The ABCs to Be Financially Free – Secret #4 – Part 2
Ministries > Pathway to Victory with Dr. Robert Jeffress
Financial pressure is driving a wedge between husbands and wives across the country, and many couples end up spending far more money than they earn. It’s no wonder that financial problems have become one of the leading causes for divorce! Dr. Robert Jeffress outlines the Bible’s roadmap to financial freedom.
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Guest (Male): Hey podcast listeners! Thanks for streaming today's podcast from Pathway to Victory. Pathway to Victory is a nonprofit ministry featuring the Bible teaching of Dr. Robert Jeffress. Our mission is to pierce the darkness with the light of God's word through the most effective media available, like this podcast. To support Pathway to Victory, go to ptv.org/donate or follow the link in our show notes. Now, here's today's podcast from Pathway to Victory.
Dr. Robert Jeffress: Hi, this is Robert Jeffress, and I'm glad to study God's word with you every day on this Bible teaching program. On today's edition of Pathway to Victory, the way we create financial margin is by obeying God in every area of our finances. Financial margin in your life does give you the freedom to do what's right. It gives you the security of preparing for your future needs. It gives you the joy of supporting God's work.
David J. Mullins: Welcome to Pathway to Victory with author and pastor Dr. Robert Jeffress. Financial pressure is driving a wedge between husbands and wives across the country, and many couples end up spending far more money than they earn. It's no wonder that financial problems have become one of the leading causes for divorce. Today on Pathway to Victory, Dr. Robert Jeffress outlines the Bible's roadmap for financial freedom. But first, let's take a moment to hear some important ministry updates.
Dr. Robert Jeffress: Thanks, David, and welcome again to Pathway to Victory. I've been studying the New Testament all my life, but when I first walked the ancient ruins of Ephesus, I never saw the Apostle Paul the same way. Something happens when you stand in the very places where scripture was lived out, and that's exactly what I want for you. May 14th through the 23rd, 2027, join me on the Pathway to Victory Journeys of Paul Mediterranean Cruise. We'll visit iconic biblical sites and sail the Mediterranean waters Paul once crossed. I promise you, it'll change the way you read your Bible forever. Please go online and reserve your spot at ptv.org. Well, I know that many who listen to this daily podcast have yet to get in touch with Pathway to Victory, and today I'd like to give you an extra reason to do so. This year, America celebrates her 250th birthday. In that spirit, Pathway to Victory produced two exclusive recordings called In God We Trust. On one disc, you'll enjoy a patriotic music collection from the First Baptist Dallas choir and orchestra. On the second disc, a full-length message from me about the country we love. Let me send you this package at no cost as my gift just for getting in touch at ptv.org. All this month, we've been taking a deep dive into a series I'm calling The Solomon Secrets: 10 Keys to Your Success. Solomon's time-tested wisdom in Proverbs holds the key to achieving and enjoying the things we want most in life, like the issue we're addressing right now. I've titled today's message "The ABCs to Be Financially Free." God has a unique purpose for your life and for my life, and that means money is not the end. Consumerism is not the end. Money is simply the means to the end to give us the freedom we need to fulfill God's will for our life. The goal of every Christian should be simply to have enough money to help us do what God has called us to do. In fact, that word "enough" is a great goal for every Christian. We're looking at what the word of God, specifically Proverbs, says about how to be successful in your work and in your relationships in every area of life. Today, we're going to conclude this study by looking at four practical ways to create financial margin in your life. How can you have that financial margin? I have what I call the ABCs to be financially free. Here are the four principles for creating margin in your life. The A stands for adjust your spending below your income. If you want to have margin, first of all, adjust your spending below your income. The B in this outline stands for be careful of debt. Be careful of debt. Here's the basic problem with debt: debt allows us to artificially live beyond our means, and debt erases any financial margin that we have. Let's say you decide it's time for your family to have a new car. Your old one is giving up the ghost and you need a new car. You go out and you find one that will meet yours and your family's need, but you look at the car and you realize that for about $500 a month, you could buy a used one a year or two years old. For $800, you could