One of the most quoted verses about legacy is Proverbs 13:22: "A good man leaves an inheritance to his children's children..." When most people read that verse, they immediately think about money. A house. Land. Investments. A retirement account. There's nothing wrong with leaving financial blessings for future generations. In fact, wise stewardship is biblical. But if all we leave behind is wealth, we've missed the greater inheritance God desires us to pass on. Money can be spent. Property can be sold. Businesses can fail. But a legacy rooted in Christ can impact generations long after we're gone. Look at the life of Timothy. Paul reminds him, "I am reminded of your sincere faith, which first lived in your grandmother Lois and in your mother Eunice and, I am persuaded, now lives in you also" (2 Timothy 1:5). Notice what was passed down. Not wealth. Not possessions. Faith. Timothy inherited something that no market crash or economic downturn could ever take away, a family legacy of knowing and following God. The same principle appears in Deuteronomy 6:6-7, where God commands His people to keep His Word on their hearts and diligently teach it to their children. Faith was never intended to be something that stayed within one generation. It was meant to be modeled, taught, and lived so the next generation would know the Lord. As fathers, grandfathers, mentors, and leaders, we have to ask ourselves a difficult question: If my children inherited my relationship with Christ, would they be spiritually rich? Would they inherit a father who prayed? A man who opened his Bible? A husband who loved sacrificially? A leader who served humbly? A man who repented when he failed and pointed his family back to Jesus? Or would they inherit a schedule full of work, success, and possessions, but little evidence of a life surrendered to Christ? Psalm 78 calls us to tell the next generation about the works of God so that "they should set their hope in God." That is the inheritance every father should strive to leave.