Episode 35 - 10 Ways to Integrate Your Faith as a Financial Advisor with Eric Chetwood and Rachel McDonough

 

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What does it mean to be a Christian financial advisor? There are lots of possible answers to this question, but today we look at two experts in the field, Eric Chetwood and Rachel McDonough, to hear what they think. 

When it comes to integrating your faith as a financial advisor, these two are living it out in the real world. Their insights will be helpful for anyone who is a financial advisor, or for anyone who is looking for one.

Useful Links:

10 Tangible Ways to Integrate Your Faith as an Advisor

Investing as Ambassadors


Episode Transcript

Some listeners have found it helpful to have a transcription of the podcast. Transcription is done by an AI software. While technology is an incredible tool to automate this process, there will be misspellings and typos that might accompany it. Please keep that in mind as you work through it. The FDI movement is a volunteer-led movement, and if youโ€™d like to contribute by editing future transcripts, please email us.

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Henry Kaestner: Welcome back to the faith driven investor podcast. We've got an edition today that is probably a little bit overdue, and that is that we're going to talk to some folks that are in the businesses professionals helping customers from retail through an institutional understand how to process the world of faith driven investments. A good number of our audience, of course, are direct investors and are in in the process of figure out how did they do angel investments, how do they pick out funds? And I think that we can all realize pretty quickly, that's pretty intimidating stuff. There's a lot there's incredible amount of complexity. There's incredible amount of selection. And through the grace guy, that selection is just increasing. And so the question then is where do I go to get some good counsel or how do I talk to somebody about my own particular needs rather than just reading an article about where I might invest in the latest trends or listening, of course, to a podcasts like this. How does that really impact me in my own financial situation? So faith driven advisors that are in the investment world are incredibly valuable and they view what they do as a mission and a ministry. And we've got two of the very best with us today. And I've been looking for this episode. Eric and Rachel, thank you for joining.

Rachel McDonough: Thanks for having us.

Henry Kaestner: Tell us a little bit as we get started just a little bit about each of you. Where are you calling from today, what your background is? We're going to start back in my hometown of Durham, North Carolina, to Eric, who is a friend and neighbor in. And then we want to move to Wisconsin and hear from Rachel about what she's doing. But, Eric, tell us about what got you to this spot where you are full time ministry in the financial marketplace.

Eric Chetwood: Yeah, yeah. Well, first of all, Henry, I think I speak for Rachel when I say I feel really grateful for you and your team because you guys have really let out in the faith and work discussion, at least for folks in my circle of influence. And many of the guests that you have had are heroes of mine. So I feel really humbled to be speaking with you all today.

Henry Kaestner: Well, before you go on. Thank you for that. That just helps me feel that much better about having had you on the show. That was awesome. Thank you. It's awesome to serve.

Eric Chetwood: It is really a humbling experience. But for me, I would say that my story after college at USC, I spent a gap year doing a Bible program in Denton, Texas, right outside of Dallas. And that year was really one of the most amazing investments of time that I could think of. And I give thanks to it for this day. But I knew that at the conclusion of that program, I wanted to come back to North Carolina and specifically play out my life in Durham, North Carolina, because I joined the church here during college and I wanted to come back and be a part of what God was doing through the summit church. And so after coming back home to join an advisory team in 2004 with an amazing mentor and boss who later became my business partner, who taught me what it looks like to love Jesus in this industry and how to care for clients holistically. So, you know, I got certified from a planner designation in 2007. And really the only other significant data point in my story would be that our team left our wire house in 2005 and started an independent registered investment advisory firm, which has given us a lot of the freedom to implement some of the initiatives that we'll talk about today.

Henry Kaestner: Rachel, tell us a little bit about the same on your side to your background, how you found yourself, where you are today.

