
The Faithful Agent: A Christian Real Estate Podcast
The Faithful Agent is the real estate business podcast for Christian real estate agents and professionals who want to grow a thriving business without losing their soul.
Hosted by Garrett Maroon—husband, father of five, founder of The Faithful Agent nonprofit, and 100% referral-based top producer—this show offers honest conversations, biblical truth, and practical strategies for building a real estate career that honors your faith, your family, and your future.
Whether you’re a solo agent, team leader, or brokerage owner, you’ll learn how to stay grounded in your values while scaling with wisdom and purpose.
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The Faithful Agent: A Christian Real Estate Podcast
A Theology of Real Estate with Brett Johnson
What is a theology of real estate? What does it look like for you to view real estate as a calling rather than just a career? In this thought-provoking episode of The Faithful Agent Podcast, Garrett Maroon sits down with Brett Johnson to explore the powerful concept of a “theology of real estate.” Brett challenges listeners to view their work not simply as transactions or commissions, but as a divine assignment with eternal significance.
Together, they dive into the biblical importance of place, the ethical responsibilities of real estate professionals, and how agents can serve as stewards of God’s creation.
This episode will stretch your thinking and inspire you to ask deeper questions—not just about what you do, but why you do it. Whether you’re a new agent or a seasoned broker, this conversation will help you reframe your role through a kingdom lens and step more fully into your calling.
Brett Johnson is a Chartered Accountant, author, and founder of The Institute for Innovation, Integration & Impact, Inc. With 40+ years of experience and work with 400+ companies worldwide, he helps organizations pursue purpose beyond profit through leadership, innovation, and societal transformation.
Connect with Brett HERE to find his books, free resources, podcast & more!
Takeaways
- A theology of real estate highlights God’s purpose in property and place.
- “Place” matters deeply throughout the Bible—and still does today.
- Work is a divine assignment, not just a means to earn.
- Real estate can be a powerful tool for community restoration.
- Agents can empower first-time buyers and underserved groups.
- We need innovative, faith-filled solutions for housing affordability.
- Asking deeper, purpose-driven questions leads to lasting impact.
- The church holds untapped potential to bless neighborhoods through land and property.
- Real estate should serve people, not just investors.
- Understanding God’s intent transforms how we work and serve.
Chapters
00:00 – The Theology of Real Estate
06:03 – Understanding Place in God's Plan
11:58 – The Purpose of Real Estate
17:58 – Empowering First-Time Homebuyers
23:56 – Creative Solutions for Housing Affordability
30:00 – Building a Theology of Real Estate
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What's up everybody? Welcome back to another episode of the Faithful Agent podcast. I have Brett Johnson with me today, an incredible guest. And guys, you're going to love this. He probably has the best accent of anyone we've ever had on the show. So Brett, I am so glad you're here. We were talking pre-show and one of the comments you made was, do agents understand and talk about a theology of real estate, which is fascinating to me. So Brett, thank you for being on. Brother, let's dive in. What is a theology of real estate? What does that even mean to you? Hey, Garrett, great to be with you. Yeah, I worked with business people from around the world for a long time. And I remember sitting with some friends of mine who were selling real estate in Northern California in a pretty hot market. And I asked them this question, you know, what's your theology of real estate? Because place is super important to God. You know, people didn't get to know God. Adam and Eve didn't get to know him because they read a theology book or they went to seminary, but they saw what he had made. and God put them in a prepared place. And so place was super important to the assignment that God gave them. And then he gave them an assignment around the earth regarding the earth. it was a land related, property related, real estate related assignment in many respects. And if you look at real estate in scripture, it's there from the beginning, all the way through until we get to heaven, know, when there's a new heaven and new earth. one day out into the future, you the promise for doing a good job is to get to rule over cities. And this is a whole real estate playbook, if you like. And so we need to understand it. So, yeah, so it's really, really important. You know, I tell people you need to find your job in the Bible. And for real estate people, it's not that hard to do. But actually, I've worked with big real estate companies, property developers and others, and some of them actually haven't even thought about. what the Bible says about these things. So for me, having