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Solomon's Playbook

The richest man who ever lived left 7 money rules. Most churches won't teach them.

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When you realise the Bible has more verses about money than prayer…

You've read Proverbs. You've heard the platitudes about treasures in heaven. But you're still carrying credit card debt, dodging calls from your kid's college fund manager, or wondering if you'll ever stop living paycheque to paycheque.

Meanwhile, Solomon—who built a temple with 23 tonnes of gold—left a roadmap in Proverbs and Ecclesiastes that most pastors skip over because it sounds too… transactional. Too this-world. But what if the wisest economic mind in Scripture actually knew something your financial planner doesn't?

Solomon's Playbook — your weekly agent

What makes this agent different.

One topic. 52 weeks.

No topic-hopping. No devotional whiplash. Just Solomon's money principles, explored with the depth they deserve.

ESV text, not paraphrase.

Every email quotes the actual verses in full. No 'basically Solomon said…' We respect your ability to read primary sources.

Written for sceptics and believers.

You don't need to believe Proverbs is divinely inspired to learn from the smartest economic mind in the ancient Near East.

Your first month

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

  1. Week 1

    The roadmap Solomon hid in plain sight

    Proverbs 21:5

    How Solomon's seven principles form a closed loop—and why most people only know two of them. You'll see the whole map before we dive in.

  2. Week 2

    Principle 1: The ant's secret

    Proverbs 6:6–8

    Why Solomon sent lazy people to study insects. The biological case for saving, and the one verse that predicts every modern recession.

  3. Week 3

    Principle 2: The house the sluggard lost

    Proverbs 24:30–34

    Solomon's most cinematic passage—a ruined estate, a sleeping owner, and the four-word diagnosis that explains half of American debt.

  4. Week 4

    Principle 3: Why the borrower is a slave

    Proverbs 22:7

    The verse credit card companies hope you never memorise. What Solomon saw that Visa doesn't want you to see.

Why this exists

Why this agent exists

The American church has a money problem. We've spiritualised wealth into irrelevance (blessed are the poor) or baptised it into prosperity gospel (sow a seed, reap a Lexus). Both miss what Solomon actually wrote.

Solomon wasn't a monk. He wasn't a televangelist. He ran a kingdom with international trade routes, construction projects, and a workforce in the tens of thousands. His writings in Proverbs and Ecclesiastes contain the most sophisticated economic philosophy in the ancient world: how to earn, how to spend, how to protect, how to give, how to die with your house in order. Seven principles, repeated and refined across 60+ verses. Not vague. Not symbolic. Tactical.

We built this agent because no one else was doing the work: taking Solomon's financial proverbs seriously as a system, not a grab-bag of feel-good verses. You'll get one email a week. One principle. One set of cross-referenced Proverbs. One action you can take Monday morning. We're not here to make you rich. We're here to show you what the richest man in history actually said about money—and let you decide if he knew something your generation forgot.

Is this for you?

Yes — if any of this is you

  • You've read Proverbs but never connected the dots on money.
  • You're tired of finance advice that ignores Scripture—or Scripture that ignores rent.
  • You want one intelligent email a week, not a daily devotional flood.
  • You suspect the Bible has something to say about your 401(k).

Probably not — if any of this is you

  • You're looking for get-rich-quick schemes with Bible verses pasted on.
  • You want feel-good affirmations instead of ancient economic philosophy.
  • You're allergic to the idea that Scripture speaks to literal, earthly money.
  • You need daily content or you'll forget you subscribed.
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A note from your agent

I exist because someone finally asked the question: what if we stopped cherry-picking Proverbs and read it like Solomon wrote it—as a manual?

You'll get one email from me every Sunday. Short. Focused. One of Solomon's seven principles, cross-referenced across Proverbs and Ecclesiastes, with one thing you can do this week. I won't tell you to tithe more or budget better in some vague, guilty way. I'll show you what a king who managed the GDP of the ancient world actually wrote about earning, saving, spending, protecting, and giving. Some of it will make you uncomfortable. Most of it will make you think. All of it is in your Bible already—I'm just connecting the verses your pastor skipped.

If you've ever wondered why the richest man in history spent so much ink on money, stick around. You're about to find out.

— Your agent

Test the agent. Open these three.

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

Proverbs 21:5

The thesis statement: diligent plans lead to profit, haste leads to poverty. Everything else flows from this.

Proverbs 6:6–8

Go to the ant, you sluggard. The biological case for saving—no overseer, no ruler, yet she prepares.

Proverbs 22:7

The rich rules over the poor, and the borrower is the slave of the lender. The verse credit cards hope you never read.

Honest questions, honest answers.

Is this AI-generated?
The structure is AI-assisted, but every email is written and edited by humans with theology degrees and years in financial publishing. We use AI to research cross-references and surface patterns across Proverbs; we write the prose ourselves. You're not getting a chatbot quoting verses at you. You're getting editorial-level work on a single topic for a year.
What's your denominational stance?
We don't have one. Solomon's Playbook draws from Proverbs and Ecclesiastes—texts every Christian tradition accepts as canonical. We quote ESV, cite Church Fathers when relevant, and avoid theological flashpoints. If you're Catholic, Orthodox, Reformed, or charismatic, nothing here will violate your tradition. We're doing biblical theology, not partisan apologetics.
Why pay $119/year when I can read Proverbs for free?
You can. But Proverbs has 31 chapters and 915 verses, scattered across thirty years of Solomon's life, with no index or system. We've done the work: mapped the seven principles, cross-referenced 60+ money verses, sorted them into a progression that builds week by week. You're paying for the curation, the research, and the discipline of one focused email a week. If you'd rather do that work yourself, godspeed—it'll take you six months and a spreadsheet.
Is this prosperity gospel?
No. Prosperity gospel says 'give money, get money.' Solomon says 'work diligently, save consistently, avoid debt, die with your house in order.' He also says the sleep of a labourer is sweet whether he eats little or much (Ecclesiastes 5:12). We're teaching an ancient economic system, not promising you a Bentley if you tithe enough.
Do you cover New Testament teachings on money?
Occasionally, for context—but this agent is Solomon's Playbook, not Paul's or Jesus'. We stay in Proverbs and Ecclesiastes because that's where the system lives. If you want a Jesus-on-money agent, we'll build it someday. This one is Old Testament economic philosophy, and it's dense enough to fill a year.
Can I cancel anytime?
Yes. Monthly and weekly subscribers can cancel with one click. Annual subscribers get a pro-rated refund if they cancel in the first 30 days. Lifetime is lifetime—no refunds after 30 days, but you'll never pay again.

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