Case Studies

Representative Planning Scenarios

1

A Widow Rebuilding Clarity and Confidence

The Situation

A woman in her early 60s lost her husband after decades of shared financial decision-making. She inherited responsibility for retirement accounts, taxable investments, and income decisions she had never needed to manage alone. While financially stable, she felt overwhelmed and unsure whom to trust.

A Common Approach

A typical advisory relationship begins with portfolio consolidation and income projections. While technically sound, the focus often remains on sustainability calculations, assuming the client’s goals and values are already clear.

Our Approach

We began by slowing the conversation down. Before discussing numbers, we took time to understand her fears, responsibilities, and sense of calling in this new season of life. Planning conversations were grounded in biblical stewardship rather than optimization alone.

We helped her clearly understand what she owned, why it existed in her portfolio, and how each component supported her need for income, stability, and flexibility. Decisions were framed around faithfulness and sufficiency, not performance benchmarks.

What Changed

Instead of merely feeling “financially secure,” she gained confidence. Her plan reflected not just income needs, but peace of mind, generosity boundaries, and clarity about what “enough” truly meant.

Why It Matters

Wise planning after loss requires more than technical skill. It requires trust, patience, and a framework that treats money as a servant, not a source of anxiety.

2

“Can We Retire Now?”
A Question of Discernment

The Situation

A couple in their late 50s had accumulated significant retirement savings and were considering stepping away from full-time work. Their financial picture was strong, but emotionally they were uncertain—torn between security, freedom, and a desire to be faithful with what they had built.

A Common Approach

Most advisors answer this question with projections, probabilities, and Monte Carlo simulations. The math is necessary—but it often leaves deeper questions unaddressed.

Our Approach

We still ran the analysis. But we also reframed the question itself. Retirement was treated not as an escape from work, but as a transition in stewardship. We explored spending boundaries, future generosity, and what role work, rest, and service might play in the next chapter of their lives.

Their investments were aligned to support long-term stability rather than chasing marginal gains. The goal was resilience and clarity, not maximization.

What Changed

They moved from anxiety to confidence—not because returns were guaranteed, but because their plan reflected conviction. Retirement became a thoughtful decision rather than a leap of faith based solely on projections.

Why It Matters

Financial independence is not the same as vocational clarity. Planning rooted in stewardship helps families make decisions they can live with—financially and spiritually.

3

Inheriting Assets Without Losing Direction

The Situation

A couple in their 50s received a significant inheritance following the death of a parent. While grateful, they felt overwhelmed — the assets were substantial, the investment decisions felt urgent, and neither of them had a clear sense of whether or how the inheritance should change their financial life. The weight of it felt more like a burden than a gift.

A Common Approach

Inheritance planning often focuses on tax efficiency and asset allocation, treating the funds as neutral capital to be absorbed into an existing portfolio.

Our Approach

We encouraged patience. Rather than rushing into decisions, we helped them reflect on the purpose of the inheritance and how it related to their broader calling. We reviewed the inherited investments in detail, ensuring they understood what they owned and whether it aligned with their convictions.

Where appropriate, we introduced values-aligned portfolio construction using direct index screening, helping them steward the inheritance with integrity while maintaining diversification and discipline.

What Changed

The inheritance no longer felt like a burden or disruption. It became an integrated part of their plan—supporting their family, generosity, and long-term goals without compromising their conscience.

Why It Matters

An inheritance is more than a financial event. Without wisdom, it can distort priorities. With stewardship, it can strengthen them.

4

Aligning Investments With Convictions

The Situation

A client nearing retirement became uneasy after learning what companies were held within their investment portfolio. While returns had been solid, they felt tension between financial success and personal conviction.

A Common Approach

Many advisors avoid these conversations altogether or treat values-based investing as purely ideological or performance-driven.

Our Approach

This conversation began with education, not assumptions. We helped the client fully understand how their portfolio was constructed and what it owned. We then discussed the biblical framework for conscience — the recognition, drawn from Romans 14 and 1 Corinthians 10, that Christians may reach different conclusions on questions like these in good faith, and that neither screening nor not screening constitutes more faithful stewardship. From there, we explored what the client actually wanted, given full clarity about the tradeoffs involved.

The client chose to implement a screened approach. That decision was theirs. We implemented it with discipline — using a direct-index approach that excluded specific industries while maintaining diversification and managing the real costs involved. Tradeoffs were discussed openly. No outcomes were promised.

What Changed

The client gained clarity — not because the portfolio was “perfect,” but because it was understood and intentionally chosen. They were no longer holding investments by default. They were holding them by decision.

Why It Matters

Integrity in planning means helping clients make informed decisions they can own — financially, morally, and personally. It also means being honest about what Scripture does and does not require. The Bible gives Christians genuine freedom in questions like these. What faithfulness in investing looks like is each person’s decision to make, and we take that seriously.

Understanding
What You Own

Many investors are surprised to discover how little visibility they have into the companies, industries, and activities held within their investment portfolios. Mutual funds and ETFs can obscure underlying holdings, making it difficult to know what your capital actually supports.

Christian Planning helps clients gain clarity — and, where desired, alignment — through careful portfolio review, disciplined screening, and values-aware investment construction. Our aim is not to provoke concern, but to provide understanding so decisions can be made thoughtfully and responsibly.

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