a theology of real estate says, okay, how does God feel about place? For example, one of the principles, and by the way, in our business at the Institute, we've identified 10 drivers of business impact. So in the old days, people used to talk about three, know, products, price, service, if you like, or product leadership, operational excellence, customer, individual. People would talk about those things, but I've identified 10 drivers of business impact, such as your purpose, your products, your positioning and so forth. They all start with a P. But one of them is place. And Garrett, the one that's least understood is place. People say, yeah, place is not that important. But I remember working with a company in Silicon Valley and we did a 10 P assessment on their business and they wrote rated place. as least important. And I said, just wait until you move to your new headquarters. It's going to become the number one thing. Then it was, who's got the biggest office? Who's closest to the CEO? What about this? Who's... And all of a sudden, place goes up in importance. And so God uses place as a megaphone to amplify his message. And so he adjusts, for example, when he's talking about promised land, big stuff, up goes Moses to the top of a mountain. I mean, he can see the whole thing. Other times, it's a valley, it's a valley of the shadow of death. Other times, it's next to a river. And so God uses place as a megaphone or an amplifier for what he is saying. So for example, the message says regarding John the Baptist that says, John the Baptist's message was just as austere as his surroundings. Now, John the Baptist is telling people, You gotta repent, you're a brute of vipers, all this stuff. And if you put him in a palace velvet couch, you know, sipping Margaritas, I mean, it's not gonna work. I mean, the guy was in the desert. He had like locusts sticking out of his teeth and all of that stuff, bad clothing. uh And so God sort of puts the place and the message together. So place is super important. So when you're selling somebody a home, It's something that can create space for God in their lives. I'll give you an example. was working with a real estate company, visiting them out in East Texas. No, West Texas it was. And they were doing property development. So they would buy a tract of land, cotton field or something, and they would come up with five model homes, set up a sales office, put in the services, the normal spiel. And so I listened to their whole story. And then I said to them, and they were very generous, wonderful company, they still are, paid for their people to go on a missions trip and everything. And I listened to their whole process. And then I said to them, so apart from putting a Bible verse on the two by four halfway through construction and handing the homeowner a Bible, you're no different than the pagan builder down the road. They were shocked. So I said to them, Do you ask God whether you should buy that piece of land? Do you ask God what his purpose was for that piece of land? Do you address the four things in scripture that defile the land? And then, do you invite Jesus onto your design team? Like, if his purpose is to create community, do you change the design of the development to create community? Or if it's to do healthy living or learning? or beauty or whatever it might be. Do you change the design or are you just chunking out cotton fields and doing X thousand hums a year? So it really got them thinking and they changed their whole approach. They changed their approach to their headquarters, all sorts of things because now there's an integrated view of God in place. yeah, so that's just generally you need to say, look at. go through, if you're selling real estate, you better go through the Bible from beginning to end. just, fortunately nowadays you've got search tools, look for place, property, property lines. And the intersection of place and the presence of God and people, because then you're not just selling people a home, you're getting them into a place where they can experience God potentially. It's amazing. So a lot to unpack. I love that though, right? That thought process even to the reality of just pausing to know, and it's challenging to me, what's my theology on what I do? Right? What does the Bible actually say about what I do each and every day? We talk a lot about on this show, Brett, of the faithfulness. versus the ambition or profit, right? Or even submission over the ambition, right? What does it look like for me to say to the Lord, all right, this is what I think makes a profit sense, Lord, right? But what is it that you have for me? And it doesn't mean that they're always opposite. They could absolutely be the same thing, right? There's, you know, there's so much to that to unpack in the nuance. But when it becomes what is your theology, right, which is a word that maybe some Christians don't even care about. But what does the Bible say? What does the Lord say? it a way to think about it? What does the Lord say about real estate? uh You wrote down so many different, or I wrote down so many different things. You said, your