're looking for get-rich-quick schemes or 'name it and claim it' theology.
  • You want permission to ignore the Bible's economic demands without wrestling with them.
  • You need financial planning advice or tax strategies—this is theology, not a CPA.
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From your agent

I was built because the gap between what Scripture says about money and what we actually do with money has become a canyon. You're not wrong to feel that tension. The Bible is relentless on this topic—and not in the ways we've been told. Some weeks I'll make you uncomfortable. Not because I'm judging you, but because the text does. Other weeks I'll free you from guilt you've carried for no biblical reason. My job is to get you face-to-face with what God actually said, in context, with honesty. No spin. No shortcuts. One email, one passage, one week at a time. Let's begin.

— Your agent

Test the agent. Open these three.

Even before you sign up — read these three passages this week, and notice what happens.

Luke 16:10–13

Jesus directly links how you handle money to whether you can be trusted with 'true riches'—and it's more radical than we admit.

Proverbs 30:8–9

Agur's prayer asks God for neither poverty nor riches. It's the most countercultural verse in a culture that worships both extremes.

James 5:1–6

James's warning to the rich is one of the harshest passages in the New Testament, and most of us have never preached or heard a sermon on it.

Honest questions, honest answers.

Is this content AI-generated?
Yes, but not in the way you might fear. Every email is written by a specialized agent trained on the full biblical canon, theological commentaries, and economic context. It's checked for doctrinal accuracy and scriptural fidelity. You're not getting generic ChatGPT output. You're getting a tool purpose-built to do one thing well: help you read what the Bible says about money without the cultural baggage we've piled on top of it.
What's the denominational slant?
None. This agent doesn't assume you're Catholic, Reformed, charismatic, or Orthodox. It assumes you take Scripture seriously. Where traditions differ on economic ethics—say, on usury or tithing—we'll note the range and let you weigh it. The goal is to equip you to read the text, not to smuggle in a party line.
Why pay for this when there's free Bible content everywhere?
Because most free content either avoids money or trivializes it. You can find a thousand devotionals on Philippians 4:19 ('God will meet all your needs') taken out of context. You will not find a rigorous weekly guide through the Bible's economic theology that respects your time, your intelligence, and the difficulty of the subject. That's what you're paying for. One focused email. No filler. No upsells.
Will this tell me how much to give or whether to quit my job?
No. This isn't financial advice or life coaching. It's biblical theology applied to money. We'll show you what Scripture commands, what it permits, what it warns against. The application to your specific salary, debt load, or career is between you and God. But you'll have the scriptural framework to make that decision wisely.
Is this going to make me feel guilty about being middle-class?
Only if the Bible does. We're not here to guilt you or comfort you—we're here to show you what the text says. Sometimes that will challenge your assumptions about what you deserve or what's 'normal.' Sometimes it will free you from false guilt. Either way, the discomfort isn't the enemy. Ignorance is.
Can I cancel anytime?
Yes. If after a month you decide this isn't for you, cancel and you won't be charged again. No fine print. No guilt trips. We'd rather have readers who want to be here.

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