buy it brand new. You kind of like the smell of the new car, and you reason to yourself that it might cut down on car repair bills if you got the new one. You reason to yourself, if I really stretch and everything goes okay, I can probably fit that $800 a month payment into my budget, just as long as there are no problems. After the first couple of months, you run into some problems. Your son breaks his arm at football practice and you have an expensive emergency room treatment. Maybe your accountant tells you that you owe more income tax than you thought was going to be due, or maybe the transmission in your other car drops out. Suddenly, what has happened is you have no margin in your finances because you're using every available dollar you had to buy that new car instead of that used car. That's what debt does. Debt allows us to artificially buy more than we're really capable of buying and to erase the margin in our life. That is why I say consumer debt is enemy number one of financial margin. Remember, God doesn't want us to be a slave to anyone except to Himself. Be careful of debt. Number three, how do you create financial margin in your life? Remember, all of this is coming straight from God's word. Consistently save part of your income. The C stands for consistently save part of your income. Remember Proverbs chapter six, verses six through eight. Solomon said, "Go to the ant, oh sluggard, observe her ways and be wise, which having no chief, officer, or ruler, prepares her food in summer and then gathers her provision in the harvest." Even an ant understands that the harvest it enjoys in the summertime—the bountiful food—won't last forever. So, it sets aside some of the food in the summer and in the fall to prepare for the wintertime where there is no food. The same thing is true for us. If we're wise, we're going to set aside some of our income for future needs. How much income should we set aside? Some financial planners say that we ought to set aside at least 10% to 15% of our income for our retirement needs, and then save more than that to set aside for emergencies, college educations, and other big-ticket items. How much money you set aside really isn't our call to make, but I want to give you three words that will help you in your saving. A lot of you are young adults, those in midlife, and senior adults. It's not too late for you, but it's going to be harder for you to create margin in your life. If you're a young adult listening to this message right now, write this down. Parents and grandparents, write it down for your children and your grandchildren. Three important words. Number one, immediacy. Immediacy. The best time to begin saving money is now. As we're going to see in a moment, smaller amounts of money saved early in life are much more valuable than large amounts of money saved later in life, all because of the magic of compound interest. Let's illustrate that for you. Let's say there are two people, Dick and Jane. Remember Dick and Jane from the first grade? We're bringing them back. Dick and Jane have grown up now, and they both go to work for the Acme Corporation on the very same day. Jane goes in to see the HR person on her first day of the job, and the HR person says, "Jane, we have a 401(k) plan here. If you invest some of your money, it'll help prepare for the future." Jane says, "That sounds like a good idea to me." She signs up to put $1,250 a year into her 401(k) plan. She does that every year for eight years. After eight years of working for the Acme Corporation, she decides to retire and become a full-time homemaker. But she also decides to leave the money she has accumulated over those eight years in that 401(k) plan, and for the next 22 years, she doesn't touch it and doesn't add anything to it. Now, that's Jane. Dick goes to work on the same day as Jane did, and the HR person tells him about the 401(k) plan. Dick says, "I know I need to do that. I should do that, but I've got so many family responsibilities and expenses right now. I just can't afford to do that right now." For the first eight years of his working life at Acme, he doesn't contribute a penny to his 401(k) plan. But after the first eight years, he hears a message just like this and he gets convicted. He says, "I really ought to do this. I need to take advantage of this." So, he starts contributing to his 401(k) plan and he does so for the next 22 years. At the end of the 30 years, who's going to end up with more money? Is it going to be Jane, who invested $1,250 a year for eight years—that's a total of $10,000—and then never added a penny to it? Or is it going to be Dick, who invested $1,250 a year for 22 years—that's $27,500? Who's going to have the most money at the end of 30 years? At 8% interest, Jane is going to have more money than Dick. She will have accumulated $74,000. Dick will have accumulated $71,000. How is that possible? One person only saves for eight years and one person