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Faith and Marketplace

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Amplifi - Launchpad

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Preparation
My kid has a friend who stops by the house after school to play with her on the weeks he is with his mom. His mom used to sit in the car at the park with him after school before they commute back home. Eventually, we told them they were free to stop by the house, and the kids could play while I finished work. Earlier in the week, the kid asked my daughter if he could walk home with her on some days because it would help his mom out. We did not think anything of it at the time. Today, when he stopped by, his mom explained what the kid was referring to. She is a single mom who shares custody with the father. Apparently, there is a court order requiring the kid to attend school in this district, even though both parents live in different cities. Since the father had other kids in the district when the order was approved, she was stuck commuting him to school every day. With her job, there are two days every week when she has custody, and she has to pay a service to pick him up and take him home after school. She said her son had the idea to ask if he could walk home with my kid those two days and hang out with him until she gets off work, because it would save them some money and give him someone his age to hang out with after school. Now she did not know that just the day before, our kid had talked to us about all her friends and their academic strengths and weaknesses, which she considers when deciding who to partner with on class assignments. She had described this kid as a friend she could depend on to get work done, so the decision to help was easy for my wife and me. While his mom talked to me about her situation, I spoke with her about resources that might help with the court case. We also discussed her job, how to leverage her strengths better to create opportunities, and her newfound journey of faith, trust, and fellowship. Even though I was technically still on the clock, it was an easy decision to lock the screen and make space on my calendar to listen and be present for the conversation.
2 likes • 22h
WOW, Scott, this is major — I really appreciate you sharing this. I love seeing moments like this. God is extremely intentional. It also sounds like you connected with your passion again, and that’s powerful. Keep leaning into that.
🔥 Wins | Work | Worship 🔥
Let’s check in. Not the highlight reel. Not the polished version. The real version. 1️⃣ WIN: What’s one win from this week? (Big or small — progress is progress.) 2️⃣ WORK: What are you working on right now? • Personally • Professionally Growth doesn’t happen by accident. It happens on purpose. 3️⃣ WORSHIP: What has your worship/prayer life looked like this week? Consistent? Quiet? Distracted? Deep? No judgment. Just reflection.
4 likes • 22h
WIN: I’ve been intentional about my focus and had several next-level meetings. WORSHIP: Some quiet moments—studying Philippians, staying connected and intentional, and praying more throughout my days.
Wins, Work & Worship
What’s a single WIN from this week? What are you WORKING on (personally and professionally) What’s your WORSHIP/PRAYER life been like this week?
1 like • 18d
@George Beall Awesome, good brother! Looking forward to hearing more about your journey!
0 likes • 18d
@Ryan Lloyd For sure!
Becoming…?
Ok. A little back story to this post. Perhaps you’ve heard of BE. DO. HAVE. You have to be the person that does the thing to have to result. Here’s a question that eludes me. What’s your take? Ok. So let’s say for instance, I want to be a millionaire. Some rough math says in my 30s, if I put away $600/month, assume a 6-8% return, then when I retire 30+ years later I’ll have $0.8-1.4 million. When am I a millionaire? Am I a millionaire when I first decide to start? Am I a millionaire only each time I make a deposit? Am I a millionaire if I miss a payment, two payments? Am I a millionaire when I finally have a million in the account? What are your thoughts? And, how does that expand to the other pillars?
2 likes • 20d
Love the post, Justin. I think multiple answers could apply to your question: “When am I a millionaire?” Here’s my added perspective: I believe millionaires are often made in their youth—the earlier the decision, the greater the opportunity to retire with abundance. Not because of income alone, but because of time, consistency, and compounding. The power of compound interest is the quiet differentiator. A dollar invested in your 20s can be worth many (nearly 70 times) more than that same dollar invested later—not because you worked harder, but because you gave it more time to work. Compounding rewards patience. Consistency builds momentum. Time does the heavy lifting. You demonstrated it well—wealth isn’t built in one moment. It’s built through a series of faithful, intentional decisions over time. LW
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Lance Wardlaw
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8points to level up
@lance-wardlaw-2580
Building wealth

Active 13h ago
Joined Jan 21, 2026
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