job in the Bible as one. Can you unpack what that means? Yeah, sure. I think a lot of people think that, you know, work is just what you do. And then there's the spiritual stuff, know, stuff that happens on a Sunday and so forth. But in reality, ah God revealed himself to us through his work and through his work products. So technically, God still can reveal himself, not technically, but practically. to other people through our work. So somebody in South Carolina, North Carolina, Tennessee, wherever it might be, can figure out what God is like by the way that we work, right? But if we think work is bad, I grew up thinking actually, Garrett, that work was punishment for sin, because when I was naughty as a kid, I got given more jobs. I figured, okay, yeah, like if you're naughty, you get more work. And... Yeah, and it's kind of like if Adam and Eve hadn't have gone for the apple, know, gone for the forbidden fruit, we would all just be hanging around. We wouldn't have to work. We'd be on the beach just, you know, angels peeling grapes for us. It would be awesome. And but you figure out that actually work is good. That work is a pre-fall concept. So God worked before the fall and he gave Adam and Eve an assignment before the fall. Work that was enjoyable. They co-created with God. They had an assignment which involved taking care of creation and getting it back into the order that God intended. So now I can either think, ah, real estate is bad because you're taking a nice forest and you're cutting it up and you're cutting down trees and you're putting up homes, or I can have a view that says, God intended the earth to be inhabited. That's why he created it. So in the world nowadays, there's a wilderness philosophy. Oh, if we got things back to the wilderness and we had fewer people, everything would be great. Well, that's an antithesis to scripture. Scripture says no, be fruitful, multiply, take care of the earth. Yeah, do a good job with creation care, but it's not to say you shouldn't be building houses. Now. We can find smarter ways to build houses. I'm working with a company in South Africa that's building a lightweight concrete out of ash, biomass, trash, like garbage, and a secret source. And so it's good for the environment, it's carbon negative, and it's providing housing. These things, as you say, aren't mutually exclusive. So it's not like development is bad, know, wilderness is good. No, we have to figure out how we do real estate with God so that it has a good outcome for people. And God as with you on land, I mean, it's all his. He said to the nation of Israel, when you go into the promised land, remember the land is mine. But there's this paradox in scripture that says, if I move in next door to you, you have a boundary between our properties. I can't move your boundary. As far as you and God are concerned, it's God's land. As far as you and I are concerned, it's your land. it's even you remember the realtors, the famous real estate agents in the Book of Acts, Ananias and Sapphira, right? It didn't do not so well for them, right? But the issue wasn't that they were selling property. I mean, the apostles said to them, hey, before you sold the land, it was yours. After you sold it, the money was yours. Right. So between Ananias and Sapphira and the apostles, it was all belong to Ananias and Sapphira. But between Ananias and Sapphira and God, it all belonged to God. And they to be ethical and truthful in that. yeah. So there's a lot about real estate. There's a lot about restitution. You know, if somebody takes your land. I mean, I love the story of the widow who goes to live in a foreign land and she comes back. And the king is saying, tell me the story about that, you what happened again? And just so happens that she comes back. She gets her land restored, there's restitution. Not only that, they figure out what the yield would have been on the agriculture for the years she was away. She gets all of that restored. So God's into property ownership, dealing with it properly. And the key thing is, how do you use it for his purpose? And I'm really concerned that real estate has become an asset class for investors, for example. But God said, look, I want everyone to sit under his own vine. So in the promised land economy, it's pretty interesting. In Egypt, they didn't own the land. It was pretty good land. They got to work it, but they didn't actually own it. Right. And then when Israel moves into the desert, they didn't own anything. They just come living hand to mouth. But in the promised land, every family, except the Levites, every family had an income producing asset. It was either farm or in the city and so on. So in God's economy, everybody has income producing assets, primarily land in that situation. But there was no river Nile. So there was no source of water. So God says, here's the deal. I'm going to give you all a piece of land. buy your tribes all figured out and so on. You're gonna get that. But you obey me. If you don't obey me, you're in trouble. If you obey me, I'll send spring rains, autumn rains. If you don't obey me, you're toast. So in the