saves for 22 years. John D. Rockefeller called this the eighth wonder of the world: compound interest. Money is more efficient saved early in life, even if for a shorter amount of time, than a large amount of money saved later in life. Immediacy. Somebody once said the best time to plant an oak tree was 20 years ago. The next best time is today. The same thing is true with your saving. Regardless of what you haven't done in the past, today's the best time. Secondly, the word consistency. This is a key word. Again, a small amount of money regularly saved over a long period of time can do wondrous things. Most people don't want to think about saving because they don't want to deprive themselves. They think if they save money, they're depriving themselves of current enjoyment of life. But you don't have to be an Ebenezer Scrooge to have financial margin in life. Let's imagine someone has just graduated from school and is just beginning their work life. They are 22 years old. Let's imagine this 22-year-old young adult starts investing $100 a month in a mutual fund. That's what he can afford: $100 a month. He invests $100 a month and never increases it at all. He invests it in a mutual fund, and let's say the mutual fund earns 12% a year. By age 72, that person will have accumulated $3.9 million. For the price of a Starbucks every day, this person can retire a multi-millionaire. My daughter Dorothy is 22 in December. Dorothy, that would be a great plan for you to take care of your parents in their old age. That would be our financial measure of success there is having you do that. I know some of you financial people are going to write me saying 12% is too high. Okay, make it 10% or 9%. You can still have multiple millions of dollars by saving a small amount of money over a long period of time. Consistency. Thirdly, the word diversity. The third key in saving money is to diversify your savings. Mark Twain said, "Put all of your eggs in one basket and watch the basket." But Solomon says, "No, that is a prescription for financial disaster." Instead, listen to what he says in Ecclesiastes 11, verse two. "Divide your portion to seven or even to eight, for you do not know what misfortune may occur on the earth." Don't put all of your money in stocks. Don't put all of your money in bonds. Don't put it all in real estate. Diversify, because you really don't know what the future holds. Have a balanced investment so that you can take advantage of some things that are up while other things are down. How do you create financial margin in your life? A: adjust your spending below your income. B: be careful of debt. C: consistently save a portion of your income. D: the final and an important principle: devote a portion of your income to God. Devote a portion of your income to God. Solomon offered another piece of financial counsel that is overlooked by so many people and so many Christians, and explains why so many Christians have trouble with their finances. Listen to Proverbs 3, verses nine to 10. "Honor the Lord from your wealth, and from the first of all of your produce; so that your barns will be filled with plenty, and your vats will be overcome with new wine." These verses are not a blanket promise that if you give to God, you will automatically be financially wealthy. If that were the case, if giving to God insured and promised that you would always 100% of the time be financially successful, then giving would not be a matter of making an offering—it would be making a wise investment, wouldn't it? Nevertheless, as you look through the whole counsel of God on this subject of giving, you find that more often than not, God promises to bless those who give and to judge those who withhold from Him. In fact, to not give what belongs to God, God calls robbery. To not give to God what belongs to Him is tantamount to robbing God. Turn over to Malachi chapter three for a moment, or as some people call it, "Malachi." Remember the situation here. The Israelites were not giving God what belonged to Him, and they had all kind of reasons. They said, "God, we just can't afford to give. We're these impoverished agricultural people. We don't have the money to give. I mean, after all, after we subtract our mortgage payment and our TV cable bill and our chariot monthly payments, we just don't have any margin left." What were they doing? They were using what belonged to God to pay for their monthly expenses. They said, "God, we cannot afford to give." God said, "You cannot afford not to give." Look at what he says in Malachi 3, beginning with verse eight. "Will a man rob God? But you say, 'How have we robbed you?'" God answers, "In tithes and offerings. For you are cursed with a curse, for you are robbing me, the whole nation of you." What's the answer to make sure you're not robbing God? "Bring the whole tithe into the storehouse, so that there may be food in my house. And test me now in this," says the Lord of hosts. It's