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‘Don’t Blame Your Stupidity on Christianity’: Dave Ramsey’s Blunt Advice to a Bride Whose Fiancé Refuses to Save
Key takeaways
- A household earning $6,000 a month can tithe $600 and still build a $15,000 emergency fund in roughly 3 years, proving giving and saving aren t mutually exclusive.
- Ramsey and Rachel Cruze argue the line between saving and hoarding comes down to attitude rather than amount.
- Many financial professionals are salespeople paid on what they push, not whether you end up wealthier.
A household earning $6,000 a month can tithe $600 and still build a $15,000 emergency fund in roughly 3 years, proving giving and saving aren t mutually exclusive.
Ramsey and Rachel Cruze argue the line between saving and hoarding comes down to attitude rather than amount. In their view, a funded emergency fund represents stewardship and not greed.
Many financial professionals are salespeople paid on what they push, not whether you end up wealthier. A fiduciary is the opposite. The SEC legally requires them to put your interests first. Advisor.com s free matching tool pairs you with vetted fiduciaries from firms like Vanguard, Empower, and Edelman — in under three minutes. See who you match with today.
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