Blessings Come With a Calling
Nothing is free, but God can turn faithful sacrifice into something greater. Faith, family, and freedom!
Hello Friends!
Our family is preparing to close on a new home, sell our current one, move our lives about 10 miles, keep up with work, and still be present for our children.
It is exciting, but it is not effortless.
There are inspections, repairs, financing decisions, boxes, deadlines, and unexpected costs. The experience has reminded me of a phrase I have carried for years: nothing is free.
Everything costs someone something. We pay with money, time, work, risk, patience, or sacrifice. Even the best blessings usually bring new responsibilities.
Christianity adds an essential truth. Salvation is a free gift to us, but it was not free of cost. Christ paid the price we could never pay. As Ephesians 2 explains, we are saved by grace rather than our own works, then called to do the good work God prepared for us.
Grace is not an entitlement. It is a gift that changes what we live for.
A new house can be a blessing, but square footage alone does not make a home. A home is built through prayer, patience, discipline, forgiveness, and love. Its purpose is not merely to make us more comfortable. It should give our family room to grow closer, welcome others, and use what God has entrusted to us well.
The same principle guides marriage. A strong marriage does not come without sacrifice. Trust must be built, difficult conversations must happen, and pride must give way to grace. Neither spouse must lose for the other to gain. By serving each other, both can become stronger and better fulfill the purpose God has for their marriage.
Parenting carries the same mutual blessing. Children require our time, money, energy, and patience, but God also uses them to shape us. We teach them responsibility and faith, while they teach us humility, endurance, and unconditional love.
Our work can serve God in much the same way.
Building Ginn Economic Consulting has required long hours, research, writing, travel, interviews, and risk. Clients receive ideas and solutions that can help them advance policies that let people prosper. That work provides for my family and gives me a platform to serve a larger purpose.
Healthy exchange is not greed. It is cooperation. A business creates value for a client, a worker contributes talent to an employer, and a customer voluntarily pays for something worth more to him than the money he gives up. Both sides can benefit because value is created rather than merely transferred.
God often works through these ordinary relationships and exchanges. He gives us talents, people, opportunities, and resources, then expects us to use them faithfully. In the Parable of the Talents, the servants are judged by what they did with what they had been entrusted. Luke 12:48 reminds us that much is required from those who have been given much.
This does not mean faith is a transaction. We cannot bargain with God, obey Him only when the reward is clear, or assume every sacrifice will produce the outcome we want.
Sometimes the door closes. Sometimes the answer is no. Sometimes the blessing looks different from what we expected.
But God wastes nothing.
He can use a difficult season to build patience, a business risk to build courage, a disagreement to teach humility, or a move to remind us that our security does not come from a house, income, or carefully designed plan.
Our security comes from Him.
The question is not whether we deserve our blessings. The better question is how we can use them to serve God and others.
As Colossians 3 teaches, whatever we do should be done wholeheartedly for the Lord.
A house can become a place of hospitality. Work can become a calling. Marriage can become a witness. Parenting can become discipleship.
Nothing is free. But when we receive God’s blessings with gratitude and stewardship, He can multiply them far beyond us.
Blessings are not merely something to enjoy. They are something to use for His glory.
Let people prosper,
Vance Ginn, Ph.D.
President, Ginn Economic Consulting