one of the few times we're ever told to test God in the Bible. God says you can test me in this. If you'll bring the whole tithe into the storehouse, test me and see if I will not open for you the windows of heaven and pour out for you a blessing until it overflows. That's the positive promise. But notice there's a negative promise here too in verse 11. "Then I will rebuke the devourer for you, so that it may not destroy the fruits of the ground; nor will your vine in the field cast its grapes," says the Lord of hosts. The positive promise is this: God said, "Israelites, if you will give 10% of what you have to me, I will bless the 90% above anything you can imagine. But if you rob me of the 10% that belongs to me, I will allow the devourer to consume 90% and more of what you have." I've heard so many Christians through the years give a testimony like this. They've said, "For years, we were disobedient to God in this area of tithing. We did not give what belonged to God. We felt like the way we could have some padding, some margin in our finances, was not to give." Yet, they said whatever margin they had through not giving to God, it was amazing every month how it got eaten up by unexpected car repair bills, medical emergencies, or other things that they had not planned for. But when they started obeying God in this area, God blessed them beyond anything they could have imagined. Many of you have that testimony as well. That's what the word of God is saying here. What is the answer here? Well, again, he tells us in verse 10, "Bring the whole tithe." Where? Into the storehouse. The question is, where is the storehouse today? We don't have a temple. Where is the storehouse today? Let me give you a hint. The storehouse is not the Red Cross. It's not Habitat for Humanity. It's not Campus Crusade for Christ. Those are all wonderful organizations and they're certainly worthy of support, but the tithe doesn't belong to them or any organization like that. It's the local church that has been uniquely created by God and it's the local church that has been uniquely commissioned by God to fulfill the great commission. Every other organization in the world, I don't care how wonderful it is, it's a man-made organization. Every Christian organization is a man-made organization except the local church. God designed the church. God commissioned the church to be His agent for spreading the word of God throughout the world. I'm not saying you don't give to those other things, but what I'm saying is the primary focus of our giving is to be the storehouse. In the New Testament, that storehouse is the local church. "Bring the whole tithe into the storehouse," says the Lord of hosts. The way we create financial margin is by obeying God in every area of our finances. Truly Solomon was right when he said in Proverbs 10, verse 15, "The rich man's wealth is his fortress, the ruin of the poor is their poverty." Financial margin in your life does give you the freedom to do what's right. It gives you the security of preparing for your future needs. It gives you the joy of supporting God's work. However, the benefits of margin are limited to this life and this life alone. There's one contingency margin cannot protect you against: your death. Solomon understood that. In Ecclesiastes 5, verses 15 and 16, he said people who live only for wealth come to the end of their lives as naked and empty-handed as on the day they were born. He goes on to say in verse 16, "And this too is a very serious problem. As people come into the world, so they depart. All their hard work is for nothing. They've been working for the wind and everything will be swept away." Jesus told a great story to illustrate that truth in Luke 12. Remember, it was a story about a very wealthy man. He had spent his life accumulating margin, a buffer zone in his finances, and he had succeeded beyond his wildest imagination. He had so much extra he didn't know what to do with it. His barns were overflowing with grain, his kids' education was fully funded, his 401(k) plan was maxed out, and he still didn't know what to do with all of his money. In fact, one night he lay awake saying, "What in the world am I going to do with all this excess?" He started making his plans. "I'll do this. I think I'll do this. I'll do this." Then God came to him and said, "You fool. Tonight your soul is required of you." That phrase in Greek literally means your loan is due. Tonight your soul is required of you. Tonight you're going to die, and who now is going to own what you've spent your life accumulating? Jesus added this application in Luke 12:21: "So is the man who lays up treasure for himself and is not rich toward God." Listen to me, ladies and gentlemen. The value of margin ceases at the cemetery. From that moment throughout eternity, only your relationship with Jesus Christ matters. Only Jesus Christ can provide you lasting freedom, lasting security, and lasting joy.
