Jubilee Life Coach: Daily Meditations

How Digital Money Is Entering Everyday Life

Jubilee Christian Life Coach Season 1

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How Digital Money Is Entering Everyday Life

And What Christians Should See

Stablecoins, Tokenization, CBDCs, and Faith in an Age of Financial Power

Money is changing.

We have already moved from cash to cards, and from cards to mobile payments. But now the change is going deeper. The question is no longer only how we pay. The question is becoming what money is, who controls it, and who gets watched.

Three terms are worth understanding.

Think of a stablecoin like a digital dollar bill that lives on your phone. You can send it to anyone, anywhere in the world, almost instantly — no bank required. 

Tokenization is similar. Imagine taking a building worth a million dollars and cutting it into a million tiny digital pieces, so that almost anyone can own a small slice. That is what tokenization does to real-world assets like property, stocks, and bonds. Big banks and investment firms are already doing this. The technology is moving fast.

The benefits are real. Transfers can become faster. Costs can come down. Markets can operate around the clock. But Christians must ask more than, "Is it efficient?" We must also ask, "Is it righteous?"

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SPEAKER_00

Welcome to another episode of Jubilee Life Coaches Blog. Today we're continuing the series on the blockchain economy, the blockchain economy, and how Christians should be prepared for it so that we may be good stewards of the kingdom of God. Today we're asking this question how digital money is entering everyday life and what Christians should see in stable coins, tokenization, CBDCs, and faith in an age of financial power. Let's begin. Money is changing. We have already moved from cash to cards and from cards to mobile payments. But now the change is going deeper. The question is no longer only how we pay. The question is becoming what money is, who controls it and who gets watched. Three terms are worth understanding. Think of stablecoin like a digital dollar bill that lives on your phone. You can send it to anyone anywhere in the world almost instantly, no bank required. Tokenization is similar. Imagine taking a building worth a million dollars and cutting it into a million tiny digital pieces so that almost anyone can own a small slice of that million dollar building. That is what tokenization does to real world assets like property, stocks, and bonds. Big banks and investment firms are already doing this. The technology is moving very fast. The benefits are real. Transfers can become faster, costs can come down, markets can operate around the clock. But Christians must ask more than is this efficient? We must also ask, is this righteous? A system that works well for people with smartphones, internet access, and digital identification, this system may not work as well for the say elderly, the poor, the migrants, or those already pushed to the margins. Scripture repeatedly warns that God's people are not to ignore the vulnerable. Exodus 22 says, do not take advantage of the widow or the fatherless. And Proverbs 14 says, whoever oppresses the poor shows contempt for their maker. So efficiency is not morally neutral. Faster is not always better. Convenient does not always mean righteous. Then there are CBDCs. It stands for central bank digital currencies. So unlike stable coins, which are issued by private companies, CBDCs are issued directly by governments or central banks. Now, in simple terms, a CBDC is government-issued digital money. Now this could bring some good. Governments could send aid more quickly, corruption can could be reduced, financial services could reach people who are currently unbanked. However, CBDCs also raise serious concerns. Digital money can be tracked, it can potentially be programmed, and it can be restricted by time, place, category, or identity, even. So if physical cash disappears, then ordinary citizens may lose one of the last remaining ways to transact with one another without being monitored by the big government. This is where Christians need wisdom, not panic. The Bible teaches us to respect government authorities. Paul writes, let everyone be subject to the governing authorities, for there is no authority except that which God has established. Now the government has a God ordained role in maintaining order and promoting the common good. But Scripture also teaches that when earthly power demands ultimate allegiance, God's people must obey God rather than human. So the apostle said we must obey God rather than human beings, Acts 529. So our posture should not be fear, cynicism, or blind acceptance. It should be discernment. We should ask, who controls the system? What safeguards protect privacy? Who has access to the data? Can people still participate without surrendering basic freedoms? What happens to those who are poor, elderly, undocumented, or technologically excluded? Stablecoins and CBDCs may appear different, one's private, the others governmental, but both move us toward a more digital and traceable financial world. In one system, corporations may hold the data, in another, governments may hold it. Now in reality, the two may increasingly overlap. This is not a conspiracy theory. This is the direction in which technology, finance, and political power are naturally moving. So Christians do not need to call every new technology evil. We also do not need to baptize every innovation as progress. We do need to be wise as serpents and innocent as doves. So we should learn how these systems work. We should look beyond convenience and ask questions about power. We should remember those who may be left behind. We should be thoughtful citizens, not passive consumers. Above all, we must hold money loosely. Jesus said in Matthew six nineteen, do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, but store up for yourselves treasures in heaven. The form of money changes. The Christians' calling does not. We are stewards, not owners. Our ultimate security is not in cash, banks, bitcoin, stable coins, CBDCs or any financial system. Our trust belongs to God. So to keep our eyes open and think carefully, love our neighbors, and follow Christ faithfully in this changing financial landscape, that is the calling of this moment. Godspeed.