Promised Land is this lovely combination of property ownership from which you can produce an income and have a base and build an economy plus dependence upon God, those two in a wonderful. So that's part of the economy of God and I think land is a big part of it. I love that. And first of all, agents, heard that our job is biblical. So thank you for that, Brett. We can be rejoicing in that. think. The thought process, right, again, of what is my theology, thinking deeper than simply how do I do more deals, how do I buy more investments, how do I develop this land, those kinds of things. You know, what I hear you saying without saying, Brett, is really the ask the next question, right? It's sure, this land that I could do X with or, you know, this seller that I'm gonna help do whatever, it's the next question. That's good and right, but as believers, We have a responsibility to ask question two, which is, but Lord, what do you want? Right. And that's the next question that I often forget as well is it's all right, great. This makes business sense. Let's do it with the, again, it's possible the Lord would say, yes, that is what my desire is, but it's our assumption. We move forward in an assumption that because it makes good business sense, it also makes good theological sense. And that isn't always the case. Right. So this theology of business of asking those questions. So what's your perspective then, Brett, on this desire, right? This desire of place. It's good, it's right, it's godly. We do have, and we were talking briefly, Prisho, but we've got this affordability crisis for young people who are, yeah, great, I'd love to buy a home, but I can't, I can't afford it. You know, it costs way too much money, I have too much debt, whatever it is. And yet there are people, good or bad, right? We can discuss that, but good or bad. taking up all the houses, buying every house. So even if there was an opportunity for this new first time buyer to buy, they can't because there aren't any homes left anyways. Now they might buy it, they might use it to rent it to somebody in their church at a super, you know, one of my best buddies. That's what he does. He rents it to a pastor at his church. He takes a $500 a month loss because the Lord's kindness he can, but he doesn't. That's good. I think that's God honoring, cause this guy couldn't afford a home on his own. But you know, if there's this desire to say the Lord cares about place and he desires, m I think you said it's the microphone that amplifies the message. I think it's how you put it. uh The reality is, does that mean, Brett, that we as believers in this industry need to try to keep the door open for young believers or anybody, but let's say young believers, to buy a home at the exclusion of investors buying homes? Like, what's the conclusion? How do we practically live that out? Okay, so, yeah, practically. So first, if you get back to what's the purpose of having a place, I mean, God wants people. as part of his restoration of us to have shelter, to have a place where we can raise a family, a place where we can be safe and so on. He wants us to have a place where we can welcome strangers, where we can draw others. Scripture says God sets the lonely in families. It doesn't help if the family is on the street. So God wants us to do those things. So if you look at the purpose of real estate, we've turned it into an asset class where you can generate a passive income, know, multifamily housing, you own 10 units, et cetera. Versus say how do we get the people in the ten units to own their own places? So we ask a different question if we understand the purpose of place the purpose of real estate It also the focus of our business. What are we going to do as agents? If we're estate agents and realtors and we're selling and we've got a choice as to who do we sell to or who do we focus on? You know, we should be figuring how do we empower the young people to actually be able to get into a property of their own? Maybe it's a smaller property, it's whatever it is, but we try to find ways to structure it versus saying, it's quicker for me to sell 20 units to Blackrock versus to do the hard work to help Mr. and Mrs. get into a first-time home, for example. And so... Proverbs 25 verse 2 says, it's the glory of God to conceal a matter, to search out a matter is the glory of kings. So search it out with God. God, how do I help these first time homeowners? How do I help people? So for example, I'll give you an example. I was chatting to a guy, he's an architect in Germany. What do they have? They have an issue of affordability of housing. But part of that problem is when you buy or sell a house, there's a lot of closing fees, transaction fees, transfer fees. They've got a whole bunch of fees and it can be a big percentage of the transaction. So he came up with a solution. His solution was... to have a multi-unit building with different sizes, so two bedrooms, three bedrooms, one bedroom and so forth. instead of selling an apartment to somebody, they got shares in the entity that owned the whole building. Why? Because when they have a kid, they