Dr. Robert Jeffress: All our striving for financial freedom and liberation from the relentless pressure that money can bring, it ends at the cemetery. There's nothing more important than settling our account with God while there's still time. Well, I'm so pleased you chose to join us for today's edition of Pathway to Victory. Earlier in the program, I mentioned a book I've written for you. It's called The Solomon Secrets: 10 Keys to Your Success. There are several chapters devoted to money management and creating a healthy financial margin in your life, which was our topic today. Solomon also addresses issues on marriage, relationships, and overcoming fear. When you give a generous gift to Pathway to Victory, please be sure to request a copy of my book, The Solomon Secrets. Then as we conclude today, let me say thank you in advance of receiving your generous gift. Your partnership truly makes a difference. Recently, we heard from a caller who said, "I was brought up with a lot of different beliefs, but I didn't know the truth about being a Christian. Since I began listening to Pathway to Victory, God has opened my spiritual eyes and open doors in my heart, and now I can receive the truth." She concluded by saying, "Thank you." Well, that's precisely why we're partnering together in this ministry. When you give to Pathway to Victory, you're the one who's making it possible to touch people like this caller and countless others who've come to rely on these daily radio programs. Thank you in advance for your generosity. Here's David to tell you more.
David J. Mullins: Today when you support the ministry of Pathway to Victory by giving a generous gift, you're invited to request a copy of the best-selling book by Dr. Robert Jeffress, The Solomon Secrets. Call 866-999-2965, visit ptv.org, or text PTV to 78800. When your gift is $75 or more, we'll send you this month's teaching series, also titled The Solomon Secrets, on DVD video and MP3 format audio disc. You can make your request online at ptv.org. You could write to us if you'd like: P.O. Box 223609, Dallas, Texas, 75222. That's P.O. Box 223609, Dallas, Texas, 75222. I'm David J. Mullins. Nobody enters into a marriage with plans to have an affair, yet an alarming number of unions end in divorce due to infidelity. Dr. Jeffress shares an important message about keeping your marriage pure. That's Monday on Pathway to Victory. Pathway to Victory with Dr. Robert Jeffress comes from the pulpit of the First Baptist Church of Dallas, Texas.
Guest (Male): You made it to the end of today's podcast from Pathway to Victory, and we're so grateful you're here. Pathway to Victory relies on the generosity of loyal listeners like you to make this podcast possible. One of the most impactful ways you can give is by becoming a Pathway Partner. Your monthly gift will empower Pathway to Victory to share the gospel of Jesus Christ and help others become rooted more firmly in His word. To become a Pathway Partner, go to ptv.org/donate, or you can follow the link in our show notes. We hope you've been blessed by today's podcast from Pathway to Victory. Oh, and one last thing before we go: don't forget to reserve your spot on the 2027 Journeys of Paul Mediterranean Cruise. You've heard me and Dr. Jeffress talk about it, and cabins are going quickly. Just picture yourself aboard the beautiful Celebrity Infinity, sailing round-trip from Athens, standing where the Apostle Paul stood in Ephesus, and taking in the breathtaking Greek islands. Nine unforgettable nights with stops in Mykonos, Rhodes, Santorini, and more. Every meal prepared, every detail taken care of, plus fellowship with like-minded believers. There's also an optional pre-cruise extension to Athens. Oh, and one more thing: if you book online before July 31st, you'll receive a $200 early bird discount. To book your spot, go to ptv.org.
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About Pathway to Victory
On each daily broadcast, Dr. Robert Jeffress provides practical application of God's Word to everyday life through clear, uncompromised Biblical teaching. Join him today on the Pathway to Victory!
About Dr. Robert Jeffress
Dr. Robert Jeffress is Senior Pastor of the 16,000-member First Baptist Church of Dallas, Texas. Dr. Jeffress is a FOX News contributor and appears regularly on FOX News Channel’s FOX & Friends , FOX News @ Night , Hannity , and The Faulkner Focus and on the FOX Business Network. Dr. Jeffress has made more than 4,000 guest appearances on television programs that include HBO’s Real Time with Bill Maher and Trinity Broadcasting Network’s Praise .
Established in 1996, Pathway to Victory serves as the broadcast ministry of Dr. Jeffress and exists to pierce the darkness with the light of God’s Word through the most effective media available. The daily radio programs air on over 1,100 stations, and the daily television program can be seen on over 11,000 cable and satellite systems, including Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN), where it has been the #1 most-watched program since 2020. Pathway to Victory broadcasts are translated into seven languages and reach 193 countries throughout the world in addition to all major markets in the USA.
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