Faith and Wealth is an independent U.S.-based editorial publication. We write for adults who already carry responsibility in their careers and households—or who are climbing with seriousness—and who want a calmer, more integrated frame for ambition, gratitude, and legacy. The voice is magazine-grade: discreet, literate, and direct. Nothing on the site is personalized financial, legal, or tax advice; we are storytellers and essayists, not a broker-dealer or RIA.
Faith & Wealth (the public brand you see in the masthead) explores prosperity mindset, spiritual capital, and the interior habits that tend to accompany durable success. We publish long essays on purpose, resilience, philanthropy, family culture, elite wellness, and the philosophy of enough. We may reference markets or money as cultural facts, always through an editorial lens. Readers who need product recommendations or portfolio construction should work with licensed professionals.
Faith and Wealth and the desk’s mandate
Our mandate is depth over volume. Each piece should feel like time well spent: reported where facts matter, reflective where meaning matters, and never sensational for clicks. We avoid dogmatic religion on one side and shallow hustle culture on the other. We also avoid “get rich quick” framing; that audience is not ours. When we monetize with display ads, including programs such as Google AdSense, we disclose mechanics plainly in our editorial disclosure and data practices in our privacy policy.
Audience, geography, and independence
Primary readers are typically 35–60, educated, and living in high-trust English-speaking markets—the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and Australia. A secondary cohort includes ambitious professionals in their late twenties to early forties who want a framework, not a checklist. Editorial decisions rest with the publisher. Sponsors cannot buy favorable reviews, and we do not let ad targeting dictate topic selection. Corrections run when we miss; send them through the contact page.
Transparency, ethics, and third-party context
We maintain terms of use, a cookie policy, and the disclosures linked above so that readers and advertising partners understand boundaries. For general background on truthful advertising in the United States—useful context even though we are not a consumer-finance site—see the Federal Trade Commission’s advertising and marketing guidance. That resource informs how we think about clarity without turning essays into compliance manuals.
Thank you for reading carefully. Faith and Wealth will keep refining this page as the publication grows; substantive updates will be reflected in the revision note on the live template.