Homepage / Academy Catalog / Work, Money, and the Ten Commandments

Work, Money, and the Ten Commandments

Discover how the Ten Commandments speak to faithful decisions about work and money.

About this Course

Work, Money, and the Ten Commandments offers a fresh look at the ancient guidelines for living. You'll walk through the Ten Commandments with an expert guide, who will invite you to consider how this ancient text provides foundational perspectives for today.

Gemini said A leather-bound Holy Bible resting next to a stack of silver coins and an open burlap sack spilling more coins.

What You’ll Be Able to Do:

Understand how the Ten Commandments address work, money, and economic justice.
Develop a deeper sense of vocation that integrates faith into every aspect of work and economic life.
Practice making economic and vocational choices informed by biblical values of justice, sabbath rest, and right relationship with God and neighbor.

How do we honor God in our daily work? What does faithful stewardship look like when it comes to money? When economic systems seem at odds with biblical values, how do we respond?

Many Christians navigate their financial lives feeling disconnected from their faith. Work, Money, and the Ten Commandments invites learners to understand vocation as more than occupation, to practice sabbath as both holy rest and economic disruption, and to make choices that honor God’s call for justice in every corner of life. By walking through key commandments and taking the time to apply them to you, you’ll finish the course equipped to integrate faith into every aspect of your work and economic life.

 

Modules

Reading the Ten Commandments

In this module, you will:

  • Understand the narrative contexts and varied numbering systems of the Ten Commandments, and recognize how the Bible addresses work and money throughout its laws, prophets, and wisdom literature.
  • Reflect on your current relationship to work and money in light of Scripture.
  • Practice faithful interpretation of biblical texts by applying guidelines that honor both the text and your current context.

 

“I am the LORD your God” (Remember You Were Slaves)

In this module, you will:

  • Learn that the experience of slavery and exodus is foundational to Old Testament law and shapes how God’s people are called to order their economic lives.
  • Develop awareness of how this shared spiritual ancestry of liberation can challenge and shape your own practices with work and money.
  • Examine what aspects of work or money come before God in your life and consider whether they function as competing sources of security or salvation.

 

“Remember the Sabbath”

In this module, you will:

  • Understand the two different rationales for sabbath found in Exodus and Deuteronomy—one emphasizing holiness and God’s rest in creation, the other emphasizing liberation from slavery.
  • Cultivate practices of rest that honor both the holiness of sabbath and its call to economic disruption and liberation.
  • Practice sabbath observance in ways that embrace values of justice, rest for all in your household, and freedom from the demands of productivity.

 

“You Shall Not Make For Yourself An Idol”

In this module, you will:

  • Understand how idols functioned as physical objects in ancient Israel and recognize the connection between material possessions, productivity, and modern forms of idolatry.
  • Reflect on the ways physical belongings and the pursuit of productivity may become false representations of what saves and sustains.
  • Examine specific areas of life where possessions or productivity compete with God's provision, and identify practices for reorienting trust toward God's care.

 

“You Shall Not Covet, Nor Steal”

In this module, you will:

  • Understand the power dynamics implied in biblical teachings about covetousness and how Scripture critiques those who use power to take what belongs to others.
  • Listen to God’s call for contentment and justice as you consider what “enough” means in your own life.
  • Reflect on the idea of “enough” in light of power dynamics and examine systems that reward greed and excess at the expense of others’ wellbeing.

 

The Ten Commandments in Your Life

In this module, you will:

  • Understand how the Ten Commandments provide a framework for just living that honors both God and neighbor, recognizing that obligations to God inevitably shape economic justice.
  • Deepen your sense of vocation, understanding it as encompassing your whole self and your first loyalty to God.
  • Reflect on economic choices you can make differently—not just in giving, but in earning, spending, and ordering all aspects of your life according to these commandments.

 

One-time purchase

With Faith+Lead Membership

One-time purchase

Get a free public display license to use for group study.

*by joining Faith+Lead Membership for just $19.95 per month

6 Modules

Self-Paced, On-Demand

Lifetime Access

Get to Know Your Instructors

Cameron B.R. Howard

Cameron Howard

Cameron Howard is an associate professor of Old Testament at Luther Seminary, where she joined the faculty in July 2012. She previously held visiting appointments at the Interdenominational Theological Center in Atlanta and the School of Theology at Sewanee, the University of the South.

Howard received a Bachelor of Arts degree cum laude with honors in religion from Davidson College, where she was inducted into the Phi Beta Kappa honor society. She holds a Master of Theological Studies from the Candler School of Theology and a Master of Theology from Columbia Theological Seminary. She received her Ph.D. from Emory University in 2010.

