The short answer is no, not in the way the prosperity gospel means. God promises provision. He promises his presence in suffering. He does not promise that faithfulness produces wealth, or that financial hardship is evidence of spiritual failure.
But the short answer can be heard in more than one way. It needs unpacking.
Where the Idea Comes From
The prosperity gospel has real proof texts. Deuteronomy 28 lists blessings for obedience and curses for disobedience, and financial abundance is on the list. Malachi 3:10 tells Israel to test God with the tithe and promises overflow. Proverbs is full of lines connecting diligence with increase. These are real verses. The problem is not the texts. It is the theology built around them.
Deuteronomy 28 is a covenant document addressed to the nation of Israel. The pattern of national blessing and national curse was built into the Mosaic covenant as a public witness -- Israel's flourishing or decline was a sign of the covenant God's faithfulness to the surrounding nations. Reading it as a personal promise to every individual Christian in every century is a category error. The New Covenant does not operate on the same terms.
Malachi 3 is addressed to a specific community that has stopped bringing the tithe to the temple storehouse. It is a call to covenant faithfulness, not a formula for personal wealth.
Proverbs is wisdom literature. It speaks in patterns and tendencies, not guarantees. Diligence generally produces more than laziness -- that is true and worth teaching. But Proverbs also contains Agur's prayer in chapter 30: "Give me neither poverty nor riches; feed me with the food that is needful for me." The wisest man in the book is not asking for abundance. He is asking for enough.
The Hall of Faith Nobody Reads Aloud
Hebrews 11 is the famous chapter. Abraham, Moses, Rahab. The great cloud of witnesses. Most preachers stop at verse 35.
Verses 35 to 38 are the ones the prosperity gospel cannot explain. "Others were tortured... Some faced jeers and flogging, and even chains and imprisonment. They were put to death by the sword. They went about in sheepskins and goatskins, destitute, persecuted and mistreated -- the world was not worthy of them."
The author does not apologize for them. Does not explain that their poverty was evidence of weak faith. They are commended. Held up. The faithful destitute are not exceptions to a rule about blessing. They are examples of what faithfulness actually looks like in a world that has not yet been made right.
Jesus Himself
"Foxes have dens and birds have nests, but the Son of Man has no place to lay his head." Matthew 8:20.
The theology of the cross runs in the opposite direction from prosperity. Jesus was not wealthy. The disciples were not wealthy. Paul wrote his most joyful letter from prison. The widow gave everything she had and Jesus held her up as the example worth following -- not as a cautionary tale about poor financial planning, but as the picture of what open-handed faith looks like.
None of this is an argument for poverty as a spiritual goal. It is an argument that financial blessing is not the primary language in which God expresses his favour toward his people.
What God Actually Promises
None of that should tip into the other ditch. God is not indifferent to the practical needs of his people.
"My God will meet all your needs according to the riches of his glory in Christ Jesus." Philippians 4:19. That is a real promise.
"Seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well." Matthew 6:33. That is a real promise too.
The difference is that "all these things" in Matthew 6 refers to food and clothing -- the baseline of physical survival. And Philippians 4:19 is written from a prison cell, by a man who has already said he has learned to be content in need as well as in plenty. These are promises of provision. Not of comfort. Not of surplus.
The man who has served faithfully and still carries a tight budget is not a man whose faith is deficient. He is in good company -- with Paul, with the widow, with the ones in sheepskins.
The Question Worth Asking Instead
The question most men are really asking is not "will God make me rich?" It is: does faithfulness matter? Does what I do with money have anything to do with who God is toward me?
Yes. It matters. Not because faithfulness produces a transaction -- a spiritual investment with a financial return -- but because the man who holds his money with open hands, who gives before he calculates the margin, who treats what he has been given as belonging to God, has positioned his heart toward the one who actually provides.
A practical place to start: give something this month before you feel like you have enough margin to give. Not because it triggers a blessing. Because it is the one act that most directly relocates your trust.
The prosperity gospel offers a formula. Scripture offers a relationship. Over a long obedience -- through seasons of plenty and seasons of nothing -- that relationship turns out to be the only thing standing when everything else has moved.
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