Slide Deck Graphics: The DNA of the Doorpost
- Reuben Lowing
- Feb 21
- 6 min read
You asked for images. You asked for graphics. You wanted the visual firepower to take "The DNA of the Doorpost" from concept to cinematic experience.
Here's the deal: a PowerPoint without compelling visuals is just a glorified Word doc. And if we're going to walk families through the evolution from Hammurabi's silver shekels to Christ's heart transformation, we need images that hit different.
This isn't your corporate quarterly review. This is the Ultimate Financial Origin Story: ancient covenant meets modern stewardship. Every slide needs to punch through the noise and land the message: Relationship, not religion. Strategy, not slavery.
Below, I'm breaking down the exact visual strategy for all 10 slides. Think of this as your creative brief: cinematic, high-contrast, military-grade precision. Let's roll.
Slide 1: The Stone Tablet Revelation

Concept: A massive stone tablet cracking down the center, brilliant golden light pouring through the fissure. Inside the crack, a glowing, organic human heart beats softly. The stone is ancient, weathered, covered in faint Hebrew lettering. The heart is vibrant red and alive.
Why This Works: This is your opening salvo. Jeremiah 31:33 says God's law would move from stone to heart: from external regulation to internal transformation. The cracked tablet represents the limitation of the old covenant. The glowing heart? That's the covenant upgrade. It's visceral. It's immediate. It sets the tone: we're not here to worship rules; we're here to build relationship.
The Warrior-Steward Angle: You can't manage money with stone-cold duty. You need heart. This slide tells your audience: Stop following the script. Start following the Spirit.
Slide 2: The Golden Thread of Conscience
Concept: A silhouette of a modern professional standing on a ridge at twilight. On the left side of the image, an ancient scroll unfurls in the wind. On the right, a gleaming city skyline rises. Between them, a single golden thread: almost like a tripwire or a laser sight: connects the scroll to the city, running directly through the person's chest.
Why This Works: Romans 2:15 proves God was working conscience long before Moses descended the mountain. This image captures that continuity. The golden thread is the moral law written in every human heart: ancient, unbroken, still active. The modern city represents today. The scroll represents yesterday. The thread? That's timeless truth.
The Warrior-Steward Angle: Financial stewardship isn't new. The principles of justice, mercy, and humility predate your 401(k). The same God who guided Abraham's wealth is guiding yours. This thread connects you to something bigger than a quarterly earnings report.
Slide 3: Hammurabi Meets Melchizedek

Concept: Split-screen composition. Left side: The towering black stone pillar of Hammurabi's Code, engraved with cuneiform, lit dramatically from below with torchlight. Right side: A regal figure (Melchizedek) in priest-king robes, holding a simple chalice of wine and a loaf of bread, bathed in soft, warm sunlight.
Why This Works: This is the proof God didn't start from scratch. Hammurabi built civil order through law (circa 1750 BC). Melchizedek? He embodied righteousness without the lineage, without the tablets, without the Temple. Genesis 14 shows Abraham tithing to a priest-king who predated the Law. This slide says: God was moving among the nations long before Sinai.
The Warrior-Steward Angle: You don't need a theology degree to know right from wrong. The Code of Hammurabi demanded restitution for financial harm. Melchizedek modeled integrity. Both predate Moses. Both prove stewardship is built into creation. This visual destroys the "I'm waiting for someone to teach me" excuse.
Slide 4: The Compass and the Sunrise
Concept: A weathered brass compass sitting on an ancient parchment map, slightly curled at the edges. The compass needle points directly toward a distant sunrise breaking over rolling hills. The map shows trade routes, ancient cities, faint nautical markings. The lighting is golden-hour perfection.
Why This Works: Genesis 18:19 says God chose Abraham to teach righteousness. Abraham didn't invent truth; he navigated it. The compass represents moral direction. The sunrise? That's the promise: the future God is leading you toward. The map shows the journey isn't random. It's strategic.
The Warrior-Steward Angle: Your financial plan needs a North Star. Not a guru. Not a fad. A fixed point of truth that existed before you did and will outlast your portfolio. Stewardship isn't guesswork. It's calibration.
Slide 5: The Golden Calf Reflection