Among her publications are contributions to “The New Interpreter’s Bible One-Volume Commentary” (Abingdon 2010), the 20th anniversary edition of “Women’s Bible Commentary” (Westminster John Knox 2012), “Connections: A Lectionary Commentary Resource” (Westminster John Knox 2018), Presbyterians Today magazine, and the journal Word & World.  Committed to making academic biblical scholarship accessible and relevant to clergy and laypeople, Howard has written over two dozen essays for WorkingPreacher.org and is a contributor to BibleOdyssey.org, the Society of Biblical Literature’s web-based initiative for public biblical scholarship. Her book, “The Old Testament for a Complex World: How the Bible’s Dynamic Testimony Points to New Life for the Church,” was published by Baker Academic in June 2021.

Howard is a member of the Society of Biblical Literature and a ruling elder in the Presbyterian Church (USA).

Ready to Enroll?

Enroll in this on-demand course today or unlock free access to this and all Faith+Lead’s on-demand courses, plus more with a Faith+Lead Membership.

Enroll in this on-demand course

$55

One-time purchase

Popular

Access this on-demand course

$0*

*by joining Faith+Lead Membership for just $19.99 per month

Need financial support?

What to Expect with a Faith+Lead Academy Course

You’ll get a transformative learning experience that combines trustworthy theological teaching with spiritual practices, interactive elements, and a supportive online community.

Know

Expand your theological toolkit with fresh insights for today’s ministry landscape. Connect timeless wisdom with practical frameworks for navigating change.

Deepen your spiritual identity through transformative practices. Move from doing church to being church in ways that nurture authentic discipleship.

Practice skills to lead confidently in your ministry context. Take actionable steps to invite your community into God’s unfolding story.

Play Video

Every Academy course is designed to

Help your growth in one of these core areas:

connect with god

Develop a Christ-centered identity, grounded in theology, scripture, and spiritual practice, that empowers community members to live as disciples of Jesus Christ in everyday life.

Tell the story of Jesus and invite neighbors into Jesus’ way of life and love through words and actions they can recognize.

community

Listen deeply, name God’s presence in the midst of everyday life, and form life-giving relationships across all dimensions of diversity—both within and beyond the church.

Through mutual relationships with the neighbors among whom you’re hosted, join in acts of compassion, justice, and reconciliation as a witness to the ministry of Jesus—especially in places of suffering and despair.

ministry models

Harness skills of agile leadership, stewardship, fundraising, entrepreneurism, and management to be nimble enough to respond to a changing cultural landscape.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to be familiar with the Old Testament to take this course?

No prior knowledge is required. The course provides context and background for understanding the Ten Commandments and their relevance to contemporary life.

 

Is this course only for people in ministry?

While valuable for clergy and ministry leaders, this course is designed for any person of faith who wants to integrate their beliefs into their work and economic decisions.

 

How long will it take to complete this course?

The course includes 6 modules, each designed to take 15-45 minutes. You can complete it at your own pace—from a single day to several weeks.

 

Can I use this course for group study?

Yes! The course includes a leader’s guide with discussion questions and activities perfect for small groups, adult education classes, or study groups.

 

Academy courses consist of 6-10 lessons or modules, each walking you through the “know, be, do” learning framework. You’ll learn some new information with instructor videos and other resources (know). You’ll engage in a spiritual practice that will help you develop your faith around the topic (be). Then, you’ll be asked to apply what you’ve learned through activities completed online or in the “real world” (do).

Each module is designed to take 15-45 minutes. Some learners complete the course in as little as one day. Some do a module a day or even a module a week. We suggest allowing some time between modules to process what you are learning, but not so much time that you lose momentum.

Each course includes a flexible leader’s guide with multiple pathways for group facilitation. You’ll find thought-provoking discussion questions and practical activities that connect faith with daily life, designed to work with whatever preparation time you have available. These resources equip you to foster meaningful discipleship experiences that meet your community where they are.

The private online group allows you to connect with others. Because our courses don’t have a required start or stop date, you will encounter others in different places in the course and even in different courses altogether. This is by design. Feel free to interact as much or as little as you like.

Reach out via email to faithlead@luthersem.edu with your question and we’ll get back to you with a response within two business days.

The best way to connect with us is to complete this form with your suggestion. We always want to hear your feedback. You may also include it in the comments section of the course evaluation.

Don’t see your question addressed?

Email us at support@faithlead.org for more information. We’ll be delighted to connect!