









A couple years ago my wife came home with a book that I would never have read unless she said I really needed to. It had nothing to do with my ‘to read list’ and tackled a subject I suspect I have avoided most of my life. Just the title “Your Money Counts” held no interest for me. However, I decided to follow my wife’s advice.
Not too far into the book, my attention was arrested. The author, Howard Dayton, challenged me to give all my belongings and money back to the Lord. I vividly recall this moment of hitting the pause button. Yes, I could simply have skimmed over that page and instruction, but I was unable to do so. I know myself well enough to know that if challenged to release something back to the Lord, I want to be able to do it.
So, after much reflection and recognizing perhaps for the first time the hold money had over my habits and me, I signed the agreement. I did not consider myself in debt, as least by my own standards. I thought everyone had a line of credit and used credit cards regularly to earn points to travel or buy extra things.
I suddenly found myself being dared to think differently. If my money and all that I own – all of it - actually belongs to God, then I am responsible for managing them to the best of my ability and with Him in mind. This thinking was foreign to me. I just thought that the tithe belonged to the Lord.
So began a much deeper journey into this area then I ever anticipated. By going back to God’s Word and studying this whole area, I discovered Jesus had a lot more to say about money than even about subjects we might consider more important, such as faith and prayer. (To my shock, I even began working for a ministry whose focus was money. The Lord sure had a sense of humour on that one.)
The more I studied this whole area, the more I realized how little I knew and how little we talk openly about this subject within our church communities. It seems this subject is often taboo and, as a result, most of us rely on what we hear and are taught by what we hear from our peers or read on the Internet and social media.
One key aspect of my discovery was this thing they call ‘mammon’. What the heck is that? I found it in Matthew 6:24 and Luke 16: 13 where it says, “ No one can serve two masters; for either he will hate the one and love the other, or else he will be loyal to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and mammon.”
I realized that this verse warns us that there is a competitor for our affections that will impact our relationship with Jesus. My research, and that of my colleague Jan Kupecz, led us to co-author a short booklet entitled “It’s Not About the Money – unmasking mammon”.
As one financial advisor remarked after recently reading it, “This is a must-read for the Body of Christ right now”.
As one pastor to another, I would highly recommend you give this booklet a read. Financial Discipleship Canada has decided to give it away for free. It is a short and an easy read. You can obtain it as a download by visiting www.notmine.ca or by clicking on this link free e-resource that allows you to read it on-line.
My prayer is that you will find the booklet to be transformational. Please savour it and read it through prayerfully and allow the Lord to speak to your heart and to your spirit: to listen to what the Father might be speaking to you about your belief system and attitude towards money.
Rev. Ray Borg
Ministry & Church Liaison
Financial Discipleship Canada
notmine.ca is part of the family of ministries of Financial Discipleship Canada