can just get more shares and they go from a one bedroom to a two bedroom or two bedroom to a three bedroom without all of the loss of that can be a high percentage every time there's the transfer fees, the agent fees, all of this kind of stuff. Then he went a step further. He said, how do I make sure that we get some continuity with this? So he bought the land himself through, and he set up a trust or a foundation. And he put the land into the trust and the building into a company so that you can't have some realtor come along and just start buying up units and get rid of the tenants because basically they start taking over the company and so on. And he figured out that he could set up that trust for a long period of time. He set it up for 700 years. mean, the guy's got to be like 50 something years old. So, you know. 650 years after he dies, that baby's still going to be going. That's awesome. It's good thinking, you know, it's good thinking. It's kind of almost like, OK, God says you can't sell the land. It's my land. Right now, you can have title, but conceptually, it's God's. And so so I just think we can ask God for creative solutions like that. And I know people are thinking about tiny house villages. They're thinking about ways to to get solutions and. More such solutions, you know, how do you? uh repurpose some of the existing real estate and give an opportunity for people who want, who need community, they need property ownership, they need portability of the asset. so you're not locking them into some landlocked situation. So yeah, we've been looking at some of those solutions in different parts of the world. And I do think that At a simple level, I have a friend who owned a rental property in Florida. He was living in California at the time. He went on one of our business missions trips with us and so and he had tenants in there and then later he sold the house to the tenants. He went out there, helped them go through the acquisition, sold it to them below market because it was going to be their first home. So instead of him just milking it for rents, he helped them become property owners and he went on and did something else. And it's a view that says, look, I don't want to just get the last dollar out of this thing, but I want to help people get into their God's purpose for them. So I would just say as a realtor, and this applies to other industries, just to be asking God, how do I help people, home purchasers, find their purpose, not just find a place? Mmm. It's good. So if God's purpose for this family is this, which means asking some deeper questions. My wife talks about asking the third questions. What do you want to do? I want to buy a house. Why do you want to buy a house? Well, so I don't have to pay rent. Yeah, but what do you want to do in the house, right? Well, and so you can ask three or four questions deep and you can really find out what's really going on with these people. Then you can match them with a solution and you can help come around them. to find creative things. And within the ecosystem of real estate, lenders, appraisers, all of that kind of stuff, I think we as believers can come up with redemptive solutions, better solutions, not just like, OK, God, I'm selling real estate. Help me meet my target this month. Yeah, I mean, that's it's such a I love all of that. It's such a reframing of the definition of success. Right. It could be to your point. It is absolutely true that I could sell 10 homes for five hundred thousand or I could sell 50 homes at one hundred thousand. Right. I hope I did that math right. Right. I can do three percent of basically anything, but the extended math is challenging for me. But That is the industry would tell me, no, no, no, no, go for the 500,000, right? Man, like why work as much and why did, and again, it doesn't mean that there's a hard and fast rule to say, no, no, no, that's totally wrong. That could be right. I don't know. There's so many factors involved in that, but inherently we have grown accustomed to say, yeah, go ahead and ignore the a hundred thousand, right? Or don't really worry about that. You don't gotta put a lot. You're not gonna make that much money on that anyway. So don't, don't worry about those things. as opposed to, Lord, is this who you're calling me to serve? You know, I have a good friend, Connie, who's in this organization I have called the 210 Collective for Ephesians 210. She's an amazing agent and she is a great agent. She sells a lot of homes. But this year, she was telling me that her business has shifted to serving seniors who are downsizing. She didn't do that on purpose. It's not marketing. It's not brand. It's nothing like that. She just started to think the Lord was placing them in her life. And so now she's trying to do it well. And it is that mindset of the stewardship of what's in front of us. I struggle a lot, Brett, with instead of stewarding what's right at my feet, I'm always looking for what's next. What I could go create, what I could do this, right? The Lord created us with ambition. That's awesome. But again, what's right here? What does faithfulness look