Rachel McDonough: Sure, I am an unlikely candidate. If you look just at the data from my background, I guess unlikely candidate to be a financial adviser. I was raised as a missionary kid in Kenya, East Africa. My parents as missionaries did not have a lot of wealth in this world. Maybe they stored up some treasures in heaven, but the balance sheet was looking a little lean. I remember we would come back on furlough to the United States and have a free lunch, get government assistance to get a free lunch at school, and then we would go back to Kenya. And I was obviously the rich kid in Kenya. So I'd go this back and forth from rich kid to poor kid in Kenya. I would have other children and come up to me in Nairobi and ask me for money. And I always had at least a little bit of spending money in my pocket. So it really made an impression on me at an early age about what it means to have wealth and what it means to be wealthy. I learned a lot about some of those intangible lessons of internal wealth and external wealth and what it takes to, I guess, transition from having money to being in a place of abundance, of being able to use that money to create something good in the world. So I was taken with that idea very early on in my career. As you know, how do we actually use the money that God's entrusted to us to make a difference in the lives of the people around us? So fast forward a bit. After college, I took a job as a receptionist at Merrill Lynch in downtown Minneapolis, and I got bored with that after about the first 20 minutes. And so I started studying for some licensing exams. Much to my surprise, I passed them all quickly and I marched into the director's office one day and said, I want you to hire me as a financial adviser. And here's my 20 arguments of why you should do that. And to my surprise, he didn't need any of my arguments. He just said, yeah, OK, you can have a shot. So there I was with no family money to start with and no book of business to inherit or purchase. And somehow, by the grace of God, there was always enough provision. I would always bring in just enough clients to meet all my hurdles. And shortly thereafter, a much like Eric the Lord released me from that warehouse and I went to the independent channel at Raymond James and then from there followed the Lord again to make a change to Ameriprise Financial, where I served today.

Henry Kaestner: You've had some leadership positions at Ameriprise, correct? You've gotten together with other groups of faith driven advisers there.

Rachel McDonough: Yes, I currently serve on the leadership team as a vice president of the CFAN Network. That's a Christian franchise advisory network. There are eleven hundred of us at Ameriprise Financial Advisors have raised their hand and said, yes, I'm a Christian. I want to figure out how to bring my faith to work and live at the intersection of faith and finance and be well equipped to serve Christian clients who come into our practice and celibacy found that work has really become a group of friends and had the honor and the privilege to help train them and equip them to take values based investing or faith based investing and apply it and implemented in their practices through quarterly webinars and newsletters and some one on one coaching.

Henry Kaestner: Eric, you talked to at the beginning about your relationship with his friend and mentor, now partner, Rick Adams. What was it that he taught you about integrating your faith with the vocation you've got?

Eric Chetwood: Yeah, I think one of the things was just that how we care for clients comprehensively and that can for clients comprehensively is a lot more than just rates of return and standard deviation that it is speaking in to really all of the way that money impacts people, which money impacts people relationally, it impacts people emotionally, especially during this current pandemic. So being able to care for clients in every way that money impacts them is one of the ways that we can really reflect and represent our savior.

Henry Kaestner: Well, both of you have been a great encouragement to me and your involvement in the larger movement of faith driven investing. And Rachel, you've served really well and with great leadership in some of our working groups. And Eric, you've written an article for FDI. I am talking about how you see God calling us to live fully integrated lives. Talk to us a little bit about what you mean by that, about fully integrated lives within the context of finance, or maybe not just within the context of finance, but just what do you mean?

Eric Chetwood: Yeah. So one of the things that I have really loved about listening to you guys in this podcast is that you all examine integrating faith and work from so many different angles and living a life that doesn't segregate the sacred and the secular. And I would say that that's a topic that I really enjoy talking about just because I used to have a very disintegrated, compartmentalized life where I saw my relationship with God and personal ministry over here and then work over here. And that worldview caused me to buy into a lie. Early in my career. And that why is this? That work is something that I endure. So I can make a paycheck in order to fund the activities that I'm actually passionate about. And I think that lie is very prevalent in our culture. And I think financial advisers are really complicit in that, even in how we frame the retirement discussion. You know, Mr. Card, do what you have to do so that you can retire and then do what you want to do. So whenever I hear that logic, it's usually a sign that someone doesn't understand the integrated purpose that God has for them. And it will be very difficult for them to experience the abundant life that he promised. So for me, I didn't understand the theology of work, and because of that, I didn't really grasp God's full purpose for me. I didn't see all of the redemptive opportunities in my job as a wealth manager, and they were right in front of me because I was looking for them. And that led me to kind of a crisis of confidence and work, feeling very meaningless and empty. And so over the course of some time, I learned something that just dramatically impacted my life and career. And I learned that all of us, you and me and Rachel and everyone joining us, regardless of their profession. If you're a follower of Jesus, you're in full time ministry. And, you know, where do I get that? Ephesians for specifically eleven and twelve, says that the primary function of a posture or a minister is to equip the Saints for the work of the ministry. They are to equip the Saints for the work of the ministry. And that statement just has massive implications. It means that our pastors should not be the only ones doing ministry. It means that our pastor should need to be the primary ones doing ministry. It means that we, the Saints, get to the ministry. And that means that everyone listening to this is both empowered and expected to be primary agents of gospel, ministry and reconciliation. And Henry. And till we understand that until I understood that this democratization, until we see ourselves as the aroma of Christ in real estate or a kingdom of priests and wealth management or as ambassadors of price and private. We miss out on. Part of the great adventure, we miss out on the joy of knowing that we're fulfilling our integrated purpose in life. So the first application for us is financial advisors is to recognize that our relationships with clients are, by nature. One of the most intimate professional relationships that they have and that no one may be other than their doctor is allowed in to their hopes and dreams or abilities. The way that we are. So God could potentially use us as financial advisors to make a bigger impact in a client's life than any pastor or priest.

