Episode Description
Trusting God for our financial needs feels especially real when life gets tight. When savings shrink, markets fluctuate, or expenses rise faster than income, the pressure exposes what—or who—we truly rely on.
Long before budgets, retirement accounts, or emergency funds existed, one man stood on a mountain believing God could provide in the most impossible circumstances. His story in Genesis 22 gives us one of the most powerful names of God in all of Scripture: “The Lord Will Provide.” And it offers a blueprint for faithful stewardship today.
Provision Is Forged in Pressure
Trusting God’s provision rarely happens in comfort. It’s forged in seasons when resources feel thin, and the future looks uncertain.
Throughout Scripture, God’s people learn His faithfulness not at banquets, but in deserts. Not in surplus, but in scarcity. Whether wandering in the wilderness, facing famine, or standing before overwhelming odds, they discover that provision isn’t merely about resources—it’s about relationship.
God is not simply someone who provides. He is the Provider.
But biblical faith isn’t naïve optimism, nor is it passive resignation. Faith rests in God’s character, moves forward in obedience, and trusts Him with the outcome.
Abraham on the Mountain
Genesis 22 is one of the clearest pictures of this kind of faith.
God asks Abraham to offer Isaac, his son of promise. It’s a shocking command, and we’re meant to feel its weight. Isaac is the one through whom God promised to build a nation “as numerous as the stars.” Without Isaac, the covenant appears to collapse. Yet Abraham obeys.
Before climbing the mountain, he tells his servants, “Stay here with the donkey; the boy and I will go over there and worship; then we will come back to you” (Genesis 22:5).
Notice what he says: we will come back. The author of Hebrews explains Abraham’s reasoning: “He considered that God was able even to raise him from the dead” (Hebrews 11:19). Abraham trusted that God’s promise was more certain than the circumstances he could see.
And when Abraham raised the knife, God intervened—not before the climb, not halfway up the mountain, but at the exact moment when obedience and trust met. A ram was provided in Isaac’s place.
It’s there Abraham names the place: “The Lord will provide” (Genesis 22:14).
What “The Lord Will Provide” Really Means
To say God provides isn’t to say He always provides in the way we expect.
It means His character is generous, attentive, and faithful. He knows our needs before we ask. He meets them according to His wisdom—not our timeline. That shifts how we think about financial provision.
Scripture commends diligence. “The hand of the diligent makes rich” (Proverbs 10:4). It warns against laziness. But diligence and provision are not the same thing. We work. God provides the harvest.
Modern financial fear often comes from trying to secure every possible outcome. We want guarantees. We want certainty. We want control. But the great enemy of faith isn’t need—it’s self-reliance.
When we believe we are our own providers, we shoulder a burden we were never designed to carry. The apostle Paul writes, “My God will supply every need of yours according to his riches in glory in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 4:19).
Notice the scale and the source: According to His riches, not ours.
Three Ways Trust Changes Our Stewardship
When we truly believe God provides, three things begin to shift.
1. We Plan Without Panic
Wisdom plans for the future. Scripture affirms preparation and foresight. But planning becomes idolatry when it tries to eliminate dependence.
Trust allows us to budget, save, and invest without fear driving every decision. Our spreadsheets serve us—they don’t rule us.
2. We Give Without Fear
Generosity flows from security.
If we believe God replenishes, we can release. Hudson Taylor famously said, “God’s work done in God’s way will never lack God’s supply.”
When God is our provider, generosity becomes an act of confidence, not recklessness.
3. We Endure Lean Seasons With Hope
Scarcity is not wasted space in the life of faith.
Lean seasons refine us. They remind us that our ultimate security rests not in accounts, assets, or accolades—but in the Lord who sees. Abraham learned something profound on that mountain—not just that God provides, but who God is.
Provision in Scripture is relational. God provides so His people know Him more deeply and so the watching world sees His faithfulness.
Faithful Stewardship Without Fear
Trusting God’s provision doesn’t mean we stop budgeting, working, or stewarding wisely. It means we do those things without trying to control the narrative. Our responsibility is faithfulness. God’s responsibility is provision.
When life tightens and financial pressure mounts, Genesis 22 invites us to lift our eyes beyond the mountain in front of us and remember the name Abraham proclaimed:
The Lord will provide. And He still does.
On Today’s Program, Rob Answers Listener Questions:
- How can I have a loving, respectful conversation with my parents—especially my dad—about whether they’re truly ready for retirement and financially self-sufficient? Also, he started taking Social Security last year while still working. Should he reconsider delaying benefits, and what options does he have now?
- A nonprofit that owned a property has shut down, and I’d like to sell it and give the proceeds to a church. Are there special forms or steps I need to take to handle that transfer properly?
- I’m turning 60 and want to prepare wisely for retirement. I have a seven-figure balance across my 401(k) and investments. What should I focus on over the next several years—how much is enough, withdrawal planning, Social Security timing, and long-term care—so I won’t become a burden on my kids?
- As I plan my estate, what does the Bible mean by leaving an inheritance to our children’s children, and how should I think about what to leave my grandchildren?
Resources Mentioned:
- Faithful Steward: FaithFi’s Quarterly Magazine (Become a FaithFi Partner)
- Splitting Heirs: Giving Your Money and Things to Your Children Without Ruining Their Lives by Ron Blue with Jeremy White
- Our Ultimate Treasure: A 21-Day Journey to Faithful Stewardship
- Wisdom Over Wealth: 12 Lessons from Ecclesiastes on Money
- Look At The Sparrows: A 21-Day Devotional on Financial Fear and Anxiety
- Rich Toward God: A Study on the Parable of the Rich Fool
- Find a Certified Kingdom Advisor (CKA)
- FaithFi App
Remember, you can call in to ask your questions every workday at (800) 525-7000. Faith & Finance is also available on Moody Radio Network and American Family Radio. You can also visit FaithFi.com to connect with our online community and partner with us as we help more people live as faithful stewards of God’s resources.
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