like today is a question that is something I need to ask more often. And I believe we all do. But in this scenario, I love that concept of just, for example, we own a house or we're helping a seller agent. We're helping a seller who owns a house, who's a believer, who's got, you know, whatever great equity and they're okay. They don't need every dollar. You know, there's all kinds of nuances and scenarios, but, but they're in that position. say, Hey, what if instead of going on the open market, get as much money as we can, X, Z. What if we went around to some churches or, you know, our church or whatever the scenario and say, is there someone specifically who's in need of housing, a place that maybe couldn't afford it otherwise let's structure up. seller finance deal and give them a 1 % interest rate, right? Like let's get creative. That's what our industry is known for. Get creative. Figure out how do we solve the problems? How do we, whatever it is, but it's asking those kinds of questions. It's not always about, this is what I think you're saying, Brett. It's not always about squeezing every dollar out. It is always about honoring the Lord and whatever that decision is, which requires a submission and an asking. Lord, what is it that you desire for me? You know, I would love to sit down with my seller and just say, hey, before I leave, can we pray about this? What would like, let's ask the Lord to show us what he wants us to do. And we'll try to trust him in that. Right. So, man, if they, if they're, if an agent's listening and they say, okay, I love this. Cause I do. Uh, and I have a lot of notes, but if they say, I really love this concept, but how do I even begin to build or think about what my theology of real estate would be? Where do they go? How would they start? Yeah, a couple of different things. You can go to BrettJohnson.biz and there's a resources page over there. In the resources page, it'll take you to a link to Amazon, where I've written this little book, This Land is Your Land, This Land is My Land, which was actually... You know, somebody criticized me for calling the book that because it's obviously from the Arlo Guthrie song that was back in the day. There was that old classic song, which was a protest song written because people couldn't afford homes. It came out of the Depression and so on. It wasn't like a Kumbaya song. was like, yeah, you know, people couldn't get access to homes and so on. And so that's one place to start. Just go through your Bible and just do, you know, use Bible Gateway or whatever you're using. research, look for land, property, boundaries, those type of words and just see sometimes they're good, sometimes they're bad. Get a bit of a picture as to what God is saying. Then look at the story. Imagine explaining the kingdom of God in terms of your industry. So there's a real estate story in the Bible. Just get used to seeing that so that you understand that you and God are in the same business. You and God have the same job. It's a redemptive story and place is an important part of it. So I think those are some some practical things to do. There's a good series of books by Alastair Petrie that's quite good. I can send you the links on those. And he writes quite a bit about place and especially dealing with the things like on the corporate real estate side, things that defile the land, witchcraft, bloodshed and so forth, and dealing with some of the historical roots of the land, the foundational pieces. So think understanding some of those things are pretty important. On a day-to-day basis, asking the why questions. God, what's your purpose? What's your purpose for this family? What's your dream for them? What are you saying? I loved your question, Garrett, and God knocked me on the head many years ago. When I was asking God, when we started our company in 1996, 1997, God, how do I get a predictable income stream? and I'm asking this question. And then like three days later, four days later, I'm like, God, you haven't answered my question. He said, it's the wrong question. He said, question isn't how do you get a predictable income stream? The question is, who do I want you to serve? Who's self-sufficient in the seniors, that can change in our career. Okay, so if a realtor is asking God, who do you want me to serve? how can I do that? what have I got in my hands? let's go back to your question of the church for example there are a lot of churches that are sitting on a big real estate asset value So what if the church said we have a problem where young families, young people, singles and so forth, they can't afford to buy something. What if we leveraged our balance sheet, worked with a local lender, leveraged our balance sheet to get people to become homeowners? It's good for the economy. It's good long-term. It's good for decades. And we actually help our young people. we have in our hands. We've got real estate assets. We've got other properties. Now, I've seen churches go about refinancing for their own reasons and so on, but I'm talking about all using the collective assets of the people in the church to support younger people