✝ Sacred Economy – What This Is, and What It Never Will Be

WhoWEareMatters is not a brand. It’s a fire. The Gospel will never be sold here. What’s freely received stays free. Offerings support the work, not truth. No performance. No paywalls for Presence. Just covenant, clarity, and Christ at the centre.

WhoWEareMatters began with a whisper, not a business plan.

It remains what it’s always been: a summons—to remember who we are in the eyes of Christ, not the algorithm.

The Gospel Is Not—and Will Never Be—for Sale

Salvation is a gift.

The message of Jesus—the incarnation, the cross, the resurrection, the Spirit—is not merchandise.

It cannot be packaged, monetised, tiered, or controlled.

Nothing here will ever place a price tag on access to the Gospel.
If you see suggested contributions, they support the work—never truth.

The Labourer is Not a Salesman

What is offered here—writing, teaching, space—is born of cost, time, and soul labour.

Where offerings appear, they are always optional. Always clear.

There are no upgrades. No exclusives. No guilt. No pay-to-pray.

This is not a product.
This is a fire.

You Are Not a Customer

You are a participant in something deeper.

If you give, thank you.
If you can’t, you are still welcome.
If you benefit and want to sustain the work, you’re helping protect a space that refuses to perform for relevance or revenue.

✝ The Sacred Exchange

“Freely you have received, freely give.” — Matthew 10
“The one who plows and threshes should do so in hope of sharing in the harvest.” — 1 Corinthians 9:10

The early Church lived in a sacred exchange economy

Not capitalism.
Not charity.
But covenant.

They shared all things in common.
No selling of Christ.
But no starving of workers either.

This space honours that pattern.

No paywall for 'Presence'.
No hunger for the one who pours out in faith.

If anything here moves you—share it, support it, or simply sit with it.
No transaction required. Just presence. Just truth.

This is the remnant way.
And I’m honoured to walk it with you.

—Bradley Schmidt