The Intersection Of Religions And The Use of Wealth

Jan 25, 2026

 

There's a pattern I've noticed across 3 major religions that most people miss, and it completely changes how we think about fathers, lineage, and money.

Before sharing this with you, I have to admit that I don't call myself religious, but I love the stories of those who came before us.

  • The wisdom.
  • The unspoken patterns.
  • The universal intelligence behind them.

And although I come from a Muslim background, my family put education before religion. And with that, my first school was actually a Christian Nun school. They had the best (and most strict) curriculum.

So all of my teachers were actually Sisters, dressed like this:

That led me to grow up being open to learning from different religions.

  • I've gone to a Muslim school.
  • I've gone to a Christian school.
  • And my Master's was in Jewish school administration.

This wasn't intentional to be honest, it was simply the pattern that unfolded in my life.  

But looking back, I realized it gave me something rare: the ability to see common patterns that connect these stories and the wisdom behind them. 

So today, I'd like to share with you the two main patterns I've noticed in religions that made me believe:

  1. The 'father figure' in the family is being distorted today
  2. With that distortion came the money distortion too, as we connect money to 'the father' or 'the provider.'

Before we get into it, let's agree to remove the religious affiliation glasses and decipher the patterns from a higher neutral perspective.

 

Pattern #1: The Deliberate Dissolution of Lineage

 

1.1 The Prophets Had No Fathers:

One of the most interesting facts about religion and spirituality is that the most influential prophets and messengers who ever existed had somehow absent father figures.

  • Jesus had no human father.
  • Muhammed (PBUH) had been born after his father’s death.
  • Although Moses had a father, in both the Biblical and Islamic traditions, the focus was more on his strong mother figure. ( The father had no dialogue, quotes, verses, no attributions..etc)

In my opinion, it's wild that the 2 last and most well-known prophets have no father:

  • Both were orphans.
  • Both died with either no children or no sons alive.
  • Both fulfilled “God’s” Prophecy without any influential or generational family legacy.

And despite their circumstances, they're the ones who became:

  • The wealthiest of them all.
  • The most influential (remembered 1,400+ years later)
  • The ones who created the most lasting impact in the world

Yet, nowadays, people love to blame it on the father figure: 

"Oh you're too masculine or too feminine, or too broke because you had an absent father figure."

As if our entire destiny is written by whoever raised us.

 But then, the prophets?

 They dissolved that entire program. 

 

1.2 The Universal System That Refuses Generational Transfer

 Everyone nowadays is so focused on 

  • Generational family wealth
  • Family protection system,
  • Family legacy..
  • Last names

But if we look deeper into these Prophets:

Jesus had no children.

Muhammad (PBUH) had 7 children, yet they all died before him, except one daughter, Fatimah, who died 6 months after his death, apparently from grief.

Moses had sons, but they were never mentioned as carriers of his prophecy. His lineage disappeared into history.

 Isn't it interesting that today we have entire systems in place to protect generational family wealth? To protect family names? To ensure the bloodline continues? 

Yet God, or this universal intelligence, deliberately dismantles these systems in the stories of the prophets?

 

The Wealth We Don't Remember:

Do we remember who was the wealthiest during Moses? Well, the Pharaon era. However, are they still present? Completely vanished.

 Do we remember who the wealthiest person was during the time of Jesus? No.

 Do we remember the most powerful kings and queens who ruled during Muhammad's era? Barely.

I'm sure the wealthiest, most influential families of that time also had systems in place to protect their lineage, their legacy, their control.

But none of that mattered.

  • We don't follow their rules anymore.
  • We don't remember those wealthy families.
  • We don't live under the control of their systems.
  • Some of them have become just stories, a last name with no wealth, power, or control.

Yet here are the prophets: orphaned, poor, lineage-less, dissolving all the anchored systems and making billions of people follow their words, centuries later..

 

What This Tells Us About the Father Wound

If divine intelligence intentionally removes the father figure from the prophets' stories, what does that tell us? 

Maybe it tells us that the father is not a source.

  • The father is not where your power comes from.
  • The father is not where your wealth comes from.
  • The father is not the one who determines your legacy.

And yet, we live in a world that has distorted this truth.