Henry Kaestner: That's an awesome thing to lean into. Rachel, I know you well enough to know that that's something you absolutely subscribe to, too. How do you see that actually working out with your clients? What does it mean when the rubber meets the road? Client comes in, you're having that meeting. How is it that you even just approach this concept of a more integrated life and the meaning of purpose? And is Eric just said, you know, you're invited into this special relationship to understand their hopes, their dreams, their fears and their anxieties. How do you see that mission's been part of the Saints being equipped to do the work of the church?

Rachel McDonough: Yes, I agree with Eric and Eric. I love your passion and enthusiasm. I share it. I think that our role is a very pastoral role and it's a role of coaching as a role of helping clients to hear God for themselves. So as the word of God tells us, we don't actually need a human teacher per say. We have the Holy Spirit and he promises to lead us and guide us into all truth. And we have the word of God, which is sufficient for instruction in every area of life. But what an adviser can do is come alongside a client or a couple and really help them to lean in and listen. Right. I remember some of the greatest memories that I have as an advisor are times when I've just been able to almost be outside of the conversation, just facilitate a setup for a husband and wife to come together before God in prayer and discover his plan and his purpose for their life. One of those examples was there was a couple. The husband was a civil engineer and the wife was a CPA. And they had some extra money that they talked about potentially investing in public securities. And as they talked further. The wife really said, you know, more than anything else, I have faith and confidence that God has given my husband tremendous capacity for creating wealth and creating jobs through his business and his company. And I would rather see us reinvest this money back into his work that I believe God's call them to and bless them to. And she must not have said that to him out loud before because, I mean, he was almost moved to tears. And that was just the result of us, not me having some kind of tremendous insider wisdom, but me just saying, come on, Dad, we need you to show up and do what only you can do to be the shepherd of your sheep. And the word of God is very clear, says my sheep. Hear my voice, my sheep know my voice and the voice of a stranger they won't follow. So we should, as believers, come to God's word and come to our decision making in real life with the expectation that we can anticipate the shepherd's voice being present to lead us in a personal and relevant way in day to day decision making.

Henry Kaestner: Hear, hear. That's awesome. Eric, I want to ask you, Rachel brought up this illustration about a husband or wife working together. Are there times that you're invited into people's lives that you feel like you're a little bit of a marriage counselor first?

Eric Chetwood: Sure. You know, it's amazing that the husband has his own risk tolerance and his own financial goals and aspirations, and the wife has her own risk tolerance. And surprisingly, in the humor, you know, God's creation, he normally allows people who are diametrically opposed to marry each other. And so a lot of times you yeah, you are dropping financial grenades, so to speak. You're asking questions and then maybe even ducking a little bit. And that is, you know, an area where so many times I tell people that our role a lot of people think that this industry is all about financial analysis and it is to some degree. But I feel especially in the last few weeks during the Kovik crisis, I have felt more like a therapist than I have a financial counselor. And so, so many times people will come to us in the last questions that really aren't necessarily financial. They're just about life wisdom. And that's why it's so intimate. And that's why it's so far to get to walk through different chapters of life with books.

Henry Kaestner: Rachel, as you do this and you walk through different chapters with different people and it's had hundreds and hundreds of conversations with individuals and with couples and with families. How has it impacted the way that you yourself think about me? You talked about, of course, your upbringing and being rich and poor at the same time. But as you've gone ahead and just heard the collective responses about financial planning and how to think about generosity and investments from your clients, has that changed the way that you think about money, too?