coming up who want to get into homes. I'll give you an example. I was working with a company in... well, an organization in India, Chennai, India. And what was interesting was that the pastor had started the church, you know, a few people in his living room. It had grown, but they didn't own their own building. And so he wanted to get a building. because they were renting and moving around and so on. So God challenges him and asks the question, what do you have in your hands? And he realized that what he had in his hands was five people in the church who all wanted to own their own home. Hmm. what they did was they persuaded somebody to sell them a piece of land, a Hindu guy, and the five of them clubbed together and they built 12 apartments. Now the church had a construction company. And so they sold off the apartments and then got some money out of that. Eventually what they did was, It turned out eventually they had to hire some people. So they had a construction company, had an HR recruitment firm, and they had a software company all out of the church, right? uh so eventually what they did was they bought an unfinished office building with four or five floors, and they put the HR company in one software company, the construction company in another, but on a Sunday it was the church. So the youth, the young people, the Sunday school and all of that stuff. So it changed their whole philosophy. It was all integrated. But they put their thing together. And it's a wonderful look at how you leverage assets that you've got. And so instead of just selling the realtor out there trying to sell so many houses a year, put your heads together. Come and say, OK, what's the need in our town? How many people can't really afford homes? They might be homeless, they might be in transitional housing, they might be coming out of college, they might be struggling with what the impact of AI is gonna be on their jobs and all this kind of stuff. How do we put our heads together and come up with a kingdom real estate solution that has the multiple players, that can solve a problem that God cares about? I think when we ask those kind of questions, we'll get better answers. So good. Right. That is so good, brother. I mean, we could talk forever. But again, just that concept of the pursuit of my theology of the work that I do. said explaining the kingdom of God through real estate, right? It's understanding that it is that we have a unique responsibility as agents. often say our mission is the gospel. Our method just happens to be in real estate. We're not you know, specifically here to the Lord wrote in the scripture that we all have to be agents. No, we have to be disciple makers, right? And we just happen to be in this industry. So let's start thinking as disciple makers, not just as profit makers. Both are good, right? But I love the reframing of that. So uh so good, Brett. So y'all go check it out. Brett Johnson. It'll be in the show notes. B-R-E-T-T for Brett. BrettJohnson.biz. You can go check out the book, check out the other resources. Please go do that. I know that's literally what I'm about to do right after this. And so just loved all these thoughts, Brett. And I know there's so much more, brother. uh If there what's the what's the podcast name that you have as well so they can go check that out? Yeah, repurposing business and they can find it also off Brett Johnson dot biz. We've got a number of free things there. For example, up on the home page is like 15 things that are self evident. They can just download a PDF and we've got a class on repurposing a business. How do you get a business into God's business is a free introductory class there. How do you change your city, impact the society? There's a free class. There's a class on transforming society. Again, a free introductory thing and good. Yeah, and so there's other resources if they're thinking about capital, finance and so on. There's a bunch of those type of resources. So encourage people to take a look and reach out to me uh if you need any questions answered or want to speak to some other realtors. I can connect you. That's great. love it. Now, Brett, I mean, we are honored to have you on, brother. Genuinely, I appreciate certainly the work and the heart that you lead with and the work that you're doing. But again, it's the helping us reframe and take ownership of the biblical nature of what we do for a living. The reality that it's not just simply go make more money by selling more homes, it is a kingdom impact and that decision and those decisions we make can't be made lightly. They must be made in tandem with what scripture says and a submission to the Lord's purpose and will, which is prayer and seeking the wisdom of others. So, brother, I just appreciate you bringing us back to that. Y'all go check out BrettJohnson.biz. Go check out those resources. Check out the book. There's so much good stuff. It'll be in the show notes if you all forget. So Brett, thank you so much for coming on, brother. It is a joy. It was a joy to have you and faithful agents. We love you and we will see you next week. Great. Thank you so much.