We've been conditioned to believe:

  • Patriarchy and Masculine figures are very important to a good life.
  • Your last name defines your worth, your status, and/or your life.
  • Your father's success (or failure) dictates yours.
  • Money comes from "the provider" (the father, the masculine, the external)
  • If you don't have a father, you're somehow broken.

But the prophets shatter that illusion.

They show us that the real source, the real father, is internal. It's the connection to something greater than bloodline, greater than inheritance, greater than what was passed down.

"Do not call anyone on earth your father; for One is your Father, He who is in heaven."  Matthew 23:9

I always wondered why this intelligence keeps having the emphasis of non importance of our father figures. And to be honest, I couldn't find a real ( and convincing) answer, except maybe the earthly father is a distraction from ‘the divine father.

 And when we keep seeking wealth, validation, and identity through the distorted father figure, we stay disconnected from the real source.

In my opinion, this could be one of the reasons why there is a higher probability: 

  • The families with the most inherited money are deeply disconnected from the divine.
  • The children of these wealthy families having hard time connecting to their own divinity. ( in general)
  • The generational families can only keep up if the worldly systems are controlled.
     

Pattern #2: The Prophets and Their Profits:

 

Many of you might think that being spiritual or divinely guided should mean having no monetary thinking.

But we might be greatly mistaken by false narratives. 

Let's dig into the actual stories of these prophet, not the sanitized, "holy and humble" versions we've been told.

 

2.1 Muhammad's Wealth Alignment:

 Yes, Muhammad was a ‘poor’ 40-year-old man when he received his first revelation.

 But what’s interesting is that 15 years before that time, ‘God’ had aligned him with Khadijah, a wealthy, successful businesswoman who was 15 years older than him. ( FYI: She was his only wife for 25 years, until her death.)

 

She trusted, loved and married him as a man, not a prophet yet.

 

So when he got his revelation in a cave.

  • She was the first one to believe in his prophecy..
  • He already proved his loyalty and trustworthiness ( He was her trade manager during those 15 years)
  • And so,  she did everything to finance his prophecy.

She funded his travels, his wars, his mission to enlighten the people.

  • Do you think he could've achieved his prophecy with no money? No.
  • Do you think people would've listened to him with no resources? Maybe some.
  • Do you think he could've spread his message across cities without Khadijah's wealth? Absolutely not.

FYI: Khadijah used her entire wealth to feed the Muslim community for almost 3 years when they were boycotted and exiled. 

The prophecy required money.

 And the divine intelligence provided it, not through his father, not through inheritance, but through alignment with a businesswoman who believed in his vision. 

So, if Muhammed’s story can inspire us in one thing, it is that this man ( whether you believe he is a prophet or not) dismantled some false beliefs that nowadays even the muslims don’t want to acknowledge:

  • He married a woman 15 years older than him ( a big NO in today’s time)
  • He worked for her. ( She got waay more money than him)
  • He proved love, loyalty, and being of service to her for more than a decade, so when he got his revelation, she gladly financed his prophecy.

It’s honestly something to wonder about, as we’re living in an era of appearances, cheating, being jealous of your wife/or husband, and judgment through the material. 

 

2.2 Jesus and the Wealthy Women:

Here's what they don't teach in Sunday school:

Jesus didn't wander around ‘ humble and broke’. 

In fact according to some historical texts, Jesus was wearing one the finest materials as clothes. Yes, it wasn’t flashy, but allegedly his clothes were valuable.

Other than that, he had financial backers.

In the Bible, it's mentioned that several wealthy (again) women funded his ministry:

  • Mary Magdalene
  • Joanna, Susanna.
  • And many other women who "provided for them out of their own means," referring to Jesus and his Disciples.

These women financed Jesus' ability to travel, teach, and gather followers.

  • They bought the food.
  • They funded the logistics.
  • They made the mission possible.

In today’s age, those women could translate to those seed investors once you’re trying to build your startup or launch your new app.

So, Jesus wasn't anti-money.

He was anti-attachment to money.

He understood that money is an exchange value, and he made sure to get enough so he could continue spreading the gospel.