Concept: Close-up of molten gold pouring from a crucible, the liquid metal glowing orange and white-hot. In the reflection of the molten pool, a blurred crowd of desperate faces: arms raised, fear and frenzy in their eyes.
Why This Works: Exodus 32. The golden calf wasn't a rebellion against morality. It was a shortcut to presence. They didn't want evil: they wanted God on their terms. The reflection in the gold shows the desperation: they'd trade truth for convenience. This image nails the identity crisis at the heart of every financial mistake.
The Warrior-Steward Angle: You can melt down your future trying to force God's timeline. Impatience creates idols. Consumer debt? That's a golden calf. The "get rich quick" scheme? Same energy. This slide asks the hard question: Are you building relationship, or manufacturing shortcuts?
Slide 6: The Altar of Obedience
Concept: A simple, weathered wooden altar in a barren landscape. A single flame burns cleanly at the center: no smoke, just pure light. The wood is scarred, used, almost holy in its simplicity. The background fades to muted earth tones. Minimalist. Powerful.
Why This Works: Leviticus 17:11. Sacrifice wasn't a "payment plan" with God. It was a training manual. The altar teaches humility, obedience, and the cost of covenant. The single flame represents purity of intent. No theatrics. No manipulation. Just faithful presence.
The Warrior-Steward Angle:Your money is a test. Luke 16:11 makes it clear: if you can't manage the "unrighteous mammon," why would God trust you with true riches? The altar isn't about death. It's about discipline.
Slide 7: The Passover Doorpost
Concept: A rough-hewn wooden doorpost in near-darkness. A single, subtle crimson mark glows faintly on the frame: not dripping, not dramatic, just present. The glow is warm, protective, almost supernatural. The door is slightly ajar, revealing faint light inside.
Why This Works: Hebrews 11:28 says it wasn't the mechanics of the blood that saved the Israelites. It was the faith to apply it. This image captures that quiet obedience. The mark is small but decisive. The glow represents God's recognition. The slightly open door? That's invitation.
The Warrior-Steward Angle: Faith without action is dead. You can know the strategy, quote the Scripture, memorize the stats: but if you don't apply the principle, you're still outside. The doorpost isn't religion. It's relationship.
Slide 8: The Chain Becomes a Vine

Concept: A heavy iron chain, rusted and dark, begins to transform halfway through the frame. The metal links morph into vibrant green vines with fresh leaves, tendrils reaching outward. The transition is smooth but dramatic: life breaking through death.
Why This Works: Matthew 5:17. Jesus didn't destroy the Law; He fulfilled it. The chain represents bondage to the letter. The vine represents freedom in the Spirit. It's organic. It's alive. It's growth.
The Warrior-Steward Angle: The Law wasn't bad. It was incomplete. Financial legalism says, "Follow these seven steps and you'll be free." The Spirit says, "Let me write these principles on your heart, and you'll bear fruit." The chain was necessary. The vine is better.
Slide 9: From Letter to Spirit
Concept: A black-and-white image of a thick law book, pages open, bleeding into a vibrant, full-color scene of people helping each other: one person lifting another over a wall, hands reaching, community in motion. The transition from monochrome to color happens in the center of the frame.
Why This Works: 2 Corinthians 3:6. The letter kills. The Spirit gives life. This image shows the shift from rigid regulation to living relationship. The law book isn't evil: it's just limited. The colorful community scene shows what happens when the law moves from stone to heart.
The Warrior-Steward Angle:Financial peace of mind doesn't come from mastering the tax code. It comes from love in action: faith working through generosity, discipline, and service.
Slide 10: The Warrior-Steward Shield

Concept: A tactical military-grade shield or emblem, brushed steel with battle scars, engraved with three simple mandates in block lettering: ACT JUSTLY. LOVE MERCY. WALK HUMBLY. The engraving glows faintly, like heated metal. The background is dark, focused.
Why This Works: Micah 6:8. This is the mission brief. The shield represents defense and identity. The three mandates? That's your operating system. Justice without mercy is tyranny. Mercy without humility is pride. This slide is your close: your marching orders.
The Warrior-Steward Angle: You want the Bottom Line? Here it is. Manage money justly: no schemes, no shortcuts. Show mercy: help others climb. Walk humbly: God's the banker, not you. That's the DNA of the doorpost.
These aren't just slides. They're a manifesto. Every image reinforces the same truth: money is a tool of the covenant, not the root of evil. Stewardship is spiritual warfare. And the families you serve? They're not looking for another pitch deck. They're looking for a better story.
This is how you give it to them.
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