You know it's true—the constant itch for “more” is intentionally influenced. From the moment you wake up and check your phone to the last screen you see before bed, you’re being coached to feel like what you have—and who you are—isn’t enough. In this episode, John discusses the struggle of wanting more, a theme explored in his book "He Spends, She Spends."
John highlights the constant influence of advertising, designed to make us feel incomplete and discontent, and how this affects financial decisions. Emphasizing the need to renew one's mind spiritually to resist these influences, he shares scriptures, practical steps and questions to achieve contentment, advocating for a balance where one can keep their focus on God.
In this episode, John discusses:
How a constant stream of advertising and cultural messages quietly trains us to feel incomplete, discontent, and always in need of “more”
Why the core problem isn’t just financial habits, but a spiritual issue rooted in what we believe about money, identity, and security.
A simple but powerful shift from just asking, “Can we afford this?” to also asking, “How much is enough for us—and what are we really chasing?”
The countercultural freedom of living modestly so we can serve God extravagantly.
A practical one-week experiment, paying attention to feelings of “not enough,” and begin choosing peace over more.
The constant desire for “just a little bit more” is often less about 'greed' and more about being shaped by messages specifically designed to make us feel incomplete and discontent.
Our money problems are rarely just math issues; they’re spiritual issues, too—rooted in what we believe about God, provision, identity, and what will actually bring us peace.
Renewing our minds, as Paul writes in Romans 12:2, gives us a new filter for money decisions so we’re no longer just copying what “everyone else” is doing, but testing and choosing what aligns with God’s will.
Shifting from “Can we afford this?” to “How much is enough for us—and what are we really chasing?” opens the door to contentment, clarity, and a different definition of success.
Learning to live with “enough” isn’t about shame or scarcity; it’s about freedom—loosening our grip on stuff, so it loosens its grip on us, and we’re freed to serve God more fully, generously, and joyfully.
“You’ve got to think differently before you can act differently, and that takes time. It takes practice. It takes a lot of grace for yourself.”
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