The Illusion of Wealth You begin with nothing. In your 20s and 30s, the goal is to become a millionaire. Through hard work, sacrifice, and relentless ambition — you achieve it. Then the target shifts. Now it’s hundreds of millions. More expansion. More accumulation. More influence. By your 40s, you reach it. Again, the goalpost moves. Now it’s billionaire status. Decades of building, gathering, acquiring, and protecting wealth. By your 50s or 60s, you finally arrive. And then comes the unexpected realization: “Vanity of vanities… all is vanity.” — Ecclesiastes You have everything money can buy: Comfort. Access. Influence. Luxury. Freedom to go anywhere and do anything. Yet something is still missing. A void remains. So many spend the next chapter of life trying to rediscover purpose — turning toward philanthropy, giving away what was once accumulated so aggressively. All while operating within systems that often undervalue workers, because society taught us: “Shareholder value is king.” But Bible presents a deeper vision of wealth. To avoid the illusion, we must study men like Job — a man who understood that wealth was never merely about possession, status, or accumulation. The life of Job reveals a higher purpose: Wealth is stewardship, not ownership. Provision, not pride. Service, not self-glorification. True prosperity is not measured by what you gather for yourself, but by how faithfully you reflect the heart of GOD through what has been entrusted to you. #BusinessByTheBook