#64 Leaving a Legacy Through Your Daily Actions: Planning Today for Tomorrow’s Impact

By Dr. Richard Perhai, Dr. Larry Oats

Introduction

I was sitting in a small living room a few years ago. The house belonged to a woman in our church named Martha. She was ninety-two. The air smelled like old paper and tea. She knew she didn’t have much time left. She reached over to a side table and picked up a Bible. The leather was peeling. The spine was held together by clear tape. “This is all I have to give them,” she told me.

She wasn’t talking about money. She had a house and a small savings account. But she didn’t care about those things. She was talking about her grandkids. She had spent forty years writing in the margins of that Bible. She wrote down prayers when her son was sick. She wrote down verses that kept her sane when her husband died. She was worried. She asked me, “How do I leave a Godly legacy for my grandchildren?”

We often think about leaving a legacy as a legal problem: wills, taxes, and who gets the good china. Those things matter because we want to be responsible. But they aren’t the heart. An estate is what you leave for someone. A legacy is what you leave behind.

The Bible says we are just passing through. We are like mist. That sounds dark, but it is actually helpful. It means we can stop trying to build a kingdom for ourselves. We don’t have to be famous. We don’t have to have our name on a building. We have to be faithful.

History is full of people who felt this friction. In the early church, people lost everything for their faith. They didn’t have bank accounts to leave behind. They had stories. They had the Gospel. They passed down the truth that Jesus is Lord. That was enough to change the world. Today, we have a gap. We go to church on Sunday and talk about eternity. Then on Monday, we log in to our bank accounts and feel a different kind of pressure. We want to be secure. We want our kids to be safe. But the world is broken. Money can disappear. Health can fail. I see this struggle in my office all the time. A father comes in, looking tired. He has worked sixty hours a week for twenty years. He has provided a great life for his family. But his kids don’t know him. And they don’t know his God. He realized too late that he was building the wrong house.

This guide is about fixing that focus. It is about Biblical stewardship. That is a heavy word. It means you are looking after something that belongs to someone else. Your life belongs to God. Your money belongs to God. Even your children belong to Him. We are going to talk about how to live in a way that lasts. We will look at the hard questions. We will talk about money and inheritance, but we will look at them through the lens of the Cross. We will talk about how to write a legacy letter.

It is messy work. Faith always is. You will probably realize you’ve made some mistakes. I have too. But God’s grace is bigger than our bad planning. You can start today. It doesn’t take a million dollars. It takes a quiet heart and a willing spirit. Let’s look at how it works.

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#64 Leaving a Legacy Through Your Daily Actions: Planning Today for Tomorrow’s Impact

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