So if some broke-minded person tells you not ask for money in exchange for your time, energy, or your ‘divine wisdom’, you might want to think again of their motives, because in my opinion, Jesus himself wasn’t doing it for free; he surely wasn’t broke and stressed about his own survival mode while spreading his words.  

 

2.3) Moses and the Wealth of Egypt

Moses was raised in Pharaoh's palace.

He had access to the wealth, education, and resources of the most powerful empire on earth. And when it was time to lead the Israelites out of Egypt, what did God tell them to do?

Take the Egyptians' gold and silver (Exodus 12:35-36).

  • They didn't leave empty-handed.
  • They asked the Egyptians for wealth, and they gave it willingly.
  • They took the resources needed to build a new system, a new temple, a new way of life.

God didn’t tell him ‘Go into the desert with nothing and figure it out.’ So, the prophecy required material wealth to manifest.

 That being said, perhaps this is why the Jews have the best skills when it comes to trading Gold or Precious metals. They definitely learned from Moses how to ask and receive. 

 

2.4) The Pattern From The Prophets:

 The prophets weren't anti-money.

They were anti-false systems.

They dismantled the distorted father, the distorted lineage, the distorted idea that wealth comes from control and inheritance.

But they used money, aligned money, divinely guided money, to fulfill their missions. 

They somehow understood: Money is the material translation of spiritual frequency. 

And when you're aligned with your mission, the resources align to come: 

  • Not from your father.
  • Not from your last name.
  • Not from your family’s inheritance.

But, from the intelligence that runs the entire universe.

 

3) The Universal Intelligence of Numerology in the Top 3 Worldwide Religions

 

Some people get uncomfortable or call it ‘demonic’ when we talk about numbers, codes, and universal patterns outside of scripture.

But here's what I've noticed: 

The same intelligence that wrote those books is the same intelligence that encoded the patterns within them.

 It doesn't just speak through words.

 It speaks through timing. Numbers. Cycles. Codes.

And if we're willing to look beyond what we've been told to see, we might find that the Universe has been leaving us clues all along.

Scientist Nikola Tesla once said: 

“If you knew the magnificence of the numbers 3, 6, and 9, you would have the key to the universe.”

(FYI, I have those numbers and cycles explained inside The Quantum Formula)

 Now, let's look at when the 3 most influential prophets died:

  • Moses died at 120 years old → 1+2+0 = 3
  • Jesus died at 33 years old → 3+3 = 6
  • Muhammad died at 63 years old → 6+3 = 9

3.6.9.

The completion code.

The code of cycles, evolution, and universal intelligence.

  • Their deaths were precise..
  • Their missions were the most impactful.
  • Their prophecies were the most influential.

Coincidence? I don’t think so.

Everything was timed according to a system far greater than what we've been taught.

We might not always like the stories; we might not like what’s been written in those books; we might try to change them based on our beliefs, distort and burn history to reprogram entire generations, but there is always an underlying intelligence that’s speaking to us through patterns, symbols, and non-human systems, if we look deeper. 

 

Conclusion: The Right Systems, Intelligence, and Evolution

 So what does all of this mean?

It means we've been living under distorted systems.

Systems that told us:

  • Your father determines your worth
  • Your lineage determines your legacy
  • Money is not important for spiritual work.
  • Generational 'family' wealth is the ultimate goal

But the prophets shattered those systems.

They showed us a different truth:

  • If you have wisdom that can change generations, you need to be paid for it.
  • If you have a mission to shift consciousness, you need resources.
  • If you're here to break generational cycles, you need wealth.

Speaking of generational wealth, I'm not talking about protecting the money in a trust fund, locking in generations of wealth to your unborn grand-grand-grandchildren.

The real generational wealth building is about the liberation of humanity, the evolution of consciousness across continents, and the distribution of wealth and resources.

Because if we look deeper, this universal intelligence keeps repeating the same patterns: 

  • Every time we hoard, it gets redistributed.
  • Every time we build empires on false systems, they collapse.
  • Every time we think of the ‘ saving and protecting just my family’ illusion, the systems suddenly break.

Maybe that's something we can learn from those prophets. 

They didn't follow the system.

They collapsed the old and became the new system.

And so can we

See you next week.

- Ons