From Burnout to Breakthrough: Faith-Based Financial Planning for a Life of Peace and Purpose
Prefer to listen? Check out episode 038 the path to lasting change of the One Degree Podcast
Making a big life or financial change often feels overwhelming, especially when efforts seem to stall or fail. The VIM framework, introduced by Dallas Willard in Renovation of the Heart, offers a practical pathway to real transformation. This model—Vision, Intention, and Means—breaks the change process into actionable steps, empowering you to achieve lasting results. Here’s how it works and how you can apply it in your personal finances, business, and daily life.
1. Vision: The Dream of What Could Be
Everything begins with a clear vision. Without it, efforts lack direction and purpose.
Ask Yourself: What frustrates you in your finances or business? Are you overwhelmed by debt, stuck in a savings rut, or unsure of your next steps? Visualize your ideal future.
Examples of Vision:
Becoming debt-free and experiencing financial freedom.
Tithing generously and making a kingdom impact.
Running a business that energizes you without burning you out.
Why It Matters: Vision provides the finish line, guiding daily decisions and keeping you motivated. Without it, efforts become aimless daydreaming.
2. Intention: A Clear Decision to Change
Once the vision is in place, the next step is commitment. Intention turns abstract dreams into actionable decisions.
Key Question: Am I ready to prioritize this change and commit to it?
Example for Business Owners: Reassess your business direction. Decide to shift from survival mode to thriving by taking specific steps like focusing on meaningful work or redefining goals.
Small Wins: Intention doesn’t require perfection. Even the smallest decision can break the inertia and create momentum.
3. Means: Small, Practical Steps Forward
Change is sustained through tangible, repeatable habits—the means to move toward your goal.
Start Small:
Set up an automatic savings draft, even if it’s $1.
Create a comprehensive list of debts, including balances, interest rates, and payoff timelines.
Make a "stop doing" list in your business to identify tasks to delegate or eliminate.
Focus on Habits: Tiny, consistent changes compound over time. As James Clear emphasizes in Atomic Habits, incremental improvements lead to dramatic results.
Pro Tip: Reflect on tools like automation and visual reminders to keep yourself aligned with your goals.
Balancing the Three Elements
All three components—vision, intention, and means—must work together. Here’s what happens when one is missing:
Vision + Intention Without Means = Frustration. You’re committed but don’t know where to start.
Vision + Means Without Intention = Guilt. You have the tools but haven’t fully decided to change.
Intention + Means Without Vision = Burnout. You’re doing the work but lack clarity on why.
Aligning Change with Faith
Transformation doesn’t happen in isolation. Bring your areas of pain or guilt to the Lord, casting your burdens on Him as 1 Peter 5:7 encourages. True change involves partnering with God to align your actions with His purpose for stewardship, generosity, and obedience.
Conclusion
The VIM framework simplifies the process of change into three manageable steps. Start with a clear vision, commit to intentional decisions, and implement practical means. Over time, these small, consistent actions will compound, leading to significant impact in your finances, relationships, and spiritual walk.
If this resonates with you, share your thoughts or questions through the Ask Me Anything form at openhandedwealth.com/onedegree. Let’s take the next step together, one degree at a time.