Rachel McDonough: I would say the biggest influence on the way that I think about money has been, you know, hopefully the word of God. Right. That's the right answer. But also, Kingdom Advisors has been a tremendous blessing to me and the wisdom of Ron Blue and Rob West and some of the other leaders thought leaders there.

Henry Kaestner: For those of us who don't know, who are listening, who don't know what Kingdome Advisors is, what is Kingdom Advisors?

Rachel McDonough: Kingdom Advisors is a fantastic organization for financial professionals. And they created a core curriculum. I know, Eric, you've gone through it and I have as well. This CKA certified kingdom advisor curriculum, is kind of like the biblical version of the CFP, I guess. And that allows us to really take a deep dove into God's word to develop personal convictions on several different topic areas, to read the scriptures and then pause and listen for the high spirits voice to make decisions on different areas of life, such as giving, managing debt, spending choices, investing choices and so on, has been a tremendous resource. They've created lots of things that can be shared with clients as long as you're if you're a financial advisor. Of course, you need to check that with compliance, but they've been great tools and great resources for our clients and that's really had a huge impact on me. The client conversations themselves. I would say have just given me a tremendous amount of depth and understanding and appreciation for the level of each person is at a different place. You know, it's really a journey. This is a financial journey. And our job, my job and Eric's job should be to meet that person on their journey, whatever stage of the journey they're at. Not with condemnation or judgment or you should do this and you shouldn't do that. But help me understand how you thought here. Helped me understand where you'd like to go. And then let me come alongside you and help you and assist you to complete that journey.

Henry Kaestner: Eric, what do you think is the biggest mistake you see a lot of your clients make in the way? Just that they think about money and planning?

Eric Chetwood: Yeah, I would say a lot of times having a short term mentality and allowing the headlines of the day to determine their investment decisions. I know that that's something that you guys have talked about a lot. That's why one of the things that we say to clients is that outperforming the market is not a financial goal. It's not a financial plan that their behavior is going to have probably more to do with their investment outcomes. Specifically, the discipline to hold tight to a quantifiably data driven financial plan. Their ability to adhere to that plan is going to have more to do with their long term financial success than any market timing or stocks.

Henry Kaestner: Do you ever find out that you work with clients that don't yet have a faith and you get an opportunity to share within the reason for the hope that you've got?

Eric Chetwood: Yeah, absolutely. So our book is probably maybe 50 percent of our people are believers and 50 percent of them are not believers, some staunchly opposed to faith in the gospel. And so one of the things that we talk about a lot as a team is that even if our clients don't yet love Jesus, that doesn't change the fact that Jesus loves every single one of our clients and that we can be if we are the aroma of Christ. You know, that means when clients interact with us and the way that we care for them, we do everything for them as if we were doing it out to the Lord. And as they interact with their sets, they smell us, if you will. They ought to be able to smell love and joy and peace patients, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control. And because we're able to speak into so many areas of their life, not just their finances, then we're able to be that aroma or we strive to be that aroma and reflect well on our king.

Henry Kaestner: So I want to ask you both something that's obviously it's top of mind for all of us on this podcast, which is this concept that we might be able to invest guides, resources for his glory, participate in the work that he's doing in his kingdom, and not just necessarily being of the mindset that, gosh, I want to make as much money over here and then give it all away here. But that very process of stirring the wealth and investments might provide investment capital to different enterprises that are being used to transform culture. So any thoughts what you guys are seeing in terms of trends? Is this something is becoming more mainstream or more clients talking about it? Just want you both riff on that a bit.

Rachel McDonough: I have a couple of statistics to share on that. So there is currently about 51 trillion dollars held by Christians who have specifically expressed an interest in aligning their investments with their values. And as we know, money, especially in the financial services industry, really has a voice of its own. Money talks. What would happen? I just want to think hypothetically, what would happen if we saw 51 trillion dollars exit a particular industry like pornography or abortion. And it's not all about what you're against instead of what you're for. I understand the importance of embracing positive investments. But what would it do? I mean, that's an easy thing. The exclusionary screening, the ability to screen out certain types of industries or certain companies from our portfolio is becoming increasingly easy and accessible to investors of all sizes. So what kind of a message could we say with our cumulative voice and then with the shareholder advocacy that's been going on as well with certain fund companies just actively behind the scenes? Even if we don't personally engage with those companies ourselves, we know that we can easily hire a mutual fund company who's going to engage on our behalf and express our values, the values that are portrayed in the Bible. And if we have the ability to do that. Why not? You know, I think we should not ask ourselves why should I engage in this activity of using investment vehicles that have a values alignment? But why wouldn't I? Especially as far more products are being created that have better and better performance. And the fees have come down substantially. There is just such an opportunity for us to give our clients the gift of not only having a relationship with their investments that's based on returns, but also a relationship with their investing activity that's based on their values and a way to live out who they are and have a greater sense of wholeness in their investing.

