Recently, I had one of those moments that stops you in your tracks.
I was fishing along the banks of Percy Priest Lake in Nashville, TN, working to catch black crappie. Like any good fishing trip, I had my setup dialed in—rod, line, lure, technique. I was adjusting, thinking, putting in the effort.
Then something unexpected happened.
An otter showed up.
Not far from where I was standing, it started doing the exact same thing I was trying to do—but far better. It dove beneath the surface, came back up with a fish in its mouth, and calmly ate it right there.
No gear.
No strategy.
No effort like mine.
Just doing what it was created to do.
And then, just as quickly as it appeared… it disappeared.
I stood there for a moment, processing what I had just seen.
Here I was working, thinking, striving… and that otter simply lived within the provision already built into its life.
And that’s when the truth hit me:
God Owns It All
Psalm 24:1 reminds us,
“The earth is the Lord’s, and all its fullness, the world and those who dwell therein.”
That means:
• The lake isn’t mine
• The fish aren’t mine
• The opportunity to stand there and fish isn’t mine
It all belongs to Him.
The otter wasn’t worried about ownership—it simply lived in it.
And if I’m honest, sometimes we forget that.
We talk about “my money,” “my investments,” “my plan,” “my future.”
But from a biblical perspective, none of it is truly ours.
We are stewards.
A Kingdom Perspective on Stewardship
As a Certified Kingdom Advisor (CKA®), this is a foundational principle:
God owns everything.
We manage what He entrusts to us.
That includes:
• Our finances
• Our time
• Our relationships
• Our opportunities
It’s not about accumulation—it’s about alignment.
Alignment with His purpose.
Alignment with His principles.
Alignment with what truly matters.
Where Faith Meets Financial Planning
At Encompass Advisory Services, this is exactly how we approach financial planning.
Yes, we:
• Build investment strategies
• Plan for retirement
• Focus on tax efficiency and long-term growth
But underneath all of that is a deeper question:
Are we stewarding what God has entrusted to us in a way that honors Him?
Because financial success without purpose is empty.
But stewardship rooted in purpose brings clarity, confidence, and peace.
Striving vs. Trusting
That day on the lake reminded me of the tension we all live in:
We are called to:
• Work hard
• Plan wisely
• Be disciplined
But we are not called to carry the burden of provision alone.
The otter wasn’t anxious about its next meal.
And yet, how often do we carry stress about things far beyond that?
Jesus reminds us in Matthew 6:26 that if God provides for the birds of the air, how much more does He care for us?
The Takeaway
That fishing trip became more than just time on the water.
It became a reminder I won’t forget:
God provides.
God owns it all.
We are called to steward—not to control.
And when we truly understand that…
Everything changes.
Our perspective shifts from:
• ownership → stewardship
• control → trust
• anxiety → peace
Final Thought
I hope I see that otter again over the next few weeks.
But even if I don’t, the lesson is already clear.
Do your part.
Be a faithful steward.
But never forget who truly owns it all.