Eric Chetwood: Yeah, I mean, I'll just add to that for us. This is something that we're growing in and we've grown in very recently because I think a few years ago, as we were looking at the investment arena, faith driven funds and ETF and things like that, it was pretty slim. And there wasn't a lot of track record or at least that I saw there wasn't a strong track record. And so we have revisited that because this is absolutely that we want something that we want to at least provide to our clients and make sure that they are living in integrity, that their investments are congruent with their belief system. And it's something that we're growing in for sure. And I've been very encouraged. I think Rachel probably knows more about this space than I do. But I've been very perche saying that the universe of available investment options or fund options that are specifically focused on redemptive investing is growing. And the track records are getting better and better and the internal expenses are decreasing. So I think that's a positive for financial advisors who are listening to this, who are open to the possibility that they might incorporate those into their portfolios. And one of the things I think Rachel made a great point on is that in the event that you're not in a position where you're managing a portfolio where that's outsourced, you know, to the advisory team within a bigger warehouse or something like that, you can absolutely be an advocate for some of the fund companies, Henry, that you guys have had on this podcast. You know, even tired and thrive, Praxis and Timothee and Inspire and Nabay, Maria and others, God Stone to be an advocate for them to have access on those trading platforms, I think is really important that all of us can be a partner.

Henry Kaestner: I think that a lot of strides that have been made in a lot of the warehouses, in a lot of the larger platforms for financial advisors to incorporate more faith friendly, faith driven investment vehicles. And yet, because of compliance, anybody's on a platform like that will never be able to have complete carte blanche on the things they do. Believing that angel investing and finding faith driven entrepreneurs in your own community is a great place to be able to put your shoulder to the power folks, to be able to mentor, to be able to get actively involved. By really having skin in the game, be strapped to the mass. I got to be careful about mixing metaphors here. But are there ever times where you see that you need to encourage your clients to investigate other ways that they might be able investigate according their faith that are beyond your own abilities as financial advisors on a specific platform?

Eric Chetwood: Yes. So I think one thing for us that I was very encouraged to see was just the opportunity to within donor advised funds, specifically a partner that we've used in the past, National Christian Foundation. Being able to have exposure to some private equity vehicles within those donor platforms. And I think that is really encouraging. And there's always going to be a conflict of interest whenever you have an advisor who is compensated as a percentage of the assets that they manage. There's going to be a conflict of interest there to redirect some of those funds elsewhere. But as long as that is acknowledged and. You know, walking through that with the client to say, hey, I do think that their private placement, real estate investment, that I was having redemptive component to that. I think that absolutely has a place in your portfolio. I do think that that private equity component that has a redemptive quality to it has a place in your portfolio, because when we as advisors only focus on, oh, I don't want to lose assets, then we're giving in to a scarcity mentality and we are doing what is right for the client in building those allocations in a way that is truly diversified, then I absolutely believe that God will replenish that in order that I just add to this isn't about private investment, but one of the things that I've been seeing that clients have really appreciated has been understanding what's inside the fund wrapper.

Rachel McDonough: So, so many of the investments that advisors use with their clients are not individual stocks for other their ETF or their mutual funds. And that's a great idea. If you don't have time to be tracking individual stocks all the time. Right. So by using a fund, though, we kind of remove investors one more step away from the companies that they are owners of as being shareholders. And so I think it's important. I've been including in the quarterly agenda with my clients quarterly review agenda. I've just been adding in a little segment at the bottom of each meeting agenda that says know what you own and reintroducing clients to the companies that they own, not X, Y and Z Fund, but the individual companies inside of the fund and telling the story of the companies to the clients. So one that I put on an agenda recently revealed a medical technology advancement that had happened through one of the companies that was inside of a mutual fund that a client owned. And as I sat across the table from her, she got really quiet. Now, all of a sudden, she just said, well, you know, if I could do that with my money, I don't even care if it makes money or loses money. And it's not that we're advocating that you should see your investment dollars as charitable giving dollars. But what a value and a blessing for clients to be able to have a positive impact even with their investment dollars. For most of us are giving dollars are a smaller bucket than the dollars that we need to invest and save for the future. And so if we can have a positive Kingdome impacts, not just with the charitable dollars, but with the investment dollars to start to understand what's inside the wrapper and understand that those are businesses and that as shareholders we are business owners. It's really been a powerful and positive experience for clients.

Henry Kaestner: I think that's a great illustration. You touched on something there about the difference between investments and giving. And I want to delve into that a little bit. I know each of you both enough to know that where you stand in terms of storage versus ownership and that kind of concept, and you're both familiar with Randy Alcorn and his work and things like that. What are some of the tools that you use to work with clients as they wrestle with things like structure versus ownership, may wrestle with things like this? Should I tie? Is the tie enough? How do I think about generosity? And just how do you wear some of the different techniques and tools that you've used when you find an opening with some of your clients? To be clear, I understand, because I've heard from both of you attorneys, attorneys, yes. You need to listen first. You need to hear what they're saying. And yet there must be times over the engagement with a client, the relationship with a client. Do you get an opportunity to encourage them towards generosity or maybe even challenge them if you've worked with them for a very long time? How does that work out? And are there tools are there different things that you use to bring that topic to bear?

Rachel McDonough: Well, Henry, I think that the financial plan is the perfect tool and the perfect platform to do that. When you set out a financial plan with a client and you're saying, OK, here we are here your retirement goals, here's what you've saved, here's what you need to live on. It's just a really easy and natural way to have the conversation about what else would you like to do besides survive? It's a great time to talk about those charitable goals, the desire for a kingdom impact. Clients have passions. They have passions that God's place on their hearts. And when you give them the freedom and understanding that actually they have capacity to do more. I have not found that clients are tight fisted. I have found that they primarily need to understand that they're being responsible, but that they already have an inherent desire to be more generous.

Eric Chetwood: That's good. I think the only thing that I would add to that is that because our relationships with clients are so intimate. One of the things that I found really helpful for myself and for clients is to share with them how I've grown in my understanding of generosity. And I'll give you a personal example. You know, a couple of years ago, I read the book, God and Money by Gregory Barber and John Cortinas, and it absolutely wrecked me. I mean, wrecked me in a good way and how that changed my view of stewardship and generosity and how that changed my view of really releasing my business to be God's business was very helpful for me.

And to share my journey with clients was helpful. And so we provide them resources like God and money. That's actually one of the KPI that we track. How many copies of that did we give away today? How many copies of Every Good Endeavor by Tim Keller? Have we given away how many copies of How to be Rich? By this day we have given away. And that's one of our KPI is one of the other resources is that we have a chaplain for our clients. A lot of companies have chaplains for their employees. Henry, I know that you're a big advocate of that. We have chaplains for our clients because we do work for many different chapters of life with clients. And when we see that a client gets a cancer diagnosis or they lose a spouse, they don't care. They don't want to talk about the internal rate of return or the standard deviation of their portfolio. They want to talk about bigger things. And so when they share that with us, you know, we hurt with them. We pray with them if they'll allow us to. And then we say, I want you to know that we have a chaplain on staff who is trained to help you process this. And they want to come and sit next to you and process this with you in a non-threatening way. But that is another resource that we can use and leverage to guide our clients to a Shulem relationship with money.

Henry Kaestner: That's awesome. Rachel, I don't know that I ever appreciate the fact that you grew up in Kenya and that you had that type of background and that experience. And now that you've been more more exposed to faith driven investing. What are your hopes for what the development of investment vehicles might look like for the kind of guy that you grew up in?

Rachel McDonough: I think Africa will always be on my heart and my mind. It has a way of getting under your skin. I was really excited. There was a culvert, 19 bond that was invested in by one of the mutual funds that we've used. I was excited to see that I would even be more excited to see, you know, some type of for profit endeavor to bring clean drinking water and increased amount of economy to the continent of Africa. Well, I grew up in Kenya. I did spend a few weeks in the country of Ghana. And we really see that business and developing economy is the way that there will be a sustainable ramp out of poverty and for Africa. And so we did a fish farm project to try to create some jobs and kind of create some. Bonhomie in one of Africa's least developing nations and just being there for that few weeks. With the focus on incorporating business and the gospel was a tremendous impact on me.

Just to see, you know, what would it mean to give real people their dignity back by allowing them to produce income and produce revenue for their families? You know, I'd love to see some mutual funds dedicate a small percentage of their overall a, um, to economic development in the continent of Africa. I'd also be really excited to see some things happening in the private sector that, you know, people could invest and expect a return, but also, you know, really see Africa lifted out of poverty.

Henry Kaestner: Guys, you've been around this ecosystem long enough to know that. We ask every one of our podcast guests things that they're hearing from God in his word, maybe today, maybe yesterday, maybe this week, but some way that you feel that he's speaking to you through the Bible. And I'd love to hear what that's been looking like for each of you.

Eric Chetwood: Yeah. So one of the things that I'm learning right now is that I have a tendency to needlessly complicate what God asks of me. I realize that I have a big to want to do things for God rather than just enjoying being with God. And so one of the things that I've been meditating on is what Jesus says to the disciples. You know, one day when right before the ascension, he says two things. He says you will receive power and you will be my witnesses. And so I've been thinking about you and on what it means to be an effective witness. And one of the comforting things for me is that you don't really have to be particularly smart or articulate or even talented or rich. The only thing that you need to do to be a witness is you have to be willing to relay what you've seen and heard. And that's it, because the power he said in the previous verse, the power has already been taken care of. And so I think that manifests itself in a variety of different ways. Day to day. But being willing to be a witness and being the aroma of Christ again. You know, I think about, yo, my wife smells great and she has this perfume that sometimes at the morgue, I give her a hug and then I'll come to the office and sometimes I will smell her perfume at various times throughout the day. Sometimes other people will smell her perfume on me. And in the same way, in the same vein, I cannot be the aroma of Christ if I'm not communing with Jesus. And all the things that we talked about earlier were the fruit of the spirit comes out of that daily communion with you.

Rachel McDonough: I love that. It just sounds exactly like what that's been laying on my heart and a lot of ways. I've been reading this book, The Secrets of the Secret Place, by Bob Sorgi. If anyone needs a little Kickstarter to their quiet time, I think it's a fantastic usually one or two or three pages to just give you some keys to ignite your personal time with God. And we know that it is out of the abundance of our intimacy with him and only through our abundance of intimacy with him, that we can really have something valuable to give to clients. But I would say, like if I just looked at the scripture, that's been kind of a guiding scripture for me over the past 10 years. I would say First Corinthians, chapter three verses ten through fifteen. So by the grace God has given me, I laid a foundation as an expert builder.

This is Paul writing and someone else is building on it. But each one must be careful how he built for no one can lay a foundation other than the one already laid, which is Jesus Christ. If anyone builds on this foundation using gold, silver, precious stones, wood, hay or straw, his workmanship will be evident because the day will bring it to light. It will be revealed the fire in the fire will prove the quality of each man's work. If what he is built survives, he will receive a reward. If his burned up people suffer a loss, he himself will be saved, but only as if through the flames. That verse is just so powerful and so haunting and so inspiring at the same time. I love the concept of gold. You know, before building with gold. You think of a goldsmith. They don't build quickly. They build with quality. And so sometimes, especially in our culture, we tend to be busy, busy, busy and not so much in Kenya. Kenya, there's a more laid back culture and a less hurried pace. But here in the United States, we just tend to go, go, go 100 miles an hour all the time. I think what that does is it distracts us from the important things, the things that will last, the things that will have eternal fruit. And yet Jesus told us in June 15. It is to my father's glory that you bear much fruit, the fruit that will remain. So we know that our goal as believers should be out of our intimacy and our abiding relationship with Jesus. There should come through our. Lives an eternal fruit and eternal quality to our work that will last even far after our lives on this earth are done. And what an awesome challenge and one awesome ability to just call labor of a thought in our lives.

Henry Kaestner: Guys, it's been great having you on the show. I'm encouraged by your partnership, by your friendship, by your faithfulness. By the way that you're getting out there and you're really leading. Rachel, I think about eleven hundred people on a platform that you get a chance to minister in addition to administering your young basin. Eric, I love the way that you've been thoughtful about integrating your life in the thoughtfulness that you have with Rick about promoting and encouraging generosity and through different resources and just the way that you do life on people. This has been encouraging for me. I'm grateful for both of you and your time.

Eric Chetwood: Thank you. This has been a joy.

Rachel McDonough